Danger Girl | |
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![]() Cover art for Danger Girl #1 by J. Scott Campbell and Alex Garner. | |
Publication information | |
Publisher | Image Comics IDW Publishing |
Schedule | Monthly |
Format | Miniseries |
Genre | Action, spy |
Publication date | March 1998–present |
No. of issues | 7 issue original series, new series currently ongoing |
Main character(s) | Abbey Chase Sydney Savage Natalia Kassle Silicon Valerie Deuce Johnny Barracuda Sonya Savage |
Creative team | |
Created by | J. Scott Campbell Andy Hartnell |
Written by | J. Scott Campbell Andy Hartnell |
Penciller(s) | J. Scott Campbell |
Inker(s) | Alex Garner |
Letterer(s) | Richard Starkings |
Colorist(s) | Joe Chiodo Martin Jimenez |
Editor(s) | Scott Dunbier |
Danger Girl is an American comic book series created by J. Scott Campbell and Andy Hartnell that started in March 1998 and is still published as a new series. The comic stars an eponymous group of three sexy female secret agents—Abbey Chase, Sydney Savage and Sonya Savage—who engage in adventures in the vein of other fictional characters like Charlie's Angels, James Bond and Indiana Jones. They are led by a former British Secret Service Agent named Deuce and guided by teenage genius Silicon Valerie.
Main article: Danger Girl (video game) |
A video game of the same name was developed by n-Space, inc. and published by THQ. It was released for the Sony PlayStation in 2000.[4] It is loosely based on the first series which consisted of seven comic issues, but there have been many significant changes from the original storyline, such as Abbey Chase being a veteran Danger Girl operative and Natalia Kassle working for The Hammer from the very beginning of the adventure, along with a new member of the team that was never present in the comic books was introduced, named "JC".
In April 2010, Hitman: Agent 47 producer Adrian Askarieh announced that he was developing a film based on the comic with Todd Lincoln as director.[5]
In November 2017, Constantin Film acquired the rights to develop Danger Girl as both a film and potential TV series, in partnership with Askarieh's Prime Universe Films and Jeremy Bolt's Bolt Pictures.[6]
In February 2018, Umair Aleem was announced as the film's writer, with creators J. Scott Campbell and Andy Hartnell serving as executive producers alongside Constantin Film's Martin Moszkowicz.[7]
In March 2019, Jeff Wadlow was announced to write and direct the film.[8]