Key Points

The long-awaited sequel to The Social Network finally has a title and release date. Titled 'The Social Reckoning', the film will hit theaters in October 2026. Jeremy Strong is set to play Mark Zuckerberg, while the story focuses on whistleblower Frances Haugen. Aaron Sorkin returns to write and direct this companion piece exploring Facebook's modern-day controversies.

Key Points: The Social Reckoning Sequel Starring Jeremy Strong as Zuckerberg Gets 2026 Date

  • Sequel focuses on Facebook whistleblower Frances Haugen's story from 2021
  • Jeremy Strong takes on the role of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg
  • Film explores the dangerous journey to expose Facebook's guarded secrets
  • Based on the Wall Street Journal's 'The Facebook Files' reporting
2 min read

'The Social Network' sequel starring Jeremy Allen White, Jeremy Strong gets official title, release date

Aaron Sorkin's 'The Social Network' sequel 'The Social Reckoning' starring Jeremy Strong as Mark Zuckerberg and Jeremy Allen White gets an October 2026 release date.

"a companion piece to The Social Network - Variety"

Washington, DC, September 27

Academy Award-winning filmmaker Aaron Sorkin's much-anticipated sequel to 'The Social Network' now has an official title and release date.

Titled 'The Social Reckoning', the film is set to hit theatres on October 9, 2026, production studio Sony Pictures announced on Thursday.

Oscar winner Mikey Madison, Golden Globe and Emmy Award winner Jeremy Allen White, Emmy and Grammy nominee Bill Burr and Oscar nominee Jeremy Strong will star in 'The Social Reckoning.'

Jeremy Strong is set to play the role of Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, reported Variety.

'The Social Reckoning' is written and directed by Sorkin, who also produces alongside Todd Black, Peter Rice and Stuart Besser.

Production for the film is expected to commence next month.

Described as a "companion piece" to "The Social Network," the new film focuses on events that take place nearly two decades after the boy-genius programmer and a troupe of tech pioneers invented what would go on to become the world's largest social media platform, reported Variety.

'The Social Reckoning' tells the true story of how Frances Haugen (Madison), a young Facebook engineer, enlists the help of Jeff Horwitz (White), a Wall Street Journal reporter, to go on a dangerous journey that ends up blowing the whistle on the social network's most guarded secrets.

Horwitz's reporting, a series of articles known as 'The Facebook Files,' was published in 2021 and exposed Facebook for its harmful effects on teens and its knowing proliferation of misinformation, which contributed to acts of political violence.

2010's 'The Social Network,' also released in October, was a critical and commercial hit, earning 226 million USD at the global box office and receiving eight Academy Award nominations, including best picture, according to Variety.

Sorkin's win for best adapted screenplay (the film was loosely based on Ben Mezrich's book "The Accidental Billionaires") was one of three Oscars it ultimately took home.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Finally a film about the Facebook whistleblower! This is so relevant for India where WhatsApp forwards and Facebook posts have caused real harm. Hope they cover the global impact, not just US perspective.
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Sarah B
October 2026 feels so far away! But Aaron Sorkin's writing is worth the wait. The original Social Network had that amazing dialogue - "You're going to go through life thinking that girls don't like you because you're a nerd..."
A
Arjun K
As someone working in tech, this hits close to home. The ethical questions around social media are huge, especially in India where platform regulation is such a hot topic. Hope the film doesn't oversimplify complex issues.
K
Kavya N
Jeremy Allen White from The Bear! 😍 Perfect casting for a journalist role. The Facebook Files exposed so much - remember when similar issues happened with farmer protests misinformation in India? This story needs to be told.
M
Michael C
While I'm excited, I hope they don't make it too preachy. The original worked because it showed complexity. Social media has done good things too - helped small businesses in India grow, connected families during lockdown, etc.
D
Divya L
The timing is perfect with all the social media regulation talks happening worldwide. In India

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