legendary horror writer as an action hero battling the very
supernatural forces he's written about (Boom! Studios has been doing somewhat of
the same thing with their "Poe" book). The book is fun and the art is great, but
let's see if Howard has a feel for the material.
Another horror comic getting onto the big screen is James Farr's "Xombie,"
about a cop-turned-zombie. The title actually started as an online animated
series, which Farr then turned into a book from the Devil's Due imprint. Farr
developed the concept with real-life-cop turned writer Will Beall. "Star Trek"
and "Transformers" writers Alex Kurtzman and Roberto Orci will produce.
In one of the weirder stories from last week, director David Cronenberg is
apparently thinking about remaking his brilliant (and damn near untouchable)
1986 remake of "The Fly." Although there's been talk of a new version for years,
Cronenberg has distanced himself from it until now; his direction of an opera
version of the material last year in Paris and Los Angeles may have changed his
mind. I saw that opera and was, frankly, not impressed. I'd rather see this
master director work on something brand new instead of revising what many
largely consider his masterpiece. But, hey, I guess that's why I don't work at a
movie studio.
Duncan Jones' directorial debut, "Moon," was one of this year's best sci-fi
movies (and maybe even one of this year's best movies, period), so it's
heartening to see that his next project seems equally ambitious. Some
pre-production art from his new movie, "Mute," has surfaced at the Web site of
production company Liberty Films, with CHUD reporting that the movie takes place
in the same world as "Moon" and involves a mute bartender looking for his
girlfriend in a future Berlin. Another intelligent sci-fi filmmaker, "Gattaca"
writer-director Andrew Niccol, is also back with "The Cross," shooting now in
Australia with stars Orlando Bloom, John Goodman and Olga Kurylenko. The movie
follows two brothers who traverse some kind of border, although being a science
fiction film it's probably not the Mason-Dixon Line. Niccol, by the way, has
also been tapped to script and direct the film version of "Twilight" author
Stephenie Meyer's first non-teen-vampire novel, a sci-fi/horror hybrid called
"The Host."
(The Strange Adventures of H.P. Lovecraft/Image Comics)
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