Award-winning comic book creator Brian K. Vaughan has been tapped to write the television adaptation of Buck Rogers for Legendary.
Ex Machina, Brian K. Vaughan’s award-winning sci-fi comic book series which ended in 2010, is being adapted for the big screen by Legendary Pictures.
Brian K. Vaughan and Tony Harris' superhero-turned-politician comic Ex Machina is headed to the big screen -- but yeah, it's gonna need a new name. Seberg and The Aftermath writers Anna Waterhouse and Joe Shrapnelare set to write the adaptation, which will be titled The Great Machine to avoid confusion with Alex Garland's 2015 sci-fi film of the same name. The project is set up over at Legendary Entertainment with Vaughan on board to produce. The Great Machine is the latest collaboration between Legendary and the Y: The Last Man and Saga writer, who has an …
If you've enjoyed a comic book from the past 20ish years, chances are Brian K. Vaughan has had something to do with it. A multiple Eisner and Harvey Award winner, Vaughan's sterling titles include Saga, Y: The Last Man, and Runaways, which was recently turned into a Marvel/Hulu show. But around 10 years ago, roughly at the same time when Vaughan was writing for Lost, he wrote a darkly comedic high-concept feature screenplay called Roundtable. It ranked high on The Black List, an industry list of well-liked, unproduced screenplays. And now, while it's not …
Ever since I started reading Brian K. Vaughn and Cliff Chiang’s Paper Girls, I was wondering why studios weren’t rushing to adapt it. It has a terrific hook where four teenage girls who work delivering papers are mysteriously transported to the future and stuck in between warring factions of time travelers. With all the love and attention heaped upon Stranger Things, which also has 80s kids as its protagonists in a sci-fi setting, I was surprised that no one was rushing to get to Paper Girls. But it appears Amazon knows what’s up. Deadline reports that …
As part of his three-year overall deal with Legendary Entertainment, Brian K. Vaughan (Saga) is set to write the screenplay for Gundam, the studio's planned live-action adaptation of the world-famous mecha series. Co-produced with Japan's acclaimed animation and production studio Sunrise, Gundam aims to be the first time in the storied franchise's 40-year run that it will appear on the big screen in a live-action format. Just how much of the final film is actually live-action versus a computer-generated form of animation remains to be seen, as does the … The post Brian K. Vaughan Tapped to Write Legendary’s Live-Action ‘Gundam’ Movie appeared first on Collider.
Brian K. Vaughan is reportedly writing the screenplay for an upcoming live-action adaptation of the Gundam franchise.