Frank Darabont to Direct The Walking Dead?

the walking dead

Frank Darabont, the writer/director of such films as The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile and The Mist, is in final talks to write and direct a small screen adaptation of the Image Comics series The Walking Dead. Darabont pitched the concept to AMC and several other outlets, with Gale Anne Hurd, who is attached to exec produce. The black and white comic book series was created by writer Robert Kirkman and artist Tony Moore in 2003, and is considered to be the definitive zombie graphic novel ever created.

The ongoing series now has over 60 issues, which have been collected in 10 trade paperbacks (but month’s end). You can pick up the first tradepaperback on Amazon for around $10. Brad Ladlee from Examiner said that The Walking Dead “realistically depicts the aftermath of a zombie apocalypse” and is “[m]ore than just a scary story about zombies, it is about how people would physically and mentally handle the dead rising and survive the fall of modern society.”

The story follows a group of people, led by a small-town Kentucky Police Officer named Rick Grimes, trying to survive in a world overrun by zombies. But unlike most zombie films, the books are more character centric. AMC’s senior vp of programing Joel Stillverman says that the tv show will stay faithful to the graphic novels.

“This is not about zombies popping out of closets,” Stillerman told Variety. “This is a story about survival, and the dynamics of what happens when a group is forced to survive under these circumstances. The world is portrayed in a smart, sophisticated way.”

And if you think about it, who better to do a series set in a character survival piece set in a horrific world than Frank Darabont? I have the super duper massive trade paperback which collects the first 8 volumes of the series, but have been unable to find time to begin reading it. That said, I’ve had many conversations in the past with my comic geek friends who have read the series. Most of them agreed that there would be no way to turn this into a film, and that it would work much better as a television series or cable miniseries.

source: Variety

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  • Scrooge McDuck
    I like what I hear.
  • dylan
    you cant do this on amc you would have to do this on hbo or showtime where there is no limits cable would block everything this is a horror violent graphic comic book with a lot of hatchets to the face
  • Moongoose
    Oh god yes! I am so for either a miniseries based directly on the books or a series written by Robert Kirkman, but featuring a completely different set of characters and storyline.
  • HBO needs to pick this up for a 9 hour - 11 hour mini-series.. HBO is about innovation right? they aren't TV they are HBO! how about getting a mini-series? have we ever seen a zombie mini-series? i don't recall one.

    The book is perfect for a mini-series, one film wouldn't do this justice even if its a 4 hour film (or 4 part movie on X channel) it needs atleast 8-9 episodes, would be perfect if it could get 10-11 and on HBO you get that extra 10 minutes (as where basic cable in an hour show you get 40-42 sometimes 45 minute shows as where hbo gives you 50-55 minute shows, sometimes up to 58)
  • joejones
    Sorry, but I'm not much for advocating dead people that are alive...
  • Paco
    Kirkman has stated since the beginning that he felt The Walking Dead was a comic only, and had no desire to change it to other mediums because he felt that it would not do the idea justice. That said, I am incredibly excited for this project and hope that it comes to fruition
  • flashzh
    Its almost like I woke today and my dreams were answered. Thank you.
  • darthjoe
    This needs to be an HBO or SHO series...
  • Agony
    Some of you people don't seem to know the first thing about good writing. The Walking Dead is some of the best writing there is in the comic world. It's about CHARACTERS. The zombies and action are incidental. As Kirkman says in his intro to the first trade, good zombie stories are not about zombies--they're about the human survivors. The shocking moments that happen don't mean anything if you're not invested in the characters. And the writing is good enough that when something happens to these characters, you feel it. It sounds like Darabont gets it--let's hope AMC does as well.
  • mpezz
    I'm sorry, but the writing I'm seeing so far in The Walking Dead is not good. At all. Now granted, I'm only halfway through the first volume and I'm willing to give it a chance, but I'm not finding anything to like about it so far.

    I get that the best zombie stories are about the human survives, but I'm not finding any full-blooded humans in this thing so far. Rick is a non-entity, one of the most boring protagonists I've ever seen. Each individual is written simply to move the story from one point to the next, nothing seems organic at all. Not to mention, the dialogue is astoundingly dumb.

    Again, I'm giving the series a chance and I really hope I end up falling in love with it as most of you seem to have. But so far it's been a less than mediocre experience.
  • Agony
    By the end of the first volume, if you don't empathize with the characters and see how heartbreaking the ending is, then I can't help you. Do the characters speak how I would speak? No, but not everyone that survives should sound like one person--that's part of what makes it decent writing. It seems realistic to me, even if people say dumb things. The dialogue would probably not stick out so much to you if you heard it delivered by competent actors. Certain characters are developed, but yes others are there to move the story forward--moving the story forward is another aspect of good writing. Like Chekov said, if you put a gun in scene one, someone better shoot it in scene three.

    And there is plenty of violence and action later, and some awful things happen to everyone. To me, it's as bleak and hopeful (if that makes sense) as McCarthy's The Road. I don't want to oversell it and have you react negatively because of the praise it gets, but bear with it. If it doesn't strike a chord with you, well, different strokes I guess.
  • Steelo
    A miniseries WOULD do it more justice, but yeah. Darabont is a good choice
  • Damn! I wanted to make this movie! haha, i even had a script and everything! Darabont is gonna kick some ass! I thought it'd be cool as a film trilogy.. once the series ended. The books are amazing. I hope it'll be black and white!
  • Yeah, love this comic.
  • mpezz
    I'm about halfway through "Days Gone By" and so far it's absolutely terrible. Does the series get better? Because if it doesn't then those of you that are ecstatic over The Walking Dead have really shitty taste.
  • So you read 3 issues of a 60+ issue series and that is your barometer? Do you judge a movie the same way when the opening credits finish?

    Anyway, it does start of as standard zombie fare, but keep in mind you haven't met practically any of the characters so far except Rick. The first 2 trades I'd say are more typical action-oriented for the most part. It gets interesting in 3-4, 5-6 are pretty quiet, 7 is the quiet before the storm and 8 is one of the most powerful things I've ever read.
  • yup, to any future readers of this comic while mpezz is probably exaggerating you have to be patient til the payoff in issue 8 thats when the comic gets addictive.
  • mpezz
    Glad to hear it gets better, because if I had to suffer through 60+ issues of writing this terrible I'd probably just give up on reading.

    Thanks.
  • needs to be a show on HBO really badly.
  • graham7x
    john hamm or thomas jane for grimes
  • Holy sweet baby Jesus! This is some of the best news I've heard in a while. TWD is one of the best ongoing comic series out there, period, in any genre. If true to the series, an ongoing tv show would rock my world. If you haven't read the series you are really missing out.
  • David Ben
    This would be awesome. TWD is one of the best on-going comics. Wouldnt want to see a movie. But a well done series on a channel like AMC? Bad ass!
  • This is stupid, Kirkman made the book series so that we could see what happens a lot later after the apocalypse. A 2hour movie won't be worth it, Tv Series would be better.
  • This is A series for AMC
  • Well then its freaking awesome! I've always hoped for a zombie TV series.
  • bomberman
    you should hope for some more patient when reading articles
  • presto117
    this just made my day... i just spent all of yesterday telling my friend how much i loved the walking dead after i gave him the collected hardcover of book 1.... *tears of joy*
  • shoothamaguchi
    Darabont making The Walking Dead would be perfect fit. AMC would be perfect, but i'm not sure they could afford it. HBO would be great, FX could be alright. Don't want it on Showtime.
  • YoungZer0
    Sucks. The only way this works is as series. Don't know if i would like to see the final product at all.
  • lobsterfancy
    Try reading the article next time champ. Its been optioned to AMC as a SERIES.
  • YoungZer0
    Next time. I promise.
  • freemachine
    Darabont's film are getting progressively worse. There is the stunning "Shawshank Redemption" and then:

    Green Mile > Majestic > Mist

    Given this trend, I'm not particularly excited by this news.
  • I wish I could care enough to check out this comic. I just can't justify the reading time. I will have to check out the adaptation however it is filmed, because it sounds awesome.
  • presto117
    you are doing yourself the worst injustice you could ever do. you have absolutely no idea how stupid you would sound to yourself if you actually read it.
  • terminals
    excited for an adaptation but would be way more siked on a hbo show.
    wasn't the idea for this comic to have a zombie story that never really ended like a movie does?
  • terminals
    totally misread it as a film adaptation.
  • a walking dead television series makes me excited period. but the fact that amc has been on a roll lately makes me even more confident that this will be a great show.
  • bomberman
    This is literally a news headline I read and yelled "yay".
  • tenno
    Syfy needs to be paying attention to how AMC is doing things and start doing more high-end in-house stuff like this
  • riggs
    Sci-fi (i will never call it SyFy ugh) should get the 4400 from USA and Eureka is another great sci-fi show. theres alot that the Sci-Fi network can do to gain fans and keep fans of their network but they just sit on their ass for some reason.
  • killjoy
    @ elharris84, I'm gonna have to disagree. As absolutely fucking amazing as this sounds, I really don't think AMC is the network for it if they're gonna do a PG-13 version of this story. True, gratuitous gore can be the downfall of some zombie flicks, but I really think that this particular story needs it. There isn't an insane amount of gore in the book, but when it comes, it is most definitely necessary (the horse and blood-smearing scenes in the first trade come to mind), and I just don't think that AMC would have the balls to go that far, and I think that could really make or break this project. Also, I personally find it very distracting in a network show when a character is in a life or death situation and says "Oh shoot," or something to that degree. That's what parental discretion warnings are for.
  • elharris84
    Language: I certainly agree that any attempt at a cussing substitute will lessen the show. It's too bad made up cuss words only seem to work with sci-fi (Firefly and Battlestar). I'm sure they could write around it (I found the cussing gratuitous at times in the comic book) or add the stronger language on DVD, which they did for at least one episode of Breaking Bad.

    Violence: As other posters have already pointed out to me, AMC can handle enough violence and gore to make it powerful when needed.
  • Scruffmcgruff
    I just hope they dont release the series in black and white. i always thought that was one of the annoying parts in an otherwise great Graphic novel series. im all for black and white in some cases, but in a zombie comic? i get that theyre trying to be artsy and focus on the character's emotional development but seriously, zombie stuff needs some RED blood.
  • There is no chance of this being in black and white. Black and white comics are very common and if they have ever had film adaptations (Ghost World, American Splendor, etc) those adaptations have been in color. This will be no different.
  • ianshirley
    You really don't get it.
  • Scruffmcgruff
    what dont i get? ive heard the black and white mist is pretty great, but what purpose does the comic being black and white serve? i mean, what does that accomplish that couldnt be accomplished by a color version
  • elharris84
    This is Darabont and if he has his way, this will stay true to the book and be in black and white. I really hope he gets his way on this, because the black and white version of The Mist (which is the version Darabont wanted in theaters) was much more powerful than the color version, in my opinion.
  • glenjm
    Weird, I didn't realize there was a b&w version of The Mist.

    Me personally, I would prefer the miniseries to be in color. I see no real reason that it should be in b&w other than that the graphic novels were b&w, and if that's the only reason, then that doesn't make much sense.
  • Ben
    Its official with Mad Men, Breaking Bad, and now they're optioning The Walking Dead, AMC has overthrown HBO at the moment.
  • omg omg omg. this is my favorite comic book of all time. (im just geeking out)
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