MARVEL’S DIRTY SECRET IS OUT: Actor Kumail Nanjiani has SHOCKINGLY ADMITTED that the studio’s disastrous “Eternals” film was so traumatic it SENT HIM TO THERAPY, exposing the HUMAN COST behind Hollywood’s assembly-line franchise machine.
In a bombshell interview, Nanjiani revealed he was locked into a SIX-MOVIE DEAL for a franchise that COLLAPSED overnight after the film was CRUCIFIED by critics and ABANDONED by audiences. “I signed on for six movies,” he confessed, laying bare the studio’s RUTHLESS trap of multi-picture contracts that leave artists holding the bag for corporate failures.
Despite his insistence he’s “proud” of his performance, the subtext is a DISTURBING indictment of Marvel’s culture. This wasn’t just a box office flop—it was a psychological breaking point for its stars. Nanjiani’s “grateful” tone is a STAGED PERFORMANCE of resilience, masking the brutal truth: these studios CONSUME talent and spit them out when the algorithms fail.
The actor’s desperate mantra—that he must separate his experience from the result—is the tragic cope of a man who saw his blockbuster future VAPORIZED. While Marvel moves on to its next CGI spectacle, the actors are left to clean up the emotional wreckage, forced to reframe CAREER-DEFINING FAILURE as a “joyful” lesson.
This is the REAL superhero movie: a chilling tale of an industry that sells dreams but delivers trauma, where even A-list stars are disposable cogs in a machine that grinds them down without a second thought. The credits have rolled, but the damage is PERMANENT.



