With Marvel releasing a teaser image for All-New All-Different Marvel -- the relaunch of all their comic books this Fall after Secret Wars -- we hopped on the phone with Editor-In-Chief Axel Alonso to discuss the notable characters, big surprises, and suspicious absences. Plus, he drops a bomb about two iconic characters not pictured here.

The image in question is below, which we've annotated with each character's identity and abilities. Note that Iron Man has been confirmed as Tony Stark, but we still don't know the details on Red Wolf.

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First and foremost, I think the Marvel Universe is a unique and diverse place to be and a reminder that it all starts in publishing. All the great stuff you see on the movie screen has its roots on the comic book page. It's a testament to Marvel that we're given the latitude we've got, to bend our universe and have some fun with who we are.For the last three years now, we've been releasing images that show the shape of Marvel and who to keep your eye on, and every year I'm excited -- but this year in particular because of some of the chances we're taking.Without a doubt. If you've been following Marvel for awhile, you'll notice that we are embracing the seasonal model. After Avengers vs. X-Men we did the first campaign, Marvel NOW, which is why #1s are based on a game of musical chairs where creators change books. Prior to that, people did books for too long, do you follow me? And we had great success with that.We've revisited that, about 18 months later, with All-New Marvel NOW, and at that point we expanded our offerings to include crazier stuff like Howard the Duck. So we've had a lot of fun with that.By "seasonal model," I'm talking about something akin to what you might see with your favorite binge-worthy TV shows, where there's a season of stories, a season that tells a larger story. It ends, but it doesn't end the story. There's more to come, and that's what we've been embracing.But about the time we started our second campaign, we already committed to doing Secret Wars, and we knew that Secret Wars was a game changer, because it gave us the opportunity of a really great launching pad for a line-wide change -- and that's what we're doing here. So, yes, you are right. That's a longwinded way of saying you're right. [Laughs]Without a doubt. There's a reason he's front and center. We had an internal conversation. How is it that Iron Man, the character we've put into our films, is arguably the most recognized superhero and widely liked by both male and female demographics? What is it about him that people are connecting with?Obviously, one, I think they boiled Iron Man down to his essence, the fact that he's such a layered, flawed individual. He's the megalomaniacal jerk with a heart of gold. We just decided that we're going to go for broke. We're committed to this, and we're signing the talent to do just the trick in terms of signaling our commitment to what we're doing.Readers are readers. Our goal is to find as many readers as possible. You don't start a book at the ground floor saying, "We're targeting this demo." The book evolves. At some point you start to understand what you're looking at, and you begin to understand what demographic that book might appeal to.But there's a difference. We don't go in saying, "Let's hit the female demographic from 18 to 34!" That's not the way it works. [Laughs] We were not looking to hit the 16 to 18 Pakistani-American demographic when we did Ms. Marvel. We were hoping that in Kamala Khan we created a character compelling enough that everybody would come. As the book began to take shape and we began to have a sense that we had a quality book, we had a mind's-eye picture in our brains about what types of readers this might appeal to -- but that's speculative. Ultimately we feel that Ms. Marvel's connected with a broad range of fans, because her story's universal. In that sense, I'd say Kamala has a lot in common with Peter Parker. In 2015, Kamala Khan is Peter Parker. That's a great thing.Yes, absolutely. All I will say about the character in the black costume is, it could be Miles; it could be someone else.Over the last few years, we've taken some chances, right? We did the female Thor, an African-American Captain America, Kamala Khan, and the all-female Avengers team The A-Force.At the beginning of the fall, we're going to get into a lot of big things.One thing I'll reveal is that we're going to be unveiling an all-new Hulk. Not Bruce Banner, but an all-new Hulk. An all-new Hulk, unlike you've seen before. A character whose silhouette and reveal is likely to inspire the same kind of reactions from a certain segment of the population who hated the new Thor, [Laughs], who thought that the world was ending, but who ultimately came around to loving the new Thor.I have every confidence that people will embrace the new Hulk and that question will be answered about Bruce and where he is. It is a natural, organic story. It's not a stunt; it's a story. The identity of this character is fascinating. Who he is, what it means to be Hulk, it's an entirely new story that I think will be inviting to new fans and interesting to a whole new segment of readers and fascinating to old fans, because this is the world in which Bruce Banner lives as well. So we'll be doing that.There will be a new Wolverine. Wolverine will be back sort of -- a new Wolverine -- and I think that is also going to be seismic when people see who it is. I think it's going to create a lot of excitement about the character and then force people to look at Wolverine through new eyes, so to speak. Looping back to where you originally started, it'll be a new Spider-Man swinging through the streets of New York. It will beg the question, "Is there room for Peter Parker? What does this mean for Peter Parker? Who is it in those tights?" There's a lot of speculation going on. I would just say read and find out what's going on: who's in those tights, where Peter is. Again, that's part of the fun of this job, is teasing you with the possibilities.[Editor's Note: After Axel dropped the bomb that there will be a new Hulk and a new Wolverine, we briefly discussed that we'd continue to talk about the All-New All-Different Marvel image and that we'd revisit Hulk and Wolverine when they get their official reveal. Stay tuned!]Yeah, let me double-check on that...[Checks...]To clarify, she'll still be in her own universe, but she'll be popping back and forth.