Done correctly, Transmetropolitan, Gotham Central, Preacher and Constantine could be really awesome stuff.
there was a short-lived CGI cartoon series earlier this decade, lasted 2 seasons. it was shown on Milkshake on Five.
And he's a blind lawyer! That alone would be a workable TV series premise on CBS, but adding the superheroics is gravy.Daredevil is perfect for TV: not just a superhero show but, TV's bread and butter, a legal drama
Yep. Looks like it never got out of development hell.I think Bill Willingham's Fables would make for an excellent series. I remember hearing something about ABC maybe developing such a show, but that was a while ago, and I haven't heard anything since.
Sound like my kind of show.I'd Nominate Garth Ennis' series Hitman. Mostly a foul-mouthed crime comedy thriller, with occasional SF/fantasy elements. Sort of... Tarantino does Twin Peaks.
I've read that The Exterminators was originally pitched as a TV series and that it has at least been optioned as one. I remember while reading it without knowing that I thought it could work as a TV series.
Two ideas that I would like to see revived:
Blade
Flash
Among the capes (though he doesn't have one), Daredevil is perfect for TV: not just a superhero show but, TV's bread and butter, a legal drama; a cast of antagonists fairly easy to render in a realistic setting (Kingpin, Bullseye (and Lady B), Elektra, the Owl, the Hand, Gladiator), and, generally, action that doesn't stretch a TV budget.
I think the problem with Gotham Central would be the same problem they had with Birds of Prey, namely people wouldn't understand why in Batman's city, with characters from the Batman comics, Batman doesn't appear more.
Constantine is one of the more unique and well-developed comic characters I've read. Setting aside all the occultism stuff and magic, he comes across as a very real character (albiet one of questionable morals)
The Walking Dead
They'll never do a Gotham Central show or anything Batman-related on the small screen in live-action form so long as they can make (hundreds of) millions off of the character on the big screen. Regardless, I still would love to see a television series version of the comic, especially with Ed Brubaker as executive producer.
Daredevil could work as a program in the vein of other legal programs (think Law and Order but with a superheroic twist) but Marvel seems invested in rebooting the character for the big screen. With The Punisher unlikely to get another chance at the multiplex, I'd give it another shot but this time as a show on HBO or Showtime. And bring back Thomas Jane. You wouldn't necessarily then have to make it a sequel to the 2004 version, just bring back Jane and in the pilot reveal he's recently relocated to New York, and continue on from there.
They'll never do a Gotham Central show or anything Batman-related on the small screen in live-action form so long as they can make (hundreds of) millions off of the character on the big screen. Regardless, I still would love to see a television series version of the comic, especially with Ed Brubaker as executive producer.
Paul O'Brien speculated that, in terms of film, Punisher doesn't really offer anything distinctive. He's a guy with guns who kills people; at the time he was imported into comics as a take-off on the film vigilante genre, he was a unique and groundbreaking presence, but he's nothing new on the screen.
Not that derivative products haven't been big hits; one imagines the poor reception for the first film had something to do with it.
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