Neil Gaiman is revealing secrets behind the long process to adapt the “The Sandman” comics for Hollywood. On a new episode of “Happy Sad Confused”, the creator sat down with Josh Horowitz to talk about his much-anticipated “Sandman” series for Netflix.
Gaiman created the comics in the late ’80s and ’90s where it became a cult classic with comic fans. Talks around adapting the series for a movie have also been around for just as long. READ MORE: ‘The Sandman’ Drops Surprise Two Bonus Episodes Featuring Sandra Oh, James McAvoy & More In fact, one attempted adaptation imagined Michael Jackson in the titular role. “By 1996, I was being taken to Warners, where the then-president of Warner Bros.
sat me down and told me that Michael Jackson had phoned him the day before and asked him if he could star as Morpheus in ‘The Sandman’,” Gaiman shared. “So, there was a lot of interest in this and they knew that it was one of the Crown Jewels and what did I think?
And I was like, ‘Ooh.'” Another name that was thrown in the casting hat was Joseph Gordon-Levitt in 2016. It wasn’t until Netflix’s “The Sandman” that the comics were finally adapted into a series with Tom Sturridge in the role of Morpheus.
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