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This is a list of television series and films based on properties of Image Comics. This list includes live action and animated television series and films. For some of the television series and films below, Image Comics did not begin publishing the associated comic book until after the television series or film had been released.
Current Image Comics logo. This is a list of unmade and unreleased projects by Image Comics.Some of these productions were, or still are, in development hell.Projects that have not provided significant production announcements within at least a year, would be considered in development limbo until further announcements are released.
Ongoing series; based on the TV series, previously published by Dark Horse Comics. Chosen Ones #1 Aug 2019 One-shot Every Generation #1 Apr 2020 One-shot Faith #1 Feb 2021 One-shot Tea Time #1 Jun 2021 One-shot The 25th Anniversary #1 Mar 2022 One-shot Willow #1 Jul 2020 One-shot #1-16 Apr 2022 - Jul 2023 Limited Series Burning Fields #1–8
subsequent issues published by Atlas Comics: My Love: vol. 1 #1–4 Jul 1949 – Apr 1950 vol. 2 published by Marvel Comics: My Own Romance #4–18 Mar 1949 – Sep 1951 continues from My Romance subsequent issues published by Atlas Comics: My Romance #1–3 Sep 1948 – Jan 1949 continues with My Own Romance: Mystic #1–4 Mar – Sep 1951
Low is an American After the End science fiction comics series written by Rick Remender and drawn by Greg Tocchini. Low was published from July 2014 to December 2020 by Image Comics , for a total of 26 issues.
Image credits: paulnoth Paul also shared about his creative process and how he comes up with ideas for his cartoons. “I write down lots of ideas and then draw the best ones.
The Studio was the name of a small artists' loft commune formed in 1975 by four comic book artists/commercial illustrators/painters in Manhattan's Chelsea district. These artists were Barry Windsor-Smith , Jeff Jones , Michael Kaluta , and Bernie Wrightson — known colloquially as the "Fab Four". [ 1 ]
Like the preceding series, Studio 4 was subject to the BBC's wiping policy. Only two episodes survive in their transmitted form in the BBC archives. [4] One of these, Doctor Korczak and the Children, was adapted and directed by Rudolph Cartier, and was shown as part of a retrospective of Cartier's television career at the National Film Theatre in London in 1990.