You know when you find yourself in a place of boredom blindly scrolling through options to watch with nothing new or rather of interest popping up and you are not awake enough to read? That was me when I stumbled upon Gen V. Full honesty, I had seen it promoted but had not paid mind enough to note that it in fact had already been released. But shortly after clicking play, my giving it a shot Hamilton-style would pay off.

Having not seen any of the directly related series, The Boys, the only way I can think to describe Gen V is to say it is like a blended mixture of rawer complexity and Sky High with an added in ensemble’s strength like that of The Magicians – which is an overly verbalized way to say I really liked it. I do not believe it to be perfection but I do see it to be truly one of a kind with celebrated diversity via all aspects of life and personages. What I found to be its best attribute is in that Gen V tackles so many issues in a way only a TV-MA-rated series could. Whilst some experiences are presented beneath sarcasm and dark humor, others more harsh are shown transparently in sometimes possibly triggering ways (ED/SA). Gen V is a rather well-written well-paced bizarre sometimes gory sci-fi piece with a potential to accrue quite a fanbase if word-of-mouth aka social media presents it binge-worthy enough to popularize – which is to say to the world, I personally do.

**Featured image: All rights reserved to Amazon Prime Video.

Briefly: Well that didn’t take long.

After releasing just five episodes, AMC has renewed Preacher for an expanded second season.

While the series, which is the #2 new series on cable this year, will run just ten episodes during its debut season, next year we’ll be watching 13.

“‘Preacher’ is a special television program and we’re eager to share with fans the rest of this wild first season and, now, an expanded second season,” said Charlie Collier, president of AMC, SundanceTV and AMC Studios. “What Sam, Seth, Evan and the entire creative team have achieved in bringing Garth Ennis’ graphic novel to the screen is extraordinary. We look forward to more time with these unforgettable characters be it in Heaven, Hell, Texas or beyond.”

The series stars Dominic Cooper as Jesse Custer, Joseph Gilgun as Cassidy, Ruth Negga as Tulip, Lucy Griffiths as Emily, W. Earl Brown as Sheriff Root, Anatol Yusef as DeBlanc, Tom Brooke as Fiore, Derek Wilson as Donnie Schenck and Ian Colletti as Eugene/Arseface.

I’ve only had an opportunity to watch the pilot thus far (which I certainly enjoyed). Those of you who have been following Preacher weekly, are you excited that a second season is happening? Sound out below!

Briefly: Finally.

We’ve watched (and loved) the first two episodes of Preacher over the past couple of weeks. Obviously, that second episode left us with a lot of questions, one of  being whether or not the series would receive an opening title sequence.

Beginning with this Sunday’s third episode, Preacher will indeed show off an opening credits sequence, and in typical Preacher fashion it looks so gorgeous that you wouldn’t mind watching it over and over and over again.

Take a look at the video below, and be sure to let us know what you think of Preacher thus far!

Briefly: This is absolutely incredible.

Yeah, we’re all really excited for Preacher to debut this weekend. The adaptation of the Vertigo title looks spot-on, and every frame, teaser, and article that I’ve read about the series has made me absolutely ecstatic to finally check out the pilot.

Today, a new trailer for the series hit the web. This one’s a little bit different, however, as it stars Seth Rogen (one of the men who helped bring the adaptation to life) in every role.

Yep. It’s ridiculous and incredible, and Preacher debuts this Sunday night, May 22nd!

Based on the twisted and popular ‘90s comic book franchise of the same name, “Preacher,” created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, is the story of Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper) a conflicted Preacher in a small Texas town who is inhabited by a mysterious entity that allows him to develop a highly unconventional power. Jesse, his ex-girlfriend, Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) embark on a journey to, literally, find God. The Sony Pictures Television and AMC Studios co-production was developed for television by Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg (“This Is the End,” “Superbad,” “Neighbors”) and showrunner Sam Catlin (“Breaking Bad”).

Briefly: The series premiere of AMC’s Preacher is fast approaching, and the network has just debuted a hilarious new sneak peek at the series which should definitely hype you up for the upcoming adaptation. It certainly takes on a more humorous tone than the other teasers we’ve been seeing lately, and is a welcome change from the all-out action that Preacher has been showing off at times.

Based on the twisted and popular ‘90s comic book franchise of the same name, “Preacher,” created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, is the story of Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper) a conflicted Preacher in a small Texas town who is inhabited by a mysterious entity that allows him to develop a highly unconventional power. Jesse, his ex-girlfriend, Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) embark on a journey to, literally, find God. The Sony Pictures Television and AMC Studios co-production was developed for television by Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg (“This Is the End,” “Superbad,” “Neighbors”) and showrunner Sam Catlin (“Breaking Bad”). The series is set to premiere mid-2016.

Take a look at the video below, and be sure to let us know if you’re excited! Preacher hits AMC on May 22nd!

https://youtu.be/OkTyLDaT_N4

Briefly: The series premiere of AMC’s Preacher is fast approaching, and the network has just debuted a new, bad-ass sneak peek at the series which should really hype you up for the upcoming adaptation. This may just be the coolest teaser for the show yet, and every preview has been pretty stellar so far.

Based on the twisted and popular ‘90s comic book franchise of the same name, “Preacher,” created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, is the story of Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper) a conflicted Preacher in a small Texas town who is inhabited by a mysterious entity that allows him to develop a highly unconventional power. Jesse, his ex-girlfriend, Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) embark on a journey to, literally, find God. The Sony Pictures Television and AMC Studios co-production was developed for television by Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg (“This Is the End,” “Superbad,” “Neighbors”) and showrunner Sam Catlin (“Breaking Bad”). The series is set to premiere mid-2016.

Take a look at the video here, and be sure to let us know if you’re excited! Preacher hits AMC on May 22nd!

Briefly: We’re less than a month away from Preacher‘s anticipated series premiere, and the network has just debuted a new, bad-ass sneak peek at the series which should really hype you up for the upcoming adaptation.

Based on the twisted and popular ‘90s comic book franchise of the same name, “Preacher,” created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, is the story of Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper) a conflicted Preacher in a small Texas town who is inhabited by a mysterious entity that allows him to develop a highly unconventional power. Jesse, his ex-girlfriend, Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) embark on a journey to, literally, find God. The Sony Pictures Television and AMC Studios co-production was developed for television by Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg (“This Is the End,” “Superbad,” “Neighbors”) and showrunner Sam Catlin (“Breaking Bad”). The series is set to premiere mid-2016.

Take a look at the video below, and be sure to let us know if you’re excited! Preacher hits AMC on May 22nd!

Briefly: We’re just over a month away from Preacher‘s anticipated series premiere, and during last night’s season premiere of Fear the Walking Dead, the network debuted a new, bad-ass sneak peek at the series focusing on Ruth Negga’s Tulip.

Based on the twisted and popular ‘90s comic book franchise of the same name, “Preacher,” created by Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon, is the story of Jesse Custer (Dominic Cooper) a conflicted Preacher in a small Texas town who is inhabited by a mysterious entity that allows him to develop a highly unconventional power. Jesse, his ex-girlfriend, Tulip (Ruth Negga), and an Irish vampire named Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun) embark on a journey to, literally, find God. The Sony Pictures Television and AMC Studios co-production was developed for television by Seth Rogen & Evan Goldberg (“This Is the End,” “Superbad,” “Neighbors”) and showrunner Sam Catlin (“Breaking Bad”). The series is set to premiere mid-2016.

Take a look at the video below, and be sure to let us know if you’re excited! Preacher hits AMC on May 22nd!

Briefly: Following the long-rumoured addition of Dominic Cooper just a few weeks back, the cast of Seth Rogen and Evan Goldber’s Preacher adaptation has grown yet again.

This time, The Killing‘s Jamie Anne Allmand and Rectify‘s Derek Wilson have boarded the project in recurring roles.

Allman will portray Betsy Schenck, “a meek wife who appears to suffer beatings by the hand of her husband, Donny. When the Preacher checks up on her, though, she tells a different story.” Wilson will play her husband Donny Schenck, “a Civil War re-enactor and abusive thug who gets into altercations with Jesse Custer (the Preacher) but nevertheless shows up to church on Sundays.”

Preacher was one of the first comic book series that I read through in its entirety, and as such, I’m more than looking forward to the adaptation. Allmand and Wilson join Elizabeth Perkins as Vyla QuinncannonDominic Cooper as Jesse CusterRuth Negga as Tulip O’hareLucy Griffiths as a new character named Emily Woodrow, Joseph Gilgun as Cassidy and Ian Colette as Arseface.

Are you looking forward to the premiere? Be sure to let us know in the comments below!

PreacherSource: Deadline

Briefly: The cast of AMC’s Preacher has grown once more.

We’ve got Ruth Negga as Tulip O’Hare, Joseph Gilgun as Cassidy, Ian Colletti as Arseface, and now True Blood‘s Lucy Griffiths has joined the project as Emily Woodrow, a “no-nonsense single mother of three. Emily’s a waitress, the church organist, a bookkeeper and Jesse’s loyal right hand. Stoic and strong, wise beyond her years, she can’t help but have a little thing for Preacher Jesse.”

I don’t actually remember Emily from the comic series, so it could be that: a) I don’t have a very good memory, and I simply can’t recall her. b) She’s been created just for the series. c) She was a minor character that’s being expanded for the AMC version. d) Something else entirely.

Aside from Lucy’s casting, TheWrap has reported that Dominic Cooper is nearing a deal to sign on as Jesse Custer.

Are you looking forward to Preacher? What do you think of the casting so far? Are you down with Dominic Cooper as Jesse, or is there someone else you’d rather see in the role?? Sound out below!

Lucy

Briefly: Following the reveal of Ruth Negga as Tulip just yesterday, the next cast member for AMC’s Preacher adaptation has been revealed.

Again, it’s not Jesse (meaning we’ll have to keep waiting to see if those Dominic Cooper rumours were true), but is one of the DC/Vertigo title’s most interesting characters: Eugene “Areseface” Root. “Even with his horribly disfigured face and severe speech impediment, Eugene’s still the nicest kid you’ll ever meet and really looks up to Jesse. Stomach-churningly difficult to look at, Eugene’s the town’s reviled Frankenstein’s monster, but that won’t change his earnest, sweet and pure outlook on life. However, he is troubled by something terrible he’s done in the past — something he fears might have turned God himself against him.”

The character will be played by youngin’ Ian Colletti.

Arseface

Are you looking forward to Preacher? What do you think of the casting so far? Who would you like to see as Jesse? Sound out below!

Source: Deadline

Briefly: The first cast member for AMC’s highly anticipated Preacher adaptation has just been revealed, and… It’s not Dominic Cooper.

In fact, it’s not even for the role of Jesse Custer.

Instead, it’s for the role of Jesse’s ex-girlfriend Tulip, who Deadline describes as “a volatile, action-packed, sexified force of nature, a capable, unrepentant criminal with a love of fashion and ability to construct helicopter-downing bazookas out of coffee cans and corn shine who’s not afraid to steal, kill or corn cob-stab her way out of a bad situation.”

She’ll be played by Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.‘s Ruth Negga.

Now, I haven’t read Preacher since I was in my early teens, but I’m really looking forward to checking out what Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, and AMC do with the property. It’s a bit too vulgar for TV from what I remember, but the network gets away with some borderline content with The Walking Dead, so it’ll be very interesting to see how this one turns out.

Do you agree with the casting? Who do you want to see as Jesse Custer? Sound out below!

Negga

Source: Deadline

Briefly: It seems like teasing far-off projects is becoming a thing. Yesterday, director Bryan Singer teased the opening of 2016’s X-Men: Apocalypse, and today Seth Rogen has teased the start of AMC’s Preacher adaptation.

Breaking Bad producer Sam Caitlin is showrunner on the series, which is being developed by Hollywood power duo Rogen and Evan Goldberg (who are also developing a film based on Blake J. Harris’s excellent Console Wars). Back when the project was first confirmed, the pair said that “This is amazing! We’ve tried for seven years to work on Preacher and we’re so psyched AMC is finally letting us. It is our favorite comic of all time, and we’re going to do everything we can to do it right. Humperdoo!”

In case you need a refresher, “Preacher follows Reverend Jesse Custer, a tough Texas preacher who has lost his faith, has learned that God has left Heaven and abandoned His responsibilities. He finds himself the only person capable of tracking God down, demanding answers, and making Him answer for His dereliction of duty. Accompanying Jesse on his journey is his former girlfriend and a friendly vampire who seems to prefer a pint in the pub to the blood of the innocent. On his tail is one of the most iconic bad guys in print – an immortal, unstoppable killing machine named the Saint of Killers – a western lone gunman archetype whose sole purpose is to hunt and kill Jesse.”

We’re still not sure when Preacher will air, but we can’t wait. Here’s the small teaser that Rogen tweeted out today:

 

Excited?

Briefly: Back in November it was rumoured that AMC was actively working on a pilot based on Garth Ennis and Steve Dillon’s Vertigo comic book, Preacher. It was also rumoured that This Is The End duo Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg were tapped to write the pilot.

Today, AMC confirmed everything. The series is in the works, and Rogen and Goldberg are attached. Breaking Bad producer Sam Caitlin will act as show runner.

In case you need a refresher, “Preacher follows Reverend Jesse Custer, a tough Texas preacher who has lost his faith, has learned that God has left Heaven and abandoned His responsibilities. He finds himself the only person capable of tracking God down, demanding answers, and making Him answer for His dereliction of duty. Accompanying Jesse on his journey is his former girlfriend and a friendly vampire who seems to prefer a pint in the pub to the blood of the innocent. On his tail is one of the most iconic bad guys in print – an immortal, unstoppable killing machine named the Saint of Killers – a western lone gunman archetype whose sole purpose is to hunt and kill Jesse.”

Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg said, “This is amazing! We’ve tried for seven years to work on Preacher and we’re so psyched AMC is finally letting us. It is our favorite comic of all time, and we’re going to do everything we can to do it right. Humperdoo!”

Series creator Garth Ennis added “Steve Dillon and I are very happy to see Preacher being developed for TV, which seems a much more natural home for the story than a 2-hour movie. Between them, Sony TV and AMC have brought viewers two of my favorite shows with Breaking Bad and Mad Men, and it’s exactly that kind of creative commitment and courage that Preacher needs. Obviously it’s taken a while, but Ken Levin along with Neal Moritz and his team refused to give up, long after the point when I myself grew skeptical, and their unrelenting enthusiasm for the project has gotten us where we need to be. I’m particularly impressed that Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg and Sam Catlin understand Preacher fully — meaning they get it for what it is, not some vague approximation. All in all, it looks like Preacher can now be brought to TV in a way that I’d previously not have thought possible, and I very much appreciate that Steve and I have been included in the conversation in the way that we have.”

The comic book series ran from 1995-2000, and was one of the very first series that I read from start to finish (while, of course, loving every second of it). As such, I am so, so, so excited to see the property finally leave development hell, and end up on the small screen (instead of the big one).

Are you excited for the series? Who would you like to see play Jesse? Sound out below!

preacher11

Briefly: Remember all the way back in August when D.J. Caruso confirmed that he was still attached to the film adaptation of Garth Ennis’s Preacher?

That may not be the case any longer (which can only be a good thing). If BadAssDigest‘s sources are correct, the project may have found a new home at AMC… and it may actually come to exist.

The series could come from This Is The End writers Evan Goldberg and Seth Rogen, which is certainly an interesting duo for this sort of project. Shortly after the rumour went public, Rogen released a pair of very hopeful tweets:

 

 
Yep, Preacher could finally be happening. AMC won’t say a word, but we’ll be sure to share anything else that we hear.

Are you excited about the possibility of a Preacher series? Or does the hyper violent work of Garth Ennis leave a bad taste in your mouth? Do you think that AMC would be a good fit for the show? Sound out below!

preacher11

Briefly: In a just released interview with D.J. Caruso (promoting his new film, Standing Up), the director briefly touched on a project that many of us have been waiting for for a very long time: the film adaptation of Garth Ennis’s Preacher.

Caruso states “I’m still attached to Preacher and we’re wrestling with Sony because I got another movie at Sony called Invertigo, which is a big action film we’re trying to get going this summer. So Preacher got put on the back burner, but we’re still involved with Preacher and hopefully we’ll have some good news on that soon. Todd August wrote a great script. I think it’s one of those features that has to kind of go through the studio system if it’s going to be made for a certain price. So we’re kind of revisiting a way to approach making the movie in the right way.”

So basically, the movie is still happening… but not right now.

The project, of course, has been in development hell forever. The film rights originally sold in the late 1990’s, and has since gone through plenty of writers, directors, studios, and even HBO before landing where it is today. For me, the HBO series sounded like the most promising way to adapt the series, and I don’t think I’d be alone in saying that I’m not overly looking forward to Caruso’s version… if it ever comes to be, that is.

Are you still waiting for a Preacher film? Who would you want to see play Jesse? Sound out below!

PRCHR_HC1_solicit

Source: i am ROGUE

I’m not one to get particularly sentimental when it comes to creators of the media I consume, let alone executives and editors. Of course, like everyone, I have my  pantheon of persons whom I trust and whose content I relish and devour and track the moment it is in announced but they are few and far between, but even of those, I know which projects I might cling to and which I can avoid. That said, there was one imprint I trusted fully when I wanted to try something new, back when my income was more disposable than it is now; before the recession, before I was an ‘adult’. The imprint in question was Vertigo Comics, and the reason I trusted it was by and large because of Executive Editor and Senior Vice President Karen Berger.

An end of an era has come, as DC has officially announced that Berger shall be leaving Vertigo and DC Entertainment this coming March in a statement released Monday:

Karen Berger, Executive Editor & Senior Vice President of DC Entertainment’s Vertigo brand, has announced she is stepping down from her post after nearly 20 years at the helm of the award-winning literary imprint. She will remain on through March 2013 where she will be assisting in the transition to a new leadership team which includes veteran staffers whom she has mentored over the years.

As I am writing this, I am more than a little choked up. Tears are stinging my eyes, as I look at my physical comic book collection (I have gone mostly digital in the past few years) and think back on my development as a comic book reader over the last decade. From the near-universally adored Sandman and Fables, the controversial-but-profitable V for Vendetta, to the practically unknown 12-issue run of the Vinyl Underground. Berger was behind each of these titles and shaped my reading and understanding of comics in ways that the mainstream superhero titles could not. They explored heavier philosophical ideas, endured more mature themes (not just violence and sex, but the many shades of gray that gradient between our concepts of right and wrong), and they kept my interest in the graphic medium when spandexed crime fighters began to feel a little too puerile even for me. Vertigo was like an independent publisher but with the luxury of a corporation behind it. Under Berger, it took chances at every turn and refused to rest on its laurels, even when the money made sense to do so.

As a girl real reading comics, it didn’t hurt that she was a woman. I remember the first time I flipped through a volume of Sandman and saw her name in small print on the inside cover. I must have been fifteen or so  when I ran to my mother enthusiastically and said, “Look! We can work in comics. She did it, so can I!” Even though I am writing this article in a feature called “Heroine Addict,” which is all about women and their place, role, and future in geek culture and genre fiction, I still forget how much it means to see other women succeeding and paving the way for future female creatives and executives. Visibility matters.

It only helped that she managed such a strong and stable history of amazing titles and creators filter through during her tenure. American Virgin, TransmetropolitanGarth Ennis, Grant Morrison. Household names now, but then? What would life be like if Karen Berger hadn’t been there? Certainly some of the greats would have made it through, but in a world where George R. R. Martin turned down Neil Gaiman to write for an anthology because he was too unknown, one cannot truly surmise how greatly she has impacted us as individuals, let alone as a community. I do not want to spend too much time on hypotheticals, but one thing is certain: for the past decade when I picked up a number one of a new title or bought a trade by an author with whom I was not yet familiar, if it had the Vertigo logo on it, I knew I was in for some solid storytelling, brilliant ideas, and great characters.

We do not know yet where Berger plans to go from Vertigo. She simply said that she was in need of a “career change,” and in light of DC pulling the plug on Hellblazer and other Vertigo staples coming to an end, one can only speculate that even with Fables, its spin-offs continuing their runs, and Sandman returning in March, this very well appears to be Vertigo’s twilight. Lucky, for me, there is still a back catalog of work that was produced under her tenure that I have yet to complete (namely Y: The Last Man and Scalped), and a few I couldn’t quite get behind but may revisit (i.e., Preacher—I loved the ideas, but sometimes the gore was just too gruesome for me to get past). At least for now, there is more to be read and, of course, her legacy will remain in print thanks to trades and digital publishing. But what of the future—for both Vertigo and Berger? We will have to wait and see: one with morbid curiosity, the other with hope.

The quite insane Crossed is going to be coming to life and may also be hitting the big screen. Comic Book Resources report that Garth Ennis, the man behind the series, will be writing and directing a series of live-action Crossed webisodes with a plan is to follow these up with a  Crossed feature film. The film will also written and directed by Ennis and the plan is to begin filming in the spring, with a debut for the webisodes later on next year. Ennis said that the webisodes will serves as “little vignettes” into the Crossed world.

Unfamiliar with the series? Crossed is grim. It’s not quite a zombie story but it’s also not quite a post-apocalyptic tale.

In the blink of an eye, humanity is lost, and the Crossed are upon us. Men, women, and children alike fall victim to the mystery infection that makes killers out of parents and rapists out of lovers. Ruthless, berserk, and evil beyond measure, these cackling demons spread their plague across the Earth, bringing humanity to near-extinction. Now, a small band of survivors make their cautious way across a deserted America, existing in a state of constant terror. The only thing they have in common is their determination to survive… but in this frightening new world, survival has a cost all its own. How far will they go to stay alive, and can they do so without become monsters themselves?

The DC/Vertigo Comics series that was created by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon has been stuck in a development limbo for quite some time now. Sam Mendes, Rachel Talalay, and Mark Steven Johnson have all taken cracks at adapting the comic. It’s seen attempts at bringing it both to the big and small screens in it’s time. The latest names attached to the project are screenwriter John August (Frankenweenie) and director D.J. Caruso (Disturbia).

Screenwriter August, who is probably best known for his work on Charlie’s Angels and Big Fish, recently mentioned Preacher and commented that it was currently “frozen in 12-point Courier” and described it’s development as “gestating.”

“I don’t know if the birth is going to be anytime soon. That’s the frustration about screenwriting. You can spend a lot of time on a project and sometimes it happens and sometimes it doesn’t happen. The luxury of working on ‘Frankenweenie’ is that I came on and they said, ‘We’re going to make this movie. You wrote the script and I shoot the script,’ and it’s done. That’s remarkable.

You look for filmmakers who will see it and make it. My favorite genre of movies are movies that get made.”

And what about the director attached to the project? Back in 2011 D.J. Caruso tweeted that he was going to direct Preacher. He even went on to say a month later that he’d like to cast Chris Pine as Jesse Custer, Alex Pettyfer as the Saint Of Killers, and Shia LaBeouf as Arseface. But just a year, Caruso announced that his next project would not be Preacher. Instead he would be directing the sci-fi thriller, Invertigo. Will this film ever see the light of day? It honestly doesn’t sound like it.

Source: Front Row Features