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Drama

Drama

Columbus, OH
January 2003

NOV 10, 2010 07:01 AM

by Damon Martin

After a stunning debut that drew in over 5 million viewers last week, AMC’s new series The Walking Dead has been picked up for a second season with a 13 episode run already approved by the network. Indeed, the zombie filled show, based on Robert Kirkman’s comics of the same name, has broken cable records for viewership among adults 18-49.

Now that The Walking Dead can be called a legitimate hit, television networks will likely mine the comic book world vein, looking for more material that can be turned into TV gold. Shows like NBC’s Heroes and ABC’s No Ordinary Family have drawn upon the superhero myth, but weren’t actually based on any established work. So as The Walking Dead continues on AMC, let’s take a look at five series comic book series that have the potential to make it big in TV land.



1. Y The Last Man

The number one choice for a comic book to be brought to life on the small screen has to be Brian K. Vaughan’s work on the Vertigo title Y The Last Man. Now many people are going to immediately point to the fact that the comic has already been optioned as a movie, with Transformers star Shia LeBeouf rumored to play the lead character, Yorick Brown. But the film has been put on hold several times, and right now is in limbo, which might provide the perfect opening for TV peeps to snap this series up.

The story focuses around Brown and his pet monkey Ampersand, who, after a plague wipes out almost every male on the planet, are the last known male species on Earth. With the human species in jeopardy, Brown goes in search of his missing girlfriend. A mixture of great story and well-timed comedic moments make this the perfect scenario for television.

2. Scalped

Imagine the film Donnie Brasco set on a Native American Indian Reservation. That’s probably the simplest way to describe Jason Aaron’s work on the Vertigo title Scalped. A brilliant comic that follows the life of Dashiell Bad Horse, a full-blooded Oglala Indian, who left his home when he was 13-years old and returns as an undercover FBI agent working to bring down Chief Lincoln Red Crow, the dirty head of the tribe who works as a mob boss as well as the leader of the community.

The story’s gritty nature and realism, set in the Native American world that is rarely touched on in American popular culture, make it a great choice for TV. Tony Soprano would be in awe of some of the wicked things Chief Red Crow does, while Bad Horse is as compelling a character as written in fiction over the last 20 years. And since the work that Aaron does on this title reads best in graphic novel form, as the stories develop and reveal themselves over multiple issues, the inbuilt structure would provide some great cliffhangers to keep TV viewers hooked.

3. Planetary

Warren Ellis’ 27-issue story, which was ultimately bound as a book, took nearly a decade to complete. A sprawling epic that mirrors the work of famed comic scribes like Alan Moore, it’s a tour de force of comic genius.

The series follows a field team of agents sent out to investigate the supernatural. The action features monsters, mythological figures and super powered humans, and has a splash of pop culture thrown in on nearly every page. The team is charged with investigating what exactly led to the creation of the superhero mythos, and cross paths with classic characters like Dracula and Frankenstein during the course of their enquiries.

While super powered individuals are involved in the story telling, what really comes across in the comics is Ellis’ ability to tell the story in a way that blends noir and current culture in one seamless tale. On the small screen, if done right, Planetary
could be CSI meets X-Files. While set as a miniseries in comic book form, Ellis has done enough work to create a few seasons of television based on his masterful opus.

4. DMZ

DMZ is a series based in a future where the United States has been thrust into a second Civil War, with renegade militia rebelling against the establishment. The result is a warn-torn New York City, that, beyond saving, has become a demilitarized zone. Matty Roth, a young photojournalist, gets the chance of a lifetime to go into the DMZ to follow a group of journalists as they document everything going on inside the metropolis.

What he doesn’t expect is for his group to be assassinated in an ambush. Only Roth is spared after the carnage ensues. Instead of getting out of Dodge, Roth decides to do the responsible thing and report on the hell on Earth that has been unleashed in the Big Apple since the war started.

This metaphor-ridden political tale has very real themes that would seemingly translate beautifully into a television series – and would be especially poignant given the state of the world today.

5. The Unwritten

The series created by Mike Carey follows the adventures of Tom Taylor, who, as a young boy, was the inspiration for a series of books written by his father which are similar in style to the Harry Potter novels. Tom’s father mysteriously disappears however, and he is left to deal with the responsibility of his father legacy and the infamy of being the real person behind the beloved protagonist in the books.

What Tom doesn’t konw is that his father’s fictional work bled into the real world, and he’s soon confronted with the reality of being hunted by a secretive group of villains hell bent on finding the boy-wizard of the novels. As Tom attempts to find out what exactly his dad was up to when writing the novels based on his youth, he travels around the world to the sites where the fiction intersected with reality.

The series is a fantasy ride that crosses over multiple dimensions and brings a children’s story to life with adult themes. A very solid series in comic form, it would make for very an interesting show for television.

mydogfarted

mydogfarted

Oakland, NJ
June 2003

NOV 10, 2010 07:10 AM

Y was my real return to reading comics a couple of years ago. Great series. The thought of Shia LeDouche playing Yorick makes me want to kick puppies.

SnakePlissken

SnakePlissken

Corvallis, OR
December 2002

NOV 10, 2010 08:54 AM

Chew would be very interesting to see.

Morgan

Morgan

SUICIDEGIRL

Illinois, USA

NOV 10, 2010 09:22 AM

mydogfarted said:
Y was my real return to reading comics a couple of years ago. Great series. The thought of Shia LeDouche playing Yorick makes me want to kick puppies.



The thought of that dude doing ANYTHING makes me want to kick puppies. He's a terrible actor.

Morgan

Morgan

SUICIDEGIRL

Illinois, USA

NOV 10, 2010 09:23 AM

Speaking of BKV, I think The Runaways would make a great series in the right hands.

LimoWreck

LimoWreck

I'm lost
October 2007

NOV 10, 2010 09:40 AM

In the very least, I'd never heard of Scalped before now, and it has me itching to hit the nearest store to look for it.

Cherry2000

Cherry2000

Calgary, AB
July 2009

NOV 10, 2010 10:51 AM

I fucking love Scalped!

Drama

Drama

Columbus, OH
January 2003

NOV 10, 2010 11:18 AM

TheStarsAreBlank said:
In the very least, I'd never heard of Scalped before now, and it has me itching to hit the nearest store to look for it.



Definitely recommend that series. Pick up the trades. I don't buy single issues of Scalped just because of the way the story reads better as a trade, but I highly recommend it

Mark_plus_Beer

Mark_plus_Beer

United Kingdom
August 2005

NOV 10, 2010 02:50 PM

I would like that HBO Fables series that was talked about a couple of years ago please.

J24U

J24U

Danvers, MA
February 2006

NOV 10, 2010 11:08 PM

SnakePlissken said:
Chew would be very interesting to see.



I actually heard that Chew was being optioned by AMC.

Edit: I just double checked the internets, and Chew has indeed been optioned by AMC.

I'd provide a link, but I'm on my phone and it is an unholy pain in the ass.

Drama

Drama

Columbus, OH
January 2003

NOV 11, 2010 10:01 AM

I had actually considered writing about Chew as one of the comics, but I did the same research and saw that it's been optioned already. Although I just found out yesterday that now Y: The Last Man is also being seriously considered for a TV series. The movie has kind of floundered in Hollywood and now the TV people are interested.

I always thought Y would be a better TV series anyways.

SnakePlissken

SnakePlissken

Corvallis, OR
December 2002

NOV 11, 2010 12:26 PM

J24U said:

SnakePlissken said:
Chew would be very interesting to see.



I actually heard that Chew was being optioned by AMC.

Edit: I just double checked the internets, and Chew has indeed been optioned by AMC.

I'd provide a link, but I'm on my phone and it is an unholy pain in the ass.



Excellent! *makes monty burns sounds*

J24U

J24U

Danvers, MA
February 2006

NOV 11, 2010 08:33 PM

SnakePlissken said:

J24U said:

SnakePlissken said:
Chew would be very interesting to see.



I actually heard that Chew was being optioned by AMC.

Edit: I just double checked the internets, and Chew has indeed been optioned by AMC.

I'd provide a link, but I'm on my phone and it is an unholy pain in the ass.



Excellent! *makes monty burns sounds*



Finally we will get to watch someone other than you who eats terrible things for our entertainment.

m0nk3y80y

m0nk3y80y

Hampton, VA
October 2005

NOV 14, 2010 10:04 PM

Y The Last Man has been trying to get out in movie or TV form for a while. And I would LOVE to see DMZ as a show.

motorfirebox

motorfirebox

Pittsburgh, PA
March 2004

NOV 14, 2010 11:48 PM

J24U said:

SnakePlissken said:

J24U said:

SnakePlissken said:
Chew would be very interesting to see.



I actually heard that Chew was being optioned by AMC.

Edit: I just double checked the internets, and Chew has indeed been optioned by AMC.

I'd provide a link, but I'm on my phone and it is an unholy pain in the ass.



Excellent! *makes monty burns sounds*



Finally we will get to watch someone other than you who eats terrible things for our entertainment.


What, The Walking Dead doesn't count?

spamtwo

spamtwo

United Kingdom
April 2006

NOV 15, 2010 01:00 AM

Preacher. One because it's really good. Two because it would really annoy Catholics.

SoulRiver

SoulRiver

Columbus, OH
January 2005

NOV 15, 2010 01:48 AM

spamtwo said:
Preacher. One because it's really good. Two because it would really annoy Catholics.



I remember rumors of HBO having rights to this show, but was having serious trouble with the religious themes of the comics.

Venom

Venom

SUICIDEGIRL

California, USA

NOV 15, 2010 09:16 AM

yupp i deffinitly agree, the preacher should be tops on that list!

Venom

Venom

SUICIDEGIRL

California, USA

NOV 15, 2010 09:18 AM

apparently there is a movie in the works for the preacher... :/ not sure if that will end up coming to life.. but if it does should be... interesting

Drama

Drama

Columbus, OH
January 2003

NOV 15, 2010 04:28 PM

I remember Preacher being optioned for HBO a few years back, but the project never got off the ground. That would be a good series for sure, as would 100 Bullets.

mydogfarted

mydogfarted

Oakland, NJ
June 2003

NOV 15, 2010 04:33 PM

Drama said:
I remember Preacher being optioned for HBO a few years back, but the project never got off the ground. That would be a good series for sure, as would 100 Bullets.



I think it would kick ass if they could do it animated, like HBO did with Spawn.

Demonic1

Demonic1

Detroit, MI
November 2006

NOV 16, 2010 02:43 AM

There was a series by J. Micheal Stracynzki called Midnight Nation that would be a great series.

dholokov

dholokov

Toronto, ON
April 2003

NOV 16, 2010 10:33 AM

Morgan said:
Speaking of BKV, I think The Runaways would make a great series in the right hands.



The first 18 episodes fit the structure of a 110 minute movie so well that it would be a loss to see it drawn out into a serialized weekly TV show.

nathaninsf

nathaninsf

San Francisco, CA
March 2009

NOV 16, 2010 08:45 PM

I'm reading Y right now, hard back versions aren't all out yet... but I'm to the point of just buying the paper trades to finish it in a hurry...

Would love to see this as a mini-series on HBO or something... would hate to see it as a multi-season story arc that ditches the original.

DevilsReject

DevilsReject

Cleveland, OH
February 2007

NOV 16, 2010 09:54 PM

SoulRiver said:

spamtwo said:
Preacher. One because it's really good. Two because it would really annoy Catholics.



I remember rumors of HBO having rights to this show, but was having serious trouble with the religious themes of the comics.



Meh. Genesis wipes out a few churches and everyone gets all judgmental.

I'd love to see DMZ go all the way.

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