Stories by @amazonprince
19 stories

The Uncanny X-Men & The New Titans
An adaptation of the Chris Claremont/Walt Simonson Original Crossover Graphic Novel showcasing the most popular superhero teams from Marvel & DC in the 1980s. In New York City, the X-Men and the New Teen Titans must band together to stop Darkseid and Dark Phoenix.

The New Teen Titans (1970s)
Based on the best-selling comics by the legendary team of Marv Wolfman & George Pérez, THE NEW TEEN TITANS sees the teenaged heroes of the DC Universe band together again. Robin (Dick Grayson), Starfire (Koriand’r), Raven, Cyborg (Victor Stone), Changeling (Garfield Logan), Wonder Girl (Donna Troy), and Kid Flash (Wally West)—find themselves caught in an interstellar conflict when Starfire's vengeful sister, Blackfire, leads the Gordanians in an invasion of Earth.

SHAZAM!!!ETERNITY
Billy Batson and the Shazam-Family meet a strange kid who, whenever he shouts "Eternity!" he can summon anyone -- living or dead, fictional or factual -- courtesy of "The Lords of Chaos" compensating for killing "Kid Eternity" before the troubled teen's time. Tasked with powers he has no idea where to start with, the Kid is secretly being used by the Lords to shift humanity's consciousness and thus earn their ticket back to Heaven. But Eternity is a rebel. He's a bad influence on Mary, and could very well be Freddy's blood-brother. The catch? Trauma. And being a non-survivor of an act of sexual abuse at the hands of a predator has made Kid's outlook on existence rather spotty at best. Can Billy help his friends, stop the Lords of Chaos, and address whether the source of their powers were ever truly the mythical Solomon, Hercules, Achilles, Zeus, Atlas, and Mercury or were they a magical trick all along with demons cosplaying at being deities... The next chapter in the DCEU's Shazam franchise brings together a story of teen angst, uncertainty, identity, sexuality, and eternity.

DC/Vertigo: The Witching Hour
Based on the DC horror anthology hosted by THE KINDLY ONES -- You know them as the Three Sisters, the Fates, the Furies, the Moirai, but beware for you should not address them without respect. Comprised of SENSATION COMICS, THE HOUSE OF MYSTERIES, THE HOUSE OF SECRETS, THE UNEXPECTED, WITCHCRAFT, THESALLIAD, and of course THE WITCHING HOUR... if it began in the 1970s.

DC Vertigo - The Books of Magic (1990)
If a series of TV specials or movies were made when the books came out originally in the 1990s (before Harry Potter was written FYI).

DC Black Orchid (1987)
Directed by Dave McKean (MirrorMask) -- A movie franchise to coincide with Swamp Thing when the OGN first released.

The Other History of the DC Universe (1978)
If the OGN by Academy Award-winning screenwriter John Ridley (12 Years a Slave, Let It Fall) was actually made in the 1970s and 80s when it is set! The story reframes iconic moments of DC history and charts a previously unexplored sociopolitical thread as seen through the prism of DC Super Heroes who come from historically disenfranchised groups. Extensively researched and masterfully executed, THE OTHER HISTORY OF THE DC UNIVERSE graphic novel is an experience unlike any other. Its adaptation should be nothing less! You may think you know the history of the DC Universe...but the truth is far more complex. THE OTHER HISTORY OF THE DC UNIVERSE isn't about saving the world--it's about having the strength to simply be who you are.

Johnny Panic and the Bible of Dreams (1975)
Based on the vivid, violent, body-horror, surreal, fantastical, postmodernist, absurdist, allegorical, semi-autobiographical, mechanophobic, hyper-rational, short-story written by Sylvia Plath in 1958. The story sees a young woman working as the Assistant to the Secretary in an insane asylum's out-patient clinic. She transcribes doctors' analyses of mentally ill patients. She copies dream-notes by Johnny Panic to compile them into a "bible" and spends a few nights at the office to finish her work. Soon she is discovered by the Clinic Director and taken to a wing of the hospital for in-patients and is given shock-therapy. Johnny Panic is a representation of her mental issues. As her vision, muse, deity, and captor, as well as her writer's block, he becomes a figure of worship and devotion. Her obsession spirals to the point where she re-creates "dreams that are not even written down at all" as "...some kind of prayer." In other words, she must have met Morpheus, the Dreamlord of the Endless. Somewhere Neil Gaiman touched upon the timeless.

DC Rogues Gallery
Just a place to keep popular fancasts of your favorite DC Villains! Please feel free to add so we can have a pool of the best of the best and use MyCast to gauge popular choices!

The Amazon
Yara Flor is the Champion of the Amazons. Only she is a Wonder Girl not from Themyscira or the Bana-Mighdall. Instead, Yara finds her roots among the tribe Amazons of the Amazon Forest in South America: The Esquecida!

Comix Zone
Based on the 1995 SEGA Genesis game.

Anxious, Secure, Avoidant, Discordant
"Cassie Sandsmark and the Olympians" meets "Blade Runner 2049" in an LDR saga between Gateway City and Metropolis, inspired by the "Riot Grrls" era of music overlapped with films like "Before Sunrise," "You've Got Mail," and "Brokeback Mountain" featuring Cassie Sandsmark and Conner Kent. Partially inspired by Mark Miller's story "Mad About that Superboy."

The Quick Starts of Bonehilda
~Even the Undead Need a Break~ Based on the iconic NPC skeletal maid from The Sims, Bonehilda has been living the life (and un-passing) of servitude for centuries, while at the same time making love to the partners of many an unsuspecting Sim. Does she have ADHD? Is she OCD? Does existential anxiety and mental health matter if you are a Sim? Sadly, her Quick Starts and Ends have resulted in an increasing disillusionment to the same old romantic cliches and courtship rituals. An undead girl can't be putting in all the work all the time! Is Bonehilde doomed to be just another skeleton in all of their closets, or is there life beyond The Sims? The story unfolds!

Wonder Girl: Donna Troy (TV series)
I'm wondering (no pun intended) what the old proposed Wonder Girl TV series would have been like if Debra Winger accepted the offer? Using mostly Earth-1/Post-Crisis Donna Troy characters.

Mortal Kombat V DC Universe
In the wake of fatalities around the realm of Earth and a Multiverse of Infinite Earths, the Elder Gods fall to the machinations of the New Gods from Apokolips. Brace yourself for an epic battle where worlds collide! Mortal Kombat and DC Universe heroes and villains clash on the big screen as you've never seen them before! In a universe beyond our own, a mysterious being known as Dark Khan emerges, determined to merge Earthrealm and the DC Universe into a single, chaotic realm. The Mortal Kombat and DC fighters must join forces to stop this ruthless entity and save their worlds from certain destruction.

WWE as the Cast of Wonder Woman
Just for fun - I always liked the idea that the 'WW' logo being similar was a sign that these 2 brands could easily have more archetypal parallels. Also, it helps that the art of wrasslin' itself has ties to the competitive athleticism on Ancient Greece/Themyscira.

DC CRISIS Season 0: Zero Hour - Crisis in Time!
A prestige-format anthology where each self-contained season adapts a major DC "Crisis." Only the seasons themselves will be in non-linear order. Season 0: ZERO HOUR Season 1: CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS Season 2: INFINITE CRISIS Season 3: FINAL CRISIS Season 4: JACK KIRBY'S THE FOURTH WORLD Season 5: WHATEVER HAPPENED TO THE MAN OF TOMORROW? Season 6: WAR OF THE GODS Season 7: KINGDOM COME Season 8: GENESIS Season 9: NO MAN'S LAND / OUR WORLD AT WAR Season 10: FINAL NIGHT Season 11: IDENTITY CRISIS Season 12: JLA ROCK OF AGES Season 13: JLA TOWER OF BABEL Season 14: AMERICA vs. THE JSA Season 15: SINESTRO CORPS WAR Season 16: BLACKEST NIGHT / BRIGHTEST DAY Season 17: CONVERGENCE Season 18: DARKSEID WAR Season 19: DOOMSDAY CLOCK Season 20: HEROES IN CRISIS Season 21: DARK NIGHTS METAL Season 22: DARK NIGHTS DEATH METAL Season 23: DARK CRISIS Season 24: ABSOLUTE POWER Season 25: THE WITCHING HOUR

Justice League of America: The Super Friends
A live-action TV series depicting the JUSTICE LEAGUE OF AMERICA in the Silver Age, gathering the mid-20th century incarnation of the greatest heroes of the DC Universe. The show combines characters from LEGENDS OF THE SUPER-HEROES (1979) while adapting SUPER FRIENDS (1973), THE ALL-NEW SUPER FRIENDS (1977), CHALLENGE OF THE SUPER FRIENDS (1978), WORLD'S GREATEST SUPER FRIENDS (1979), SUPERFRIENDS (1980), THE LEGENDARY SUPER POWERS SHOW (1984), and THE GALACTIC GUARDIANS (1986).

Justice Society of America
A black-and-white episodic film serial from the 1940s featuring the JUSTICE SOCIETY OF AMERICA. Superman & Batman (who had their own movie serials) would guest-star in single episodes. The regular cast includes: The Flash (Jay Garrick) Green Lantern (Alan Scott) Hawkman (Carter Hall) Hawkgirl (Shiera Saunders) The Spectre Doctor Fate The Sandman (Wes Dodds) The Atom (Al Pratt) The Hour-Man (Rex "Tick Tock" Tyler) Starman (Ted Knight) Dr. Mid-Nite (Charles McNider) Wildcat (Ted Grant) Team Mascot: Johnny Thunder Secretary and War Dept. Liaison: Yeoman Diana Prince They oppose Vandal Savage!