The age of gods is ending, but the age of monsters has just begun. In Clash of the Titans: The Primordial Gate (2026), Perseus (Sam Worthington) has tried to live a quiet life, but the fabric of reality is tearing. The Primordials—entities older than Zeus himself—are clawing their way back from the void. With Olympus in ruins, Perseus must venture into the heart of Chaos to prevent the erasure of humanity.

Sam Worthington returns as a battle-hardened, “silver fox” Perseus. He no longer fights with youthful rage, but with a cold, divine precision. His armor is now a mix of weathered bronze and celestial light, making him a true icon of the demigod warrior.
Liam Neeson and Ralph Fiennes reprise their roles as Zeus and Hades, but in a tragic new light. Once all-powerful, they are now fading echoes, forced to put aside their eternal feud to guide their son through a world that no longer fears them.
Paul Mescal joins the fray as a new hero, bringing a raw, grounded intensity that balances the grand scale of the divine war.
The visuals are a 2026 masterpiece, utilizing “Physically Based Rendering” to make the monsters—from the multi-headed Typhon to the shifting shadows of Chaos—look terrifyingly real. It’s a visceral, neon-soaked journey through a crumbling mythology.