Comic book aficionado and screenwriter/director David Goyer talked to SuperHeroHype! on the press junket for his film The Unborn starring Gary Oldman. He updated on the progress of the proposed Magneto spin-off film in which he is attached to direct and even updated on the Blade franchise.
Regarding Magneto:
Magneto chronicles the early days of Erik Lensherr and his first encounters with Charles Xavier. I am assuming if X-Men Origins: Wolverine is a hit this coming May, expect Magneto to be greenlit and in theaters no later than summer 2010.
Goyer also spoke about the Blade franchise, which technically ended with the short-lived Blade: The Series on Spike TV.
What he said regarding the Blade character:
It seems like Goyer is speculating on whether or not he'd even be in consideration for the creative position of any future Blade incarnation. However it would make sense that whoever owns the rights to Blade (I believe it was New Line before it disbanded) would want to continue the character, or reboot the character, now since Wesley Snipes is in legal trouble and now perhaps not so viable as an actor.
I think after three films and one short-lived television series, they've explored all that's left to be explored in the character, unless they went back to the comics and imagined him in the sort of Victorian image that he was birthed as.
Thoughts?
Regarding Magneto:
"I think they like the script and they're just waiting to see what happens with Wolverine," Goyer told us. "I don't think they would consider moving forward until the movie comes out."
Magneto chronicles the early days of Erik Lensherr and his first encounters with Charles Xavier. I am assuming if X-Men Origins: Wolverine is a hit this coming May, expect Magneto to be greenlit and in theaters no later than summer 2010.
Goyer also spoke about the Blade franchise, which technically ended with the short-lived Blade: The Series on Spike TV.
What he said regarding the Blade character:
"I heard rumors that they may want to start from scratch with a new person playing Blade. It's funny because I thought about how I never wanted to do a vampire film ever again because I'm sick of it. But I was reading the Tomb of Dracula Omnibus and I hadn't read them in a long time and I thought it might be cool to do another vampire movie at some point."
It seems like Goyer is speculating on whether or not he'd even be in consideration for the creative position of any future Blade incarnation. However it would make sense that whoever owns the rights to Blade (I believe it was New Line before it disbanded) would want to continue the character, or reboot the character, now since Wesley Snipes is in legal trouble and now perhaps not so viable as an actor.
I think after three films and one short-lived television series, they've explored all that's left to be explored in the character, unless they went back to the comics and imagined him in the sort of Victorian image that he was birthed as.
Thoughts?