Tag: todd-mcfarlane

  • ‘Venom’ Animated Movie in the Works at Sony

    (Left) Director Adam Stein and Director Zach Lipovsky in New Line Cinema’s 'Final Destination Bloodlines,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Eric Milner. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Right) Venom in 1994's 'Spider-Man: The Animated Series'. Photo: Marvel Entertainment Group
    (Left) Director Adam Stein and Director Zach Lipovsky in New Line Cinema’s ‘Final Destination Bloodlines,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Eric Milner. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved. (Right) Venom in 1994’s ‘Spider-Man: The Animated Series’. Photo: Marvel Entertainment Group

    Preview:

    • ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ filmmakers Zach Lipovsky and Adam B. Stein will make a ‘Venom’ animated movie.
    • Tom Hardy is aboard to produce.
    • The movie is at an early stage.

    Having managed to get a movie trilogy out of slavering, ravenous Spider-Man character Venom, Sony is looking to keep the franchise alive in the animated realm.

    Per The Hollywood Reporter, the studio has hired ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines’ filmmakers Zach Lipovsky and Adam B. Stein to develop an animated take on the character.

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    The directors have become an in-demand duo since ‘Bloodlines’ helped to shock the horror movie series back to life with $315 million in box office receipts.

    Related Article: Movie Review: ‘Venom: The Last Dance’

    What’s the story of Venom?

    Venom, created by writer Bill Michelinie and artist Todd McFarlane, was famously introduced as a villain in 1988’s ‘Amazing Spider-Man’ No. 300, and quickly became a fan-favorite as well as one of his arch-nemeses. He got his first solo comic in 1993.

    The character then made his big-screen debut in Sam Raimi’s ‘Spider-Man 3’, played by Topher Grace.

    Sony produced three ‘Venom’ movies starring Tom Hardy as down-on-his-luck journalist Eddie Brock, who bonds with the symbiote. The eponymous first arrived in 2018, followed by sequels ‘Venom: Let There Be Carnage’ in 2021 and 2024’s ‘Venom: The Last Dance.’

    Hardy is aboard the new movie as a producer alongside live-action team Amy Pascal, Avi Arad and Matt Tolmach, alongside Kelly Marcel, who wrote on all three of the movies and directed ‘The Last Dance.’

    What will the new movie be about?

    (L to R) Director Adam Stein and Director Zach Lipovsky in New Line Cinema’s 'Final Destination Bloodlines,' a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Eric Milner. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.
    (L to R) Director Adam Stein and Director Zach Lipovsky in New Line Cinema’s ‘Final Destination Bloodlines,’ a Warner Bros. Pictures release. Photo Credit: Eric Milner. Copyright: © 2025 Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. All Rights Reserved.

    There’s no word on a plot for the animated movie at this early stage –– Sony is in the process of opening a writers’ room to develop ideas, run by Lipovsky and Stein.

    The pair are also at work with Chris Columbus on a new ‘Gremlins’ movie. They are also developing to direct the original thriller ‘Long Lost’, described as ‘What Lies Beneath’ meets ‘Rosemary’s Baby’ and set up at Universal with Amblin Entertainment producing.

    When will the new ‘Venom’ movie be on screens?

    Given the development stage, Sony has yet to confirm a release date for the potential movie.

    Venom in Columbia Pictures 'Venom: The Last Dance'. Photo: Sony Pictures.
    Venom in Columbia Pictures ‘Venom: The Last Dance’. Photo: Sony Pictures.

    List of Movies Featuring Venom:

    Buy ‘Venom’ Movies on Amazon

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  • ‘Joker’ and ‘Falcon and Winter Soldier’ Writers Board ‘Spawn’

    Todd McFarlane's Spawn.
    Todd McFarlane’s Spawn. Photo Courtesy of Todd McFarlane’s Facebook page.

    The development process for the new movie based on Todd McFarlane’s Spawn character has been pretty hellish so far.

    Created in 1992 for Image Comics, the character is a former black-ops agent who makes a deal with a demon after being betrayed and killed. The demon allows him to return to Earth, but when he returns, five years have passed, his wife has moved on, and he roams Earth as a disfigured spawn of hell.

    Spawn – AKA Al Simmons – has been the subject of a successful animated series and a movie in 1997 that didn’t score with critics or audiences and barely made its money back.

    At the San Diego Comic-Con in 2017, McFarlane confirmed that he’d partnered with the Blumhouse team to make an R-rated new movie adaptation.

    Yet ever since then, it has been a stream of announcements countered with delays, one-step-forward-two-steps-back momentum and no sign of bigger studio backing.

    Jamie Foxx and Jeremy Renner were cast in the lead role of Al Simmons and Twitch Williams, but elsewhere there was talk of endless script re-writes and McFarlane getting frustrated with the process.

    Jamie Foxx as Bud Jablonski in 'Day Shift.'
    Jamie Foxx as Bud Jablonski in ‘Day Shift.’ Photo: Parrish Lewid/Netflix.

    Now, in news from The Hollywood Reporter, the script is being handed over to a new group. ‘Joker’s co-writer Scott Silver, ‘The Falcon and the Winter Soldier’s Malcolm Spellman and rising writer Matt Mixon are going to share the job of cranking out fresh drafts.

    And according to McFarlane – who for a long time has been saying that he’ll direct – is appearing ready to step back and let others take over for that gig as well. “If we’ve got an A-list actor, A-list producers, A-list writers, then do you want to shoot for A-list directors, A-list cinematographers?” McFarlane says. “The answer is, ‘of course.’ Let’s keep the momentum going.”

    For Spellman, at least, this is a dream job. “I grew up in Berkeley, which is a comic book city. Todd McFarlane’s ‘Spawn’ character was always one of my favorites — a Black superhero that was no bullshit, he was cool and dealt with modern issues,” he says in a statement. “Myself, Matt Mixon, and Scott Silver are pledged to honoring what Todd started and what ‘Spawn’ is at its core, delivering something that’s relevant and edgy and unlike any other superhero movie out there.”

    Apparently, McFarlane was surprised he managed to secure Silver and everyone else. “It was a complete hail Mary,” he admits. Sometimes timing is everything.”

    And he appears hopeful that, while he’d been looking at having to shoot this thing for lower budget, the addition of well-known writers might help any potential studio open its wallet and offer a bigger fund to draw from.

    Right now, Foxx (who has been a vocal supporter of the new movie) remains attached to star, but Renner’s status is a little less clear. It’s a waiting game as to whether this latest step helps get the new film made at last.

    Todd McFarlane's Spawn.
    Todd McFarlane’s Spawn. Photo Courtesy of Todd McFarlane’s Facebook page.
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