Post by Deleted on Jan 7, 2022 22:10:13 GMT -5
Looks like Ed Brubaker is returning to Batman, as head writer and co-executive producer on Bruce Timm's new Batman animated series Batman: The Caped Crusader.
Article here
Timm is the show runner and (now) co-executive producer for the show. JJ Abrams and Matt Reeves are also involved in the project as executive producers. It is not a sequel to Batman: The Animated Series but a new exloration of the Batman mythos. I don't currently have HBO Max and have been reluctant to get it, but this could be the thing that puts me over the edge.
from the article...
the bolded part is what really excites me.
-M
Article here
Timm is the show runner and (now) co-executive producer for the show. JJ Abrams and Matt Reeves are also involved in the project as executive producers. It is not a sequel to Batman: The Animated Series but a new exloration of the Batman mythos. I don't currently have HBO Max and have been reluctant to get it, but this could be the thing that puts me over the edge.
from the article...
Back in May 2021, animation fans learned that Bruce Timm, J.J. Abrams, and Matt Reeves (The Batman) were teaming with HBO Max and Cartoon Network to expand Batman's animated universe with the new series Batman: Caped Crusader. Executive produced by showrunner Timm, as well as Abrams and Reeves, co-executive produced by James Tucker, and produced by Warner Bros. Animation (WBA), Bad Robot Productions, and 6th & Idaho, the series is a reimagining of The Dark Knight's mythology- and marks Timm's return to Batman in animated series form (because who can forget his Emmy Award-winning run with Batman: The Animated Series?). Nearly three decades later, Timm returns as he, Abrams, and Reeves utilize state-of-the-art animation techniques and technologies to "reinvent Batman and his iconic rogue's gallery with sophisticated storytelling, nuanced characters and intense action sequences all set in a visually striking world." Now, THR is reporting exclusively that comics author Ed Brubaker (Catwoman, Gotham Central, Captain America) has joined the creative team as head writer & executive producer, and is currently running the writers' room with Timm and acting "as Timm's right hand.
"Here's something few people know, but the original Batman: The Animated Series was one of the things that made me want to write superhero comics in general, and Batman in particular," said Brubaker in a statement to THR. "If not for what Bruce Timm and all the talented writers and artists did with that show, things like my revamp of Catwoman with Darwyn Cooke (who worked on BTAS) and Gotham Central with Greg Rucka and Michael Lark, would never have happened. So when Bruce Timm offered me the chance to come work on this new reimagining of Batman with him, James Tucker, J.J. Abrams and Matt Reeves, I jumped at it. Their vision for the show, with a slightly more pulpy take on the character, and a new way of looking at the world of Gotham, set in the past but viewed through a modern lens really sold me, and so far every part of it has been a blast to work on. I can't wait until the rest of the world can see what we've been building the last few months in the writers room. All I can say is, it's not what anyone is expecting … but in a good way."
"Here's something few people know, but the original Batman: The Animated Series was one of the things that made me want to write superhero comics in general, and Batman in particular," said Brubaker in a statement to THR. "If not for what Bruce Timm and all the talented writers and artists did with that show, things like my revamp of Catwoman with Darwyn Cooke (who worked on BTAS) and Gotham Central with Greg Rucka and Michael Lark, would never have happened. So when Bruce Timm offered me the chance to come work on this new reimagining of Batman with him, James Tucker, J.J. Abrams and Matt Reeves, I jumped at it. Their vision for the show, with a slightly more pulpy take on the character, and a new way of looking at the world of Gotham, set in the past but viewed through a modern lens really sold me, and so far every part of it has been a blast to work on. I can't wait until the rest of the world can see what we've been building the last few months in the writers room. All I can say is, it's not what anyone is expecting … but in a good way."
the bolded part is what really excites me.
-M