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Rejected(/Altered) Projects
Sometimes planned and/or advertised projects for some reason or other never realize. Or they appeared under different name or in different form.
There is no record how many different animation/movie productions Mr. Corben has been through. Richard Corben's Art Book #2 (1994) lists only some. Also Flights into Fantasy (1981) shows several photos of unlisted live action movies. Pg 45 has "Return of the Box", and "Mondo Amore". There is no record of the first one, but the latter is prob. part of the later published video movie, The Dark Planet (1989). The Dark Planet video was a mixture of several old projects. Pg 44 (of Flights into Fantasy) talks about "Creatures of the Box", which is sequel for "Return of the Box". Stop-action animation was scheduled for completion by the summer of 1981. FoolCon4 Souvenir Program (1982) includes a mention of release of it.
Amazons Below (around
1990)
History: A screenplay
Mr. Corben wrote (around
1990?). Appeared
later under different
name, "From
the Pit",
though only one chapter
exists.
Dreams of an Ancient
World (1986)
Advertised in: Rip in Time #2 (1986).
History: Aside of the Art
Print (under that very same name) Mr. Corben explains of
his idea to make an story of an American indian verison of The Beauty
and the Beast. Only a single Art Print exists from that idea, and
he never pronounced the possible name for it. There is a dead bison
and on it an athletic indian woman, similar to the Kil's outlook in the story, "Children
of Fire". Never realized.
Playboy (1979)
Time: 1979. Exists only a sheet of character design.
Fantagor #5 (1974)
Listed: In an interview of Infinity
#5 (1973). Plan: Possible ought to come out around 1973
to 1975, because his other project, a comic book adaption of Phili José Farmer's A
Feast Unknown (1975) suppoused to wait till this comic book is
out. The cap between Fantagor #4 and #5 was prob. not intedted to be that
long since #4 was printed in 1972. Question: What was going to be
in Fantagor #5 year 1974? Delay: Comic book was out not until trilogy Jeremy
Brood #1: Relativity (1982) cooled down and
he decided to make a hit by truck endind for the story [the conclusion
appeared first time in Fantagor #5 (1983)].
A Feast Unknown (1975)
Listed: In an interview of Infinity
#5 (1973). Plan: A comic book adaption of Phili
José Farmer's A Feast
Unknown (1975), one story spread out over the length of two
comic books in full color, which have to wait till Fantagor
#5 (1983) is out. Altered: That
didn't happen, but he did provide a cover and a few illustrations for
a new
printing
(1975)
of the book.
From the Dark (1991)
Advertised in: The Comics Buyer's Guide, Son of Mutant
World #5 (1990).
Exchange: The title was changed to Horror
in the Dark and comic book serial was published under that new name. Reason: They
thought that the original title was too close to the other existing (non-Corben) title Tales
from the Darkside.
From the Pit #1 to #7 (1994)
Format: A seven (7!) issue full color serial (on high quality paper,
same as "DenSaga"), based on Mr. Corben's screenplay he
wrote several years before called, "Amazons Below". Printed
only the first issue. Reason: Fantagor Press went bankruptcy after first
issue came out. Afterprint: The rest of existing (20 pgs), unpublished story was printed later in Odds and Ends (2009) in B&W.
Horror in the Dark
#1 to #5 (1991)
Altered: Actually this title was printed [See also From
the Dark (1991)]. But they did not only change the title, they neither
never published last issue, issue #5. And there was even planned an extra
story #6! The serial was forced to appear only as 4 issue long.
The
last
story (for issue #5) was printed alongside with
story #4 in issue
#4. The missing extra story was
added into Tradebook version (were all stories were printed together)
as a story #0, because it was kind of the opening story. Reason for
the cut down number: Bad
selling figures.
Jeremy Brood #2 & #3 (1982)
Advertised in: Heavy Metal #71 (1983).
Contents: The other two chapters for the beginning of the epic story "Jeremy
Brood". Never realized. Reason: Because of the
bad selling numbers of the first issue, the serial was forced to cancel.
Jan Strnad wrote a hit by a truck ending instead, "The
Big Shriek!" The new, quick ending was completely different than what
it was planned to be. See also The
Jan Strnad interview.
Legacy of Horror (production
year unknown)
Listed: in Richard
Corben's Art Book #2 (1984), pg
21, with a color photo of rat creature.
Format: Prob. puppet animation. Unfinished.
Mutant
World [III] (1990)
Mentioned: In Comics
Scene #14 (1990) was an article,
"Return to the Mutant Planet",
by Scott Lobdell. Author,
Mr. Strnad and Mr. Corben
are talking about a new serial "Son
of Mutant World". Mr.
Corben mentioned that if
his new serial will be very
successful, he's prepared
to stand and deliver several
more generations of offspring
(of "Mutant World"). But
because Mr. Strand would
be tight with other projects,
the story would have been
written by Mr. Corben himself. Untitled. Never
realized.
Odds and Ends (1994)
Advertised in: The end of DenSaga #4 (1994).
Contents: A 300 page collection of short stories with many underground
strips. Never
realized. Reason: Prob. because Fantagor Press went bankruptcy after
next quarterly issue, From the Pit (1994). See also Underground
#4 (1986). Extra: Though there exists a Robert Crumb sketch
book under the same name...
Richard Corben Complete Works, Underground #4 (1986)
Advertised in: Den [I]: Neverwhere (2nd: Nov. 1985, Catalan) as
up coming in 1986: Bodyssey, Underground, books 2, 3, and 4. Underground,
book 1
was already out.
Contents: Unknown. Maybe this unpublished 4th Underground book has
a link to later (also never published) Odds and Ends (1994) collection
book. Never realized. Reason: Unknown.
Rowlf (1972?)
Listed: in Richard
Corben's Art Book #2 (1984),
pg 21,
without a photo. There it is dated as 1972, but it was also mentioned in
an interview, The
Magic World of
Richard Corben by Rudi Franke in Voice
of Comicdom
#17 (Winter 1970!) , "Rowlf was first conceived a couple of years
ago [!] not
as
a
comic story, but as a film".
Format: A full-length animated film. Abandoned. Extra: Also
a Japanise animation company
was interested of the story.
Production year around thirty
years
after Mr. Corben's own. Never
realized? Extra2: In
Infinity
#5 (1973), there's an
April, 1973 interview with
Corben by Jan Strnad where,
on page 17, Corben says,
"One firm is interested in
making a full-length animated
film
of "Rowlf" using
the comic book art as a basis
for the
movie. I'm not sure they
know how much
work they're getting into,
but I've told them to go
ahead and
shoot a 30 second test section
and then I'd tell them whether
I approve
or not."
Skull Island (1975)
Listed: in Richard Corben's Art Book #2 (1984), pg 21, with
a B&W photo of puppets.
Format: Prob. puppet animation. Abandoned.
Son of Mutant World #1 to #5 (1990)
Altered: This serial was also printed as planned, but after
#3 they had to drop colors off and the rest
of the
story was in B&W. Reason: The old and the same, bad selling
numbers. Extra: This
story has never been published in English completely in color. All translated,
foreign
prints
are
in color.
Warren stories (around
1968)
Unpublished: "[Corben] drew several [B&W] stories for CREEPY
on speculation. Unfortuneately none of these were accepted". [corbenstudios] Extra: Two
panels (of possiby those stories) were published in Eerie
#16 (1968).
Copyright © 2004 Heart-Attack-Series,
Ink!,
Created: July 8, 2004. Modified:
January 17, 2012.
