10 Universal Horror Monsters That Should Appear In Skybound’s Universe

The Universal Classic Monsters franchise is timeless, present since the dawn of film in the early 20th century. The movies have gripped the minds of many audiences with their captivating tales of horror and imagination while also forwarding the development of film in various ways.
The timelessness of the franchise has lent the films within it to be adapted in many ways over the years, with the most recent endeavor found in Skybound Entertainment’s Universal Monsters line of comics. Having successfully produced comics reinterpreting Dracula and Creature from the Black Lagoon— with a Frankenstein series on the way in August— Skybound has limitless possibilities for films to adapt from Universal’s expansive canon.
The comic medium would be a new and interesting way to present a modern version of the story, originally a slow-burn mystery told from the perspective of neither Jekyll nor Hyde. A comic could have more room to play with POV shots and the mystery of who Mr. Hyde is in the story. A modern comic could also dive deeper into some of the 1931 film’s darker topics around abuse and murder.

The Universal Classic Monsters franchise is timeless, present since the dawn of film in the early 20th century. The movies have gripped the minds of many audiences with their captivating tales of horror and imagination while also forwarding the development of film in various ways.

The timelessness of the franchise has lent the films within it to be adapted in many ways over the years, with the most recent endeavor found in Skybound Entertainment’s Universal Monsters line of comics. Having successfully produced comics reinterpreting Dracula and Creature from the Black Lagoon— with a Frankenstein series on the way in August— Skybound has limitless possibilities for films to adapt from Universal’s expansive canon.

The comic medium would be a new and interesting way to present a modern version of the story, originally a slow-burn mystery told from the perspective of neither Jekyll nor Hyde. A comic could have more room to play with POV shots and the mystery of who Mr. Hyde is in the story. A modern comic could also dive deeper into some of the 1931 film’s darker topics around abuse and murder.

#Universal #Horror #Monsters #Skybounds #Universe

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