Videos by ComicBook.com
The story was pretty well-received, and of course drove a lot of new readers to comics since somebody of Romero’s caliber comes with his own built-in fan base. It was also the first Big Two work he’d done in a decade — preceded only by 2004’s Toe Tags for DC — and the first set in the world of his film.
Apparently, though, there was a previous project that Romero almost did at Marvel and…well, it looks like it would have been one of the only times he got into comics for a non-zombie story (he also worked on Land of the Dead for IDW and a single story in the famed Heavy Metal anthology series.
The 1st project Marvel did with the G. Romero was “Copperhead” in the 80s.Unfortunately,never got made. Sad. #Marvel pic.twitter.com/oA97sAo4tx
— Bob Layton (@Bob_Layton) August 12, 2014
The project apparently stalled after the financial failure of Romero’s Day of the Dead, which was sabotaged after having budget problems throughout production. What had been referred to as “Romero’s Star Wars” would turn out to be just another project that never got off the ground.
Without a movie to prop it up, or a generation of filmmakers on big and small screens aping Romero’s success as would happen years later, apparently Marvel also felt the comic was too big a risk and put the project in mothballs.
You can check out a full-page ad from Variety at right and a number of pages of Guice and Layton’s art for the project below.