Moon Knight spoilers follow.
Oscar Isaac has just reignited a conversation about the chance of more Moon Knight.
Earlier this year, the actor took the double role (well, technically triple) of Steven Grant/Mark Spector in Marvel's Moon Knight, a miniseries on the eponymous superhero with dissociative identity disorder.
In a recent TikTok post, the series' director Mohamed Diab and Isaac hinted at a possible season two.
Related: Moon Knight writer confirms death of major MCU character
"The question on everyone's mind: is there a season two?" TikTok user @hayaattiaaa asks Diab and Isaac in the clip.
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"Of Moon Knight?" Diab replies, before the camera pans to reveal Isaac.
"Why else would we be in Cairo?" the actor says.
To be clear, there hasn't been any official confirmation of a second season of Moon Knight as of yet.
Did Isaac and Diab – who helmed four out of six episodes of the show – just reveal that there's more in store for fans? Given a portion of season one was set in Cairo, this could very well be the case. Or were they simply campaigning for a second instalment? Only time will tell.
Related: Moon Knight writer explains why Kit Harington's character doesn't appear in the show
Premiered in March this year, the series created by Jeremy Slater kicks off with Isaac pulling off his polarising British accent as softly-spoken gift-shop employee Steven Grant.
As the events unfold, Steven gets acquainted with his alter ego Mark Spector, a Jewish-American mercenary who's the avatar for Egyptian moon god Konshu (played by Karim El Hakim and voiced by F. Murray Abraham).
Moon Knight also stars Ethan Hawke as cult leader Arthur Harrow, May Calamawy as archeologist and Mark's wife Layla El-Faouly, and the late Gaspard Ulliel in one of his final roles as Anton Mogart.
Moon Knight is streaming on Disney+.
Reporter, Digital Spy
Stefania is a freelance writer specialising in TV and movies. After graduating from City University, London, she covered LGBTQ+ news and pursued a career in entertainment journalism, with her work appearing in outlets including Little White Lies, The Skinny, Radio Times and Digital Spy.
Her beats are horror films and period dramas, especially if fronted by queer women. She can argue why Scream is the best slasher in four languages (and a half).

















