Tom Holland will soon return to filming the next Spider-Man movie after suffering a concussion.
The 29-year-old English star was hospitalized after an injury on the set for Spider-Man: Brand New Day, according to The Sun.
It is said that Holland cracked his head while performing a stunt on Friday at Leavesden Studios in Watford.
"We were called at 10.30am on Friday to attend to a patient who had sustained an injury at Leavesden Studios in Watford," An East of England Ambulance Service spokesman said, according to The Sun.
“An ambulance was sent to the scene, and the patient was transported to hospital for further care.”
The movie production is shutting down for a week while Holland recovers, according to The Hollywood Reporter.
This is Holland's fourth time acting in a standalone Spider-Man movie. He became famous for playing Spider-Man in Captain America: Civil War (2016.)
Holland appeared at a dinner for his family's charity, Brothers Trust, over the weekend. The actor was joined by his fiancée Zendaya, who is reprising the role of Michelle “MJ” Jones MJ in Spider-Man: Brand New Day.
Holland left the charity event early because he was not feeling well, according to reports.
Producers for Spider-Man: Brand New Day made the call on Monday to pause work for a week. The movie is being co-produced by Marvel Studios and Sony and is set for release in July 2026.
While the pause is not expected to delay the movie's release, it is certain to be very costly.
According to the Daily Mail, Holland's absence will likely burn through over $14 million. Daily operating costs for the $200 million movie are likely in the range of $2 million, a director told the Daily Mail.
"On a production the size of Spider-Man, which carries a $200 million budget, the daily running costs are immense," said director Emeka Egbuonu.
"Once you factor in cast, crew, set locations, equipment, and the logistical machine that keeps a blockbuster moving, each day of filming can cost between $1.5 and $2 million [£1.1m and £1.5m]."
"The challenge is that even when filming halts, many of those costs don't disappear — the crew still need to be paid, sets need to be maintained, and equipment continues to be on hire."
That's one expensive fall! But it goes to show how much the star is worth in a big production.