In an interview with Sci-Fi Wire, "Blade: Trinity" writer/director David Goyer updated them on the various projects he has in the works as a producer, writer and director. Amongst such projects there is:
<strong>Murder Mysteries</strong>
An adaptation of a Neil Gaiman short stort in "Smoke and Mirrors". Goyer says"I think it's the best script I've ever written. And it's currently without a studio home, and it's hopefully something I'm going to direct one day - It's a tricky story. It's sort of a story within a story within a story. ... It really plays with the audience's expectations, and it's one of those stories, kind of like in Usual Suspects, it turns in the very last moments and everything you thought the movie is about is not what it's about at all".
<strong>The Invisible</strong>
"A remake of a Swedish film that I'm developing with Spyglass for DreamWorks. I'm not writing it. It's a supernatural thriller and kind of a love story. It's quite good. It doesn't involve any visual effects, but the original film is a really beautiful movie."
<strong>Y: The Last Man</strong>
A project based on the comic book by Brian K. Vaughan. I'm one of the producers. Jeff Vintar, who wrote I, Robot, is adapting it. We just got our first draft in. It's very good, and he's embarking on a rewrite."
<strong>The Descent</strong>
Based on Jeff Long's novel about an underground ancient civilisation - the project is in limbo. "It was developed with Dreamworks. Really cool book, I'm really happy with the script, and when [former production president] Mike De Luca left DreamWorks, it kind of lost its champion, so we'll see".
<strong>Alone</strong>
"I'm producing at New Line. It was originally written by Kevin Taft, and Josh Olson, who wrote the script for History of Violence, is rewriting it right now. And it's about ... a high school girl who's agoraphobic, cant leave her house. She becomes convinced that her house is haunted, and that the ghost is trying to kill her"
<strong>Unique</strong>
Set up at Disney, "it's loosely based on a graphic novel. And Michael Cooney, [who] wrote Identity, has just started writing a script for it, so that's a long ways off. It's about parallel worlds".
Thanks to 'Patrick'
