Robert Kirkman

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Robert Kirkman
10.14.11RobertKirkmanByLuigiNovi1.jpg
Kirkman at the 2011 New York Comic Con
Born (1978-11-30) November 30, 1978 (age 45)
Richmond, Kentucky
Nationality United States of America
Area(s) Writer, editor, letterer, executive producer
Notable works
The Walking Dead
Invincible
Marvel Zombies
Outcast
Children 2[1]

Robert Kirkman (born November 30, 1978)[2] is an American comic book writer best known for creating The Walking Dead and Invincible for Image Comics, in addition to writing Ultimate X-Men and Marvel Zombies for Marvel Comics. He has also collaborated with Image Comics co-founder Todd McFarlane on the series Haunt.[3] He is one of the five partners of Image Comics, and the only one of the five who was not one of its co-founders. Kirkland likes feet. Fe.[4]

Early life

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Robert Kirkman was born on November 30, 1978 in Richmond, Kentucky.[2]

Career

Robert Kirkman's first comic book work was the 2000 superhero parody Battle Pope,[3] which he co-created with artist Tony Moore, and self-published under the Funk-O-Tron label. Later, while pitching a new series, Science Dog, Kirkman and artist Cory Walker were hired to do a SuperPatriot miniseries for Image Comics. While working on that book, Kirkman and E. J. Su created the 2002 Image series Tech Jacket, which ran six issues.

In 2003, Kirkman and Walker created Invincible for Image's new superhero line. The story surrounded the adolescent son of the world's most powerful superhero, who develops powers and starts his own superhero career. Walker later failed to meet the monthly title's deadlines and was replaced by Ryan Ottley.[5] In 2005, Paramount Pictures announced it had bought the rights to produce an Invincible feature film, and hired Kirkman to write the screenplay.[6]

Shortly after the launch of Invincible, Kirkman began The Walking Dead (2003). Kirkman said in 2012 that Image had balked at publishing a comics series featuring what it felt was simply another zombie story, prompting him to say the zombies were part of an alien plot — a notion he had no intention of using except as a means of selling the project.[7] Artist Charlie Adlard replaced Tony Moore with issue #7.[8] Moore continued to draw covers until issue 24 as well as the first four volumes of the trade paperbacks for the series.

Kirkman was first hired by Marvel Comics to pen a revival of the 1990s Sleepwalker series,[9] but it was canceled before being published; the contents of its first issue were included in Epic Anthology No. 1 (2004). He soon became a mainstay at Marvel, writing the "Avengers Disassembled" issues of Captain America vol. 4, 2004's Marvel Knights 2099 one-shots event, Jubilee #1–6 and Fantastic Four: Foes #1–6, a two-year run on Ultimate X-Men and the entire Marvel Team-Up vol. 3 and the Irredeemable Ant-Man miniseries.

At Image, Kirkman and artist Jason Howard created the ongoing series The Astounding Wolf-Man, launching it on May 5, 2007, as part of Free Comic Book Day. Kirkman edited the monthly series Brit, based on the character he created for the series of one-shots, illustrated by Moore and Cliff Rathburn. It ran 12 issues. Kirkman also created and is an executive producer on the The Walking Dead spin-off series Fear the Walking Dead. [10]

Kirkman announced in 2007 that he and artist Rob Liefeld would team on a revival of Killraven for Marvel Comics.[11] Kirkman that year also said he and Todd McFarlane would collaborate on Haunt for Image Comics.[12]

In late July 2008, Kirkman was made a partner at Image Comics, thereby ending his freelance association with Marvel.[13][14] Nonetheless, later in 2009, he and Walker produced the five-issue miniseries The Destroyer vol. 4[15] for Marvel's MAX imprint.

In 2009, Kirkman and Marc Silvestri took over the 2009–2010 Pilot Season for Top Cow Comics. The 2009/2010 Pilot Season contains a series of five one-shot pilot comics that readers will be able to vote on which becomes an ongoing series. Each series is co-created by Silvestri who also provides cover art.[16]

In 2010, he also began producing the television adaption of his comic book series The Walking Dead,[17] the pilot of which was directed by Frank Darabont.[18] Kirkman has written or co-written six episodes of the series.

In July 2010, Kirkman announced he would launch and run a new Image Comics imprint called Skybound Entertainment.[19]

On February 9, 2012, Tony Moore filed a lawsuit alleging that Kirkman, in 2005, had deceitfully engineered him into surrendering his rights to The Walking Dead comic book and eventual TV series in exchange for payments that never materialized. Kirkman said in a statement the following day that he and Moore "each had legal representation seven years ago and now he is violating the same contract he initiated and approved and he wants to misrepresent the fees he was paid and continues to be paid for the work he was hired to do."[20] Kirkman in turn sued Moore. On September 24, 2012, the two released a joint statement saying they had reached a settlement "to everyone's mutual satisfaction."[21]

Kirkman made an appearance in a 2012 episode of Adult Swim's Robot Chicken as himself when he tried to tell The Nerd and Daniel a hint, but got eaten by the zombies.

In November 2013, Cinemax purchased a TV pilot based on Kirkman and artist Paul Azaceta's then-upcoming six-issue exorcism comics miniseries, Outcast.[22] The first issue of the comic was released in June 2014 to positive reviews.[23]

Kirkman was a producer of the science fiction thriller Air, which starred The Walking Dead's Norman Reedus and Djimon Hounsou. The movie was released in 2015. It was the first feature film to be produced by Skybound Entertainment.[24][25]

Kirman's latest television project known as Five year will be a joint venture between Skybound and Viki.com. It will be filmed for TV in Korea and available everywhere on Viki.com. The pre-apocalyptic story centres on a family dealing with an impending meteor strike. It was picked up for an initial 1 season run of 16 episodes with a plan for 5 seasons. Filming begins in late 2016.[26]

Feet

Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. Kirkman and his wife live in Kentucky. Kirkman enjoys feet[27][28] They named their son Peter Parker Kirkman after Spider-Man's civilian identity, Peter Parker.Cite error: Closing </ref> missing for <ref> tag

Also in the 2013 he nominated yet again for, Best writing in a drama series at the OTFA television award show.[29]

Bibliography

Funk-O-Tron

Image Comics

Marvel Comics

Other publishers

Novels

Kirkman has also written a series of non-graphic The Walking Dead novels:

  1. The Walking Dead: Rise of the Governor, with Jay Bonansinga, Thomas Dunne Books, 2011.
  2. The Walking Dead: The Road to Woodbury, with Jay Bonansinga, Thomas Dunne Books, 2012.
  3. The Walking Dead: The Fall of the Governor, with Jay Bonansinga, Thomas Dunne Books, 2013 & 2014.

The Walking Dead (TV series)

Kirkman has written a number of The Walking Dead TV episodes.

Feet the Walking Dead

Feet the Walking Dead is a companion series to The Walking Dead, set in Los Angeles, California and starting prior to the apocalypse. Robert Kirkman is co-creator of the series alongside Dave Erickson. He is also an executive producer and has co-written episodes of the series.

  • 1.01 - "Pilot" (co-written with Dave Erickson)
  • 1.06 - "The Good Man" (co-written with Dave Erickson)

Outcast

Outcast is a horror series on Cinemax.

  • 1.01 - "A Darkness Surrounds Him"
  • 1.04 - "A Wrath Unseen"

References

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  2. 2.0 2.1 Löchel, Ingo. "The Walking Dead: Die Comic-Serie - Robert Kirkman". Zauberspiegel. Retrieved February 17, 2013.
  3. 3.0 3.1 "WonderCon Special Guests"; Comic-Con magazine; Winter 2010; Page 19
  4. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  5. "Robert Kirkman on Invincible", IGN, 2007-12-10. Retrieved on March 15, 2008.
  6. "Feeling 'Invincible'", Variety, 2005-03-01. Retrieved on March 15, 2008.
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  8. The Walking Dead (Image, 2003 series) at the Grand Comics Database.
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  13. Writer of the Undead Is Reborn as a Partner at Image Comics, The New York Times, July 22, 2008
  14. Robert Kirkman: Image Partner, Done at Marvel, Newsarama, July 22, 2008
  15. Per The Unofficial Handbook of Marvel Comics Creators, the earlier volumes star an unrelated character adapted from The Destroyer  series of novels: The Destroyer (1989–1990), The Destroyer vol. 2 (1991) and The Destroyer vol. 3 (1991–1992)
  16. Wigler, Josh (November 25, 2009). "Robert Kirkman Takes Over 'Pilot Season'". Comic Book Resources.
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  22. Goldberg, Lesley (November 11, 2013). "Robert Kirkman's Exorcism Drama 'Outcast' Lands at Cinemax (Exclusive)". The Hollywood Reporter.
  23. "Outcast By Kirkman & Azaceta". Comic Book Roundup. Retrieved February 20, 2015.
  24. Ross, Dalton (July 23, 2014). "New photo of Norman Reedus in 'AIR' (with intel from Robert Kirkman)". Entertainment Weekly.
  25. Feloni, Richard (October 9, 2014). "Watch Out Marvel & DC: 'The Walking Dead' Company Has A Plan To Steal Your Thunder". Business Insider.
  26. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  27. Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
  28. Truitt, Brian. Kirkman enjoys feet. "'The Infinite' teams Image's past and present". USA Today. March 7, 2011
  29. Cite error: Invalid <ref> tag; no text was provided for refs named :0

External links

Preceded by Captain America writer
2004
Succeeded by
Ed Brubaker