Und weil ich grad Lust hab... gucken wir mal was Wikipedia zu potenziell kommenden (für mich interessanten) Comicverfilmungen sagt. Keine Garantie (!), dass da irgendwas von wirklich feststeht.

Zitat Zitat von Fathom
On March 3, 2009, Variety magazine announced that a movie adaptation of Fathom was under development by Fox Atomic with Megan Fox signed up to play the role of Aspen Matthews and as a producer on the film. It has also been announced that English actor Matthew Tate will portray Chance Calloway. Screenwriter and video game creator Jordan Mechner will write the script. Michael Turner, who created the series, is to be credited as the film's Executive Producer.[2]
Hm... let's face it, sie passt wahrscheinlich schon in die Rolle, auch wenn ich in Aspen immer etwas mehr (bzw. Meer) gesehen habe als nur den Turner-Fick-mich-Blick. Bin gespannt. So lange in dem Film die Atmo stimmt, ist der Rest egal.

Zitat Zitat von Witchblade
An upcoming American superhero film based on the series is currently in development.[1][2] The film will be directed by Michael Rymer, who directed the 2002 film Queen of the Damned and various episodes of Battlestar Galactica, and written by Everett De Roche (who subsequently left the project because of creative differences with Marc Silvestri).[13][14] The film is one of two being produced and financed back-to-back by Platinum Studios, IDG Films, and Relativity Media. The film will be produced by Arclight's Gary Hamilton and Nigel Odell, Platinum Studios' Scott Mitchell Rosenberg, and Steve Squillante of Havenwood Media. Top Cow's Marc Silvestri and Matt Hawkins will be executive producers with Platinum Studios' Rich Marincic and Greenberg Group's Randy Greenberg. The film's website and teaser poster were released in May 2008.[1]
Nix neues hier.

Zitat Zitat von Sandman
Film adaptations
Throughout the late 1990s, a movie adaptation of the comic was periodically planned by Warner Bros., parent company of DC Comics. Roger Avary was originally attached to direct after the success of Pulp Fiction, collaborating with Pirates of the Caribbean screenwriters Ted Elliott and Terry Rossio in 1996 on a revision of their first script draft, which merged the Preludes and Nocturnes storyline with that of The Doll's House. Avary intended the film to be in part visually inspired by animator Jan Švankmajer's work. Avary was fired after disagreements over the creative direction with executive producer Jon Peters, best known for Batman and Superman Lives. It was due to their meeting on the Sandman movie project that Avary and Gaiman collaborated one year later on the script for Beowulf. The project carried on through several more writers and scripts. A later draft by William Farmer, reviewed on the Internet at Ain't It Cool News,[22] was met with scorn from fans. Gaiman called the last screenplay that Warner Brothers would send him "...not only the worst Sandman script I've ever seen, but quite easily the worst script I've ever read."[23] Gaiman also has said that his dissatisfaction with how his characters were being treated had dissuaded him from writing any more stories involving the Endless, although he has since written Endless Nights. By 2001 the project had become stranded in development hell. In a Q&A panel at Comic-Con 2007, Gaiman remarked: "I'd rather see no Sandman movie made than a bad Sandman movie. But I feel like the time for a Sandman movie is coming soon. We need someone who has the same obsession with the source material as Peter Jackson had with Lord of the Rings or Sam Raimi had with Spider-Man."[24]

TV Series
Due to the prolonged development period of the film, in 2010 DC Entertainment shifted focus on to developing a TV series adaptation. Film director James Mangold pitched a series concept to cable channel HBO, whilst consulting with Gaiman himself on an unofficial basis, but this proved to be unsuccessful. It was reported in September 2010 that Warner Bros. Television were licencing the rights to produce a TV series, and that Supernatural creator Eric Kripke was their preferred candidate to adapt the saga.[25]
Blablabla, wir wollten den Wikiartikel füllen, haben aber eigentlich keine Ahnung. Mal sehen, ne Serie wäre bei dem Quellenmaterial auch das einzig sinnvolle.

Zitat Zitat von Death: The Hight Cost of Living
Death and Me is a film in development based upon Death: The High Cost of Living. The concept is that, once every century, the embodiment of Death is incarnated as a mortal woman for a single day to experience what she takes from others. Gaiman wrote the screenplay himself, and will also be directing. Gaiman made his directorial debut in 2003 with A Short Film About John Bolton. Guillermo del Toro will serve as executive producer. Gaiman spent several days on the set of del Toro's film Hellboy II: The Golden Army to get pointers on how to direct.[7]

Other than two additional scenes at the beginning (set in a Tibetan monastery and Alaska), and a move from New York City to London for the main setting, the screenplay is relatively unchanged from the comic script.

After being in development hell for several years, work on it was renewed in 2007, but quickly derailed again due to the WGA strikes.[8] According to Gaiman, the studio "may still be New Line, but Warner Independent is keen on it too." Shia LaBeouf may have a role in the film, possibly as the lead character Sexton, due to his role in helping the movie come about.[9]

On October 14, 2010 it was reported in an interview with Neil Gaiman that as of June or July, DC and Warner Bros. had closed down work on the film and it is unclear if they will start it back up again.[10]
Hm. Ist wahrscheinlich das einfachere Script als Sandman.