10 TV Shows That Marvel Seriously Needs To Make

By Percival Constantine /

9. Blaze of Glory

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What Is It? Before Stan Lee revolutionized comics with the Fantastic Four in the 60s, Marvel (then Atlas Comics) published a number of western books, featuring characters like the Two-Gun Kid, the Rawhide Kid, Kid Colt, the Outlaw Kid (they sure liked using €œkid€ in their cowboy names), and the Phantom Rider (a predecessor of the Ghost Rider). Despite taking place in the Old West, these characters have interacted with the modern-day Marvel Universe (Two-Gun Kid even joined the Avengers for a time when he was stranded in the future). In 2000, a series called Blaze of Glory: The Last Ride of the Western Heroes, by John Ostrander and Leonardo Manco, was released. It featured many of Marvel€™s western heroes, re-imagined in a more realistic setting and the colorful adventures of the past described as being dime novel adventures. How To Do It Right? The western was once thought to be a dead genre, but it€™s starting to make a comeback. Django Unchained proved to be extremely popular, and Hell on Wheels is AMC€™s second highest-rated show, behind The Walking Dead. So there€™s clearly an audience there for a well-done western series. A good way to do it would be to take a cue from Blaze of Glory, both in terms of depicting it in a more realistic fashion and, instead of building a series around just one western hero, build it around all of them. It could feature a rotating cast, with different episodes focusing on the different heroes. One episode could have the Phantom Rider, another could feature the Rawhide Kid, and so on.