James Gunn Lifts the Lid on DC’s Creature Commandos

Updates From Agatha All Along, and More
September 12, 2024
Labor Day Deals at Amazon: Apple Must Be Cringing at This MacBook Air M3 Price
September 12, 2024
Show all

The new DC universe begins when the animated series hits Max in December.

DC Comics fans got a teaser for Creature Commandos at July’s San Diego Comic-Con; now, we know exactly when the animated series that will properly kick off James Gunn‘s DC reign will arrive: Thursday, December 5. After the premiere, you can watch a new entry each week on Max through January 16, for a total of seven episodes. A press release with the date announcement—accompanied by the fiery new photo you see here—reiterated the official logline: “Creature Commandos tracks a secret team of incarcerated monsters recruited for missions deemed too dangerous for humans. When all else fails… they’re your last, worst option.” It also ran down the stacked cast: Steve Agee as Economos, Maria Bakalova as Princess Ilana, Anya Chalotra as Circe, Zoe Chao as Nina Mazursky, Frank Grillo as Rick Flag Sr., Sean Gunn as GI Robot & Weasel, David Harbour as Frankenstein, Alan Tudyk as Dr. Phosphorus, Indira Varma as the Bride, and Viola Davis as Amanda Waller. The show is written by Gunn, who’s also one of its executive producers—as well as one of the guys (along with Peter Safran) overseeing this brand-new chapter for DC. Speaking to Entertainment Weekly, he shared his excitement about the show as well as DC’s future. He has his own live-action Superman film arriving next summer, of course, which he describes as a “humongous epic.” Creature Commados, by contrast, is more of “a way for people to just take a little nibble [of the new DC universe] and see what it tastes like.” In the interview, he likened Creature Commandos to his Marvel trilogy of Guardians of the Galaxy films; just from that official logline you can see the similarities, and Gunn agrees he’s a fan of “oddballs and irregular types and weirdos.” (Also not unlike his Suicide Squad movie characters, come to think of it.) However, there’s a key difference, too: “The Guardians are all really good characters at their heart, and that just isn’t necessarily the case with the creatures.” Head to EW to read more from Gunn, including how his show’s take on Frankenstein and the Bride will be a bit different than what horror fans are used to from the classic characters; he also teases how Creature Commandos will offer “bunch of hints for things that are coming [in the DC universe] … I think it’s just an extraordinarily fun way to start.” Creature Commandos kicks off December 5 on Max. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what’s next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.
Creature Commandosdc comicsJames Gunn
DC’s new, very large Batman has a new, very large Bat-axe—and maybe a laissez-faire approach to the Dark Knight’s traditional “no killing” rule.

Plus, Laika prepares to take a step into the world of live-action with Jon Spaihts’ new project.

In Lady Gaga and director Todd Phillips’ attempts to downplay Joker 2 as a musical, they end up defining what a musical is.

Warner Bros. may be all-in on Matt Reeves’ grounded take on the Dark Knight, but apparently not so all-in that he can headline a game.

Here’s hoping Gunn’s take on Superman puts some respect on Olsen’s name.

Batman’s 2009 game didn’t just change his life, it also became a core pillar of triple-A gaming over the past 15 years.
We may earn a commission when you buy through links on our sites.
©2024 GIZMODO USA LLC. All rights reserved. Mode
Follow us
Mode
Follow us

https://gizmodo.com/dc-creature-commandos-release-date-streaming-james-gunn-2000495475

Aman Mehndiratta
Aman Mehndiratta
Aman Mehndiratta encourages the concept of corporate philanthropy due to the amazing advantages of practicing this. He is a philanthropist and an entrepreneur too. That is why exactly he knows the importance of corporate philanthropy for the betterment of society.

Comments are closed.