And if that didn’t get you pumped, here’s the official trailer which will settle what you’re going to be doing day after tomorrow.

TheBlack Widowofficial synopsis reads, “The action-packed feature film unravels the mystery of Natasha Romanoff’s past and her path to becoming an unrelenting spy and assassin. Filled with regret and the desire to right her wrongs, Natasha reunites with people she once considered family in order to destroy the organization that tore their lives apart. Scarlett Johansson reprises her role as Natasha/Black Widow, Florence Pugh stars as Yelena, David Harbour portrays Alexei/The Red Guardian, and Rachel Weisz is Melina.”

Black Widow Disney Plus Poster

Ray Winstone as Dreykov, William Hurt as Secretary Ross, Olga Kurylenko as Antonia, and O-T Fagbenle as Mason round out the cast.Black Widowis directed by Cate Shortland and produced by Kevin Feige; Eric Pearson penned the screenplay.

The film has been in the spotlight for more reasons than one, leading up to its release.Scarlett Johansson’s suit against Disneyprompted a settlement for her, renegotiated contracts for others, and an announcement from Disney that the rest of Disney’s 2021 slate would have their exclusive theatrical release.

Disneyhad been urged by investors in the past, like Dan Loeb, the hedge fund manager for Third Point, to head straight to streaming and by-passing the theaters. “My understanding is that the old-line executives don’t want to go over the top with their big tentpole movies, which is why they announced they were pushing Black Widow and other movies to 2021,” Loeb continued. “I don’t think they appreciate the tiger they have by the tail, which is to say the value they can drive by moving into a subscription model, which has been adopted by everyone from Microsoft to Amazon. It’s so value accretive.”

Loeb even goes so far as to predict that, due to the ongoing circumstances, movie theaters will become nothing more than a “novelty experience,” before saying that the world is “going to go largely toward online distribution.” The remaining films set to be released from Disney are as follows.