Marvin Jones III Reveals Tombstone in Spider-man: Brand New Day Promo Art
Official spider-man: brand new day promo art showed Marvin Jones III’s Tombstone before the film’s July 31 release. The image gives the first live-action look at Lonnie Lincoln’s design and puts Tom Holland’s Spider-Man on a collision course with one of the movie’s villains.
Marvin Jones III’s Tombstone appears with pale gray skin and white hair, matching the character’s hard-edged comic-book profile rather than a softened adaptation. The promotional art surfaced online via All Posters, which makes the reveal less about studio rollout theater and more about how quickly the film’s villain lineup is now coming into view.
Jones and Tombstone
Marvin Jones III already knows the part from the Spider-Verse movies, where he voiced Tombstone. Here, the live-action version carries the same Lonnie Lincoln identity and the same power set: superhuman strength, stamina, durability, reflexes, nearly indestructible skin, and enhanced healing after exposure to an experimental Oscorp gas.
Tombstone has yet to show up in any official footage, so this art becomes the clearest evidence of how the character will be presented on screen. For a film still months from release, that matters because it shifts Tombstone from a listed villain to a visual presence audiences can actually place inside the movie’s street-level world.
Spider-Man Villains Lineup
Brand New Day will feature Tarantula, Boomerang, Mac Gargan as Scorpion, and Tombstone. That gives the film four named antagonists in the mix, with the promo art specifically teasing the clash between Tom Holland’s Spider-Man and Tombstone.
Tombstone is also set to appear in Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man Season 2 on Disney+ and Spider-Noir on Prime Video. That cross-project run makes the character one of the more active villains in the current Spider-Man lane, and this first live-action look signals that the film is no longer hiding where Tombstone fits in the lineup.
July 31 Release
July 31 is now the deadline that matters. The promotional art narrows the wait to one thing readers can actually track: whether the film’s final marketing push keeps leaning into its villains, or whether Tombstone stays a teaser until release day.