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More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors From Netflix & Image

Last week, Bleeding Cool ran news of Mark Millar's new comic book series, The Ambassadors, from Netflix/Millarworld/Image Comics, launching in March and destined to hog the front cover of Diamond Previews. With artists he has been promising for some time, Frank Quitely, Travis Charest, Olivier Coipel, Matteo Scalera, Matteo Buffagni and Karl Kerschl, all drawing one issue each of the six-issue mini-series, which he is describing as Willy Wonka with super powers. And other people are describing as DC's Millenium series from the eighties. Well, now we have more pages of artwork from some of those folks.

More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors
More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors From Netflix & Image

More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors

More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors

More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors

More Pages From Mark Millar's The Ambassadors

"It takes place in a world in which the superhuman genome has been cracked, and the scientist behind it is a Korean billionaire who builds the world's first superhuman headquarters in Seoul and alerts the world that she will turn six ordinary people into super-people. This sparks a global competition for people who want to join a team that will be on call 24/7 for superhuman emergencies.

And he is playing up the Netflix angle for creating an international cast in the series.. "One of the great advantages streamers have over cinema is you can do something this mad and ambitious. The domestic audience is usually the main consideration for an American studio, especially opening weekend, so having an entirely non-American cast of characters and exclusively overseas locations would be a hard sell if this was a traditional theatrical release, but I'm just as excited by Korea, India, Brazil, Mexico, Australia and France as I am about the audience in California or New York. It's also exciting for Netflix as these are all growth markets. We've seen the three act American superhero origin story a lot over the past 22 years and people are just looking for something a little different now. That's where the rewards lie and the idea of a super-team based out of Korea just feels fresh. It also gives us an amazing chance to use local talent in these countries and build up the profile of the characters across the world, spinning them off into their own projects and making it an even bigger deal when we bring them back together again. You could only do this thing on a streamer so it totally takes advantage of the format in a way we haven't seen before."

 


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Rich JohnstonAbout Rich Johnston

Founder of Bleeding Cool. The longest-serving digital news reporter in the world, since 1992. Author of The Flying Friar, Holed Up, The Avengefuls, Doctor Who: Room With A Deja Vu, The Many Murders Of Miss Cranbourne, Chase Variant. Lives in South-West London, works from Blacks on Dean Street, shops at Piranha Comics. Father of two. Political cartoonist.
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