ZOMBIE TURNS ON "BLACKLIGHT"
Zombie Studios has reached an agreement with Fox Atomic, a unit of Fox Filmed Entertainment, and production company Union Entertainment to develop its military action franchise "Blacklight" as a feature film, comic book series and video game. The announcement was made jointly by Zombie CEO Mark Long, Fox Atomic President Debbie Liebling, and Union President Richard Leibowitz.
An original property created by Zombie Studios, "Blacklight" is a covert military action epic set twenty-five years in the future. The three companies will work together on a movie and comic book series to be produced by Fox Atomic and a multi-platform video game that will be produced by Zombie.
Both the film and the video game will be written by Jason Dean Hall, a veteran writer whose latest film, SPREAD, sold at Sundance to Summit. He is also writing projects for Dreamworks and Universal.
"'We are excited by the huge potential "Backlight" has to succeed across multiple platforms -- theatrical features, comics books, and video games," said Liebling, "it offers us a remarkable franchise opportunity for film."
"From the start, I have envisioned 'Blacklight' as a story that spans all of the forms of media I enjoy most," stated Long. "It's an ambitious project and I've been fortunate to find partners at Fox Atomic and Union who share that same vision. We are cooperating on the comic, game and movie at levels that are unprecedented in the industry."
"Blacklight plays to Union's strengths as a film and game production company, allowing us to help bring a great property to consumers in both media," added Leibowitz, a producer on the project.
Richard Leibowitz will produce and Dmitri Johnson and Dan Jevons will executive produce for Union. Mark Long, in addition to developing the video game, will serve as an executive producer on the feature. Zak Kadison and R. Eric Lieb will oversee for Atomic.
The "Blacklight" film, video game, and comics will feature the same characters and high caliber military action, but with unique, intersecting storylines that complement each other. No release dates for any of the properties have yet been announced.
Powered by Unreal Engine 3, the title is in development for PC, PlayStation 3 and Xbox 360. It will sport online jump-in, jump-out co-op for up to four players. Furthermore, players will be able to assume control of any computer-controlled squad mate.
"That sounds pretty simple, but if you think about the AI required to be able to instantaneously jump out of a guy and [have them do] anything, have them not running into a wall...it took a lot of work to get there," said Long.
The "science fact" future of Blacklight includes a multi-spectrum "turtle helmet," which players can engage to see opponents through walls and share that data with other team mates. However, that mechanic is not without its drawbacks.
As Long puts it, there's a rock-paper-scissors dynamic at work. Should an opponent engage camouflage and stay still, they'll be invisible to the visor, but not plain sight. Furthermore, enemies can throw up a decoy only visible on the infrared spectrum.
Thus, players will need to cooperate with each other in order to be effective.
The video game, comic book and feature film will each tell a self-contained story that complements, but does not retell the events of the others. The game and movie are set twenty-five years in the future, while the comics will serve as a prequel and sequel.
Fox Atomic and Union Entertainment are helping Zombie turn the franchise into a live-action movie. Jason Dean Hall, who penned a Grand Theft Auto screenplay regarded as one of last year's best unproduced efforts, will write the game and movie.
"I think the best example I can point to is Dead Space. I thought EA did a brilliant job of doing exactly what we want to do, and that's telling a story across individual mediums so that they complement one another, and each one is self-contained," explained Long.
"That project was marketing-centric...We're coming at it from a slightly different perspective, in that the budget will be larger," he added, noting that each effort will have its own budget--"a real movie budget, a real game budget, and a real comic budget."
None of the projects have a release date yet, though Long expects the comic to hit first.
However, it's not the first time that Zombie has tackled a cross-medium franchise.
While Blacklight is receiving all the attention today, Long credited Shrapnel, which Zombie created before Blacklight, as leading the effort and helping him understand the possibilities and freedom that multiple mediums can provide.
The first issue of the Shrapnel comic series hit retailers earlier this year, and a game is on the way. In all, Zombie plans for a trilogy of Shrapnel-branded graphic novels.
Set in a far-flung future, Shrapnel follows the exploits of an ex-soldier as she tries to defend Venus, the last free colony in the solar system, from Alliance invasion. Nick Sagan, son of famed astronomer Carl Sagan, is writing the comic.
Long explained that a comic book frees you from the budget and technical constraints that, say, blowing up a planet in a video game might entail. You just draw a picture.
"I wouldn't say soon, but you definitely will see a video game based on [Shrapnel]," he teased. "All I can about Shrapnel, look for a big announcement from us at the San Diego Comic Con."