Friday, January 21, 2011

Writer Hired To Pen Marvel's 'Black Panther' Film

black panter
After several years of "we do, but now we do not" nonsense empty, it looks like Marvel Studios will finally commit to making films based on characters that are not household names. The Hollywood Reporter says the company has hired Mark Bailey, a worker who contributed documentaries at the 2007 unforgettable movie Ghosts of Abu Ghraib on the screen, pen Black Panther, the studio adaptation to long- in-the development of African warrior prince hidden.

Black Panther first appeared in the pages of Fantastic Four comic in 1966 and is considered the first black hero in mainstream comic books. Coming from a fictional African country called Wakanda, T'Challa Panther is really the prince of the people and the natural warrior who fights to defend his people and the rich deposits found in the soil of his kingdom Vibranium (Vibranium, an imaginary metal which is a foreign material to create a shield of Captain America is incomprehensible). The film version was in development at Columbia Pictures in early 1990 and the Blade star Wesley Snipes on board the Star Indiana Jones-style adventures.

After numerous companies to offer human nature, which rose from Artisan Entertainment for Lions Gate and finally back at Marvel, the studio sat on the property, because it introduces the heroes as Iron Man and The Incredible Hulk returns to the screen. Now, with a strong corporate parent Disney, it appears that the company wants to put the lesser-known figures such as Panther to the silver screen. While Bailey may seem a strange choice for a movie script like this, his involvement suggests a focus on actual events that make Africa and its people against the exploitation of its natural resources to the tyranny of the lords influence of war on his people. Performed carefully, this could be one of the grittiest comic adaptations ever.

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