
Where the Dodsons leave/Deluxes end would be a fine end point too. After having read the rest of "The Kesel Run" (in under 12 parsecs, aka the remainder of tpb 3) it is pretty skippable but puts to rest some character stuff from the earlier part of the series. I got the tpbs because they are complete, and there would be double-dipping with deluxes if you want every issue. But I doubt anything's changed from the floppies.
#Canceled dc collections series
Which issue is that? *looks up tpb* There are a couple of obvious different pages in issue #6 but those are also scenes where we might be seeing in "Harley-vision" (a technique that is not widely used in the series so it's hard to tell.) That issue shares credits on both pencil and ink but I don't know if it was for those pages or others that more seamlessly blend in. Do you know if the Dodson redrew those two or so pages that another artist did due to deadline constraints at the time?

Due to a dense network of contracts tying the property to both Marvel and Universal, it's anyone's guess whether Namor will ever see the light of day, but rumors abound of a Black Panther 2 MCU debut for the Sub-Mariner.I stand corrected. In a more complicated fashion, a film version of Namor has been a possibility since the late '90s, with a slew of different writers and directors attaching to the project from 2001 to 2006. Ultimately, however, this project was abandoned in favor of integrating Fury into the early MCU films. Also among the discarded titles are Fury, which would have followed the storyline of Jim Steranko's Nick Fury, Agent of S.H.I.E.L.D. series and had a script written by Andrew W.

This vision included such titles as Man-Thing, Deathlok, Silver Surfer, and even prototype versions of Iron Man and Captain America, as revealed in the Marvel Studios 2004 film slate.

While some of these projects came to fruition, many were ultimately scrapped, reworked, or folded in once the MCU began to solidify.
#Canceled dc collections movie
While the official MCU canon didn't begin until 2008's Iron Man, Marvel Studios was still trying to develop a long-term slate of movie adaptations based on their classic comic book IPs well before then. Even after Hensleigh distanced himself from the movie after two years of increasingly stagnating discussions, it still took until 2007 for The Punisher 2 to finally be canceled, with a franchise reboot released the following year. Despite all the pieces being in place for The Punisher 2 to come to fruition, the sequel project remained in development for over three years due to the lack of an acceptable script despite numerous writers being attached. Yet, despite a modest box office haul, The Punisher 2 was greenlit by Lionsgate, with Hensleigh and Jane set to reunite and commence filming on the sequel as early as 2005. Jane's Punisher was singled out for praise by critics, who enjoyed his steely performance, though they were less impressed by the overall tone and creativity of the film. The second of these is Jonathan Hensleigh's, which sees Thomas Jane take up the mantle of the vengeance-driven Punisher. While Jon Bernthal has become synonymous with the tortured vigilante Frank Castle, three separate Punisher incarnations had already been pushed by various studios by the Netflix series' 2017 release. Marvel Studios subsequently confirmed that all production for Hulk 2 had been canceled in favor of a reboot, which would go through another failed The Incredible Hulk narrative before the green giant finally found his spiritual home in Marvel's Avengers in 2012. Despite writer James Schamus drafting a sequel that would have included a deadly combination of Grey Hulk and (the now MCU adapted) Abomination, Marvel took over production in 2006 following a year of delays when Universal Pictures did not meet the film's deadline for principal production. Hulk 2, therefore, was a highly anticipated feature that was expected to follow up its predecessor as quickly as 2005, before a string of pre-production delays halted Hulk 2's seemingly inexorable advance. Hulk, in fact, got off to the best possible start for a new superhero franchise, with Universal's blockbuster Hulk feature grossing an impressive $245 million worldwide and almost doubling its production budget.

Before Mark Ruffalo's iconic Bruce Banner and even Edward Norton's turn as the Gamma-loaded professor, Eric Bana's version of Hulk existed as early as 2003.
