According to Screen Rant, Adria Arjona may be joining the Superman-adjacent film Man of Tomorrow — but the role isn't what most people assumed. The report suggests the character she's attached to carries a significantly more tragic arc than the obvious frontrunner picks fans had been speculating about.
Why This Rumor Changes Everything
When an actor of Arjona's caliber gets linked to a superhero project, the internet immediately starts slotting her into the most glamorous available role. For a Superman film, that reflex points straight to Lois Lane. But if the Screen Rant report holds up, we may be looking at something far more emotionally complex — characters like Lana Lang, whose history with Clark Kent is bittersweet by design, or even someone like Lyla Lerrol, a tragic Kryptonian figure from the comics who barely registers on the mainstream radar. A darker, more grief-stricken supporting role could actually signal something meaningful about the film's overall tone: this might not be the bright, hopeful Superman story some fans are expecting.
For myCast users, this is the kind of casting puzzle that makes the platform genuinely useful. Arjona's role is unconfirmed and deliberately vague — which means right now is the perfect moment to stake your claim on who she should be playing.
What myCast Fans Are Already Saying
The myCast community has been building out Man of Tomorrow dream casts across multiple stories, and the data reveals some strong consensus picks — along with a few wild cards worth talking about.
Across the three active fan-cast stories — Man Of Tomorrow, Man of Tomorrow, and Man of Tomorrow — Amy Adams shows up as the fan favorite for Lois Lane in two of the three, which makes sense given her well-loved run in the Snyder-era films. Henry Cavill similarly dominates the Superman slot across stories, a reflection of how passionately a segment of fans still wants to see him back in the cape. But the most surprising data point? Roman Reigns has pulled 5 votes for Lobo in the — more than any other single pick across any role in any of the three stories. Lobo fans, it turns out, are loud and organized.