Stories by @humbertonajera
447 stories

Superman & Uzi (2027)
Years after Superman Returns and Murder Drones, the world questions its need for heroes. When a mysterious crystalline signal revives the artificial intelligence Brainiac and the creepier villain Cyn, he creates a perfect mirror copy of Superman — Bizarro, designed to replace humanity’s protector with a conqueror. Those warships invade Earth, converting cities into data constructs. Superman and Uzi Doorman face his clone in a battle stretching from Metropolis to orbit. Only by embracing both these Kryptonian, Drones and human identities can he outwit Brainiac and Cyn and save his son, Jason.

Albert Pyun's Doom: The Movie (1996)
Between 1993, after the success of Doom, Hollywood began gaining interest in producing a live-action film adaptation of Doom. Cyborg and Captain America director Albert Pyun was set to direct Doom in 1993 after the game's release, production of Doom began in February 1994 and releasing in theaters on a December 1994 release date. Sylvester Stallone or Arnold Schwarzenegger were rumored to star Doomguy. Stallone picked up to star the main protagonist of the film. The draft for Pyun's Doom is the film would get more faithful than the video game, in the vein of James Cameron's Aliens and John McTiernan's Predator. Stallone, Lawrence Konner and Mark Rosenthal wrote the screenplay from a story written by Stephen Tolkin and Larry Block. The film was produced by Menahem Golan of 21st Century Film Corporation. Production of Doom was still set to filming who begun on March 1994 in Arizona, that looks like the set of Mars, during February, while Stallone thinks the Doomguy character would "be a fantastic role." The demons of Mars from the movie would've been created by Industrial Light & Magic, Stan Winston Studios and by Jim Henson's Creature Shop, unlike Masters of the Universe. The working title was "Doom: The Movie" in the script. Production will come to a halt due to Albert Pyun left the project and canceled the project with Stallone expected that if the Doom movie were made, aswell.

Richard Donner's DOOM (1996)
Before Universal Pictures acquired the rights to the iconic Doom brand into a film on 2005, Warner Bros. initially acquired the rights of Doom, following the sucess of the first game. Genre icon Richard Donner was tapped to helm and wrote Doom, while Christopher Reeve was portrayed his role of Doomguy and the movie's production will begun again in early April 1994 and the film is scheduled for release on a summer 1995 theatrical date. His draft would've seen the demons of Hell will begun to invade New York City, causing chaos. When a space marine-now-a monster hunter embarks on a mission to kill monsters from the Apocalypse of New York City, predating Doom Eternal. After the success of Doom II, Donner's take on Doom was pushed over to a release date of 1996 and production stalled soon as Reeve talks about the production's re-start to filming on early 1995. On May 27, 1995, during Reeve's riding accident, Donner left Doom for Warner Bros., while the production halted again.

Superman: Resurrection (1993)
Following the tragic events of The Death of Superman, Metropolis struggles in his absence until a mysterious celestial signal heralds his resurrection — but not without consequence. Clark Kent returns changed, haunted by visions of Krypton and a being known as Brainiac who seeks to enslave humanity through perfect order. Torn between his duty as Earth’s protector and the divine destiny whispered by his father Jor-El, Superman faces his ultimate trial — the battle for the soul of mankind.

Superman
The gritty origin story of Superman, including his infancy as Kal-El of Krypton, son of Jor-El, and his youthful years in the rural town of Smallville. Disguised as reporter Clark Kent, he adopts a mild-mannered disposition in Metropolis and develops a romance with Lois Lane while battling the villainous Lex Luthor.

Michael Bay's Superman Returns (2006)
Superman returns to Earth after five years and discovers that his love interest Lois Lane has moved on from him and that his archenemy Lex Luthor is planning to kill him and reshape North America.

Stephen Sommers' Namor (2002)
When pollution and human weapons testing threaten the underwater realm of Atlantis, Prince Namor McKenzie—a half-human, half-Atlantean torn between two worlds—must choose between vengeance and peace. But when a rogue warlord, Attuma, seizes Atlantis, Namor must unite humans and Atlanteans alike to prevent a global catastrophe.

Superman Salvation
Years after the battle for Metropolis, Superman faces a new existential threat from beyond the stars — an intelligence older than Krypton itself. As Earth faces annihilation, he must unite heroes across realities to confront the ultimate question: can hope survive in a universe that’s forgotten how to believe?

Superman: Reloaded (2027)
Superman has returned again to Earth after three years and has encountered with a Murder Drone and the Princess of Hell.

The WB's Sonic (2000s)
The villain Dr. Robotnik from a bumbling tubby buffoon into a sinister military tactician who conquers the world of Mobius with his mechanical servants, forcibly transforming the animal people of that world into more robots for his army in a process called Robotization. Sonic went from the first series as a carefree wanderer to a swashbuckling freedom fighter, facing real danger as he and his friends tried to bring the Doctor and his evil empire down.

Richard Donner's X-Men (1980s)
They are children of the atom, homo superior, the next link in the chain of evolution. Each was born with a unique genetic mutation, which at puberty manifested itself in extraordinary powers. In a world filled with hate and prejudice, they are feared by those who cannot accept their differences. Led by Xavier the X-Men fight to protect a world that fears them. They are locked in a battle with former colleague and friend, Magneto who believes humans and mutants should never co-exist.

Lightyear (1990s)
After he believes he got his partner, Warp Darkmatter killed by Emperor Zurg, Buzz Lightyear refuses to take on a new partner, suffering from survivor's guilt. He is given a new partner in Princess Mira Nova by Star Command anyway. It is up to Buzz, Mira, and any other help they can find, to stop Emperor Zurg from collecting the Uni-Mind on the Little Green Men home world to conquer the universe.

Scooby-Doo (2002)
A look into what could've been a darker, tongue-in-cheek deconstruction of the classic cartoon aimed for a teen/adult audience. Featuring a stoner Shaggy, Daphne and Velma in a secret relationship, Fred's sexuality, an origin story, a secret cult, a haunted mansion, a goth girlfriend, references to Hanna-Barbera, and the villain who is not Scrappy-Doo!

Tim Burton's The Sandman (1990s)
In 1916, Morpheus, the king of dreams and one of the seven Endless, is captured in an occult ritual. After being held captive for 105 years, he escapes and sets out to restore order to his kingdom of the Dreaming.

How to Train Your Dragon (2025)
A misfit Viking teen sees an opportunity to change the course of his clan's future when he befriends an injured dragon.

Quentin Tarantino's Superman Returns (2006)
One of the greatest almost-made superhero film by Quentin Tarantino of all time. Following a mysterious absence of several years, the Man of Steel comes back to Earth in the action-packed Superman Returns, a soaring new chapter in the saga of one of the world's most beloved superheroes, by the director of Pulp Fiction: Quentin Tarantino. While an old enemy plots to render him powerless once and for all, Superman faces the heartbreaking realization that the woman he loves, Lois Lane, has moved on with her life. Or has she? Superman's bittersweet return challenges him to bridge the distance between them while finding a place in a society that has learned to survive without him. In an attempt to protect the world he loves from cataclysmic destruction, Superman embarks on an epic journey of redemption that takes him from the depths of the ocean to the far reaches of outer space.

Superman: Man of Steel (2009)
Years after Superman Returns, the world questions its need for heroes. When a mysterious crystalline signal revives the artificial intelligence Brainiac, he creates a perfect mirror copy of Superman — El-Kal, designed to replace humanity’s protector with a conqueror. Brainiac’s warships invade Earth, converting cities into data constructs. Superman faces his clone in a battle stretching from Metropolis to orbit. Only by embracing both his Kryptonian and human identities can he outwit Brainiac and save his son, Jason.

Bomberman (1990s)
In the far future, war has been replaced by ritualized combat — the Bombing Games — where warriors in advanced exo-suits fight for control of planets. When Shiro, an engineer framed for treason, escapes with an experimental “core bomb,” he discovers the truth: the Games are rigged to harvest life-energy for B.O.M.B.’s super-weapon. With the help of rogue scientist Lisa Flame and a team of misfit bombers, Shiro must infiltrate the central arena and destroy the Omega Core before Draycus uses it to annihilate entire worlds. The final battle takes place in a cathedral-like arena of glass and neon, where Shiro uses his own energy to detonate a “Perfect Bomb,” creating a blinding explosion that purges corruption — but possibly at the cost of his life.

Superman: Bizarro (2009)
During the death of a family, a new threat comes from the dark skies. When our Big Blue, Superman comes back from his heroic mission to protect our people from Bizarro's evil plans.

Superman: Flyby (2004)
The planet Krypton being besieged by a civil war between Jor-El and his corrupt brother Kata-Zor. Before Kata-Zor sentences Jor-El to prison, Kal-El is launched to Earth to fulfill a prophecy. Adopted by Jonathan and Martha Kent and given the name Clark, he forms a romance with Lois Lane at the Daily Planet. However, Lois is more concerned with exposing Lex Luthor, a government agent obsessed with UFO phenomena. Clark reveals himself to the world as Superman, bringing Kata-Zor's son, Ty-Zor, and three other Kryptonians to Earth. Superman is defeated and killed, and visits Jor-El — who committed suicide on Krypton while in prison – in Kryptonian heaven. Resurrected, he returns to Earth and defeats the four Kryptonians before flying off to Krypton in a spaceship.