Skip to main content

Charlize Theron will produce an Aqualad series for HBO Max

When Charlize Theron signed a first-look development deal with HBO Max in 2020, it’s a safe bet that no one was expecting a comic book adaptation to come out of that contract. Regardless, Variety broke the story that Theron is slated to executive produce an Aqualad live-action series for HBO Max. And the things that make this project unique may be exactly the reason why Theron took it on.

The series is an adaptation of an out-of-continuity LGBT-themed YA graphic novel, You Brought Me the Ocean. Alex Sanchez and artist Jul Maroh were the creative team behind that 2019 re-imagining of the origin story for Jackson “Jake” Hyde, the second Aqualad. Within the graphic novel, Jake is unaware of his half-Atlantean nature and initially uncomfortable with his emerging sexuality. However, Jake finds himself falling for his fellow high school student, Kenny Liu, even as Jake’s powers begin to manifest themselves whenever he is exposed to water.

This incarnation of Aqualad was created in 2010 for the animated series, Young Justice, by Brandon Vietti, Greg Weisman, and Phil Bourassa. He wasn’t initially portrayed as LGBT on the show, but he has been in a romantic relationship with another male Atlantean for the past two seasons. His comic book counterpart came out years earlier.

Jackson Hyde, the second Aqualad.
Image used with permission by copyright holder

One of the most intriguing aspects of this incarnation of Aqualad is that he is the son of an Atlantean woman and Black Manta, one of Aquaman’s deadliest villains. And his Atlantean birth name is Kaldur’ahm. Within both the comics and the Young Justice show, the former Aqualad is now sharing the Aquaman codename with the original, Arthur Curry. And assuming that the HBO Max show goes forward, Aqualad will be the first openly gay male hero to headline a DC superhero show.

Variety notes that the series is being developed as a one-hour dramedy, although there are no writers attached to the project yet. A.J. Dix, Beth Kono, and Andrew Haas will executive produce the show with Theron for Warner Bros. Television and HBO Max.

Blair Marnell
Blair Marnell has been an entertainment journalist for over 15 years. His bylines have appeared in Wizard Magazine, Geek…
10 best episodes from Batman: The Animated Series on HBO Max
The shadowy silhouette of Batman standing atop a building in Gotham City.

The Batman has spread its wings and success over to HBO Max, opening up the movie to another segment of the general audience. The movie was a critical and commercial success, though the streaming platform has plenty of other solid Batman content available. In many ways, the early- to mid-'90s cartoon Batman: The Animated Series (BTAS) set the gold standard for how high the brooding superhero should be aiming for in any on-screen project.

BTAS perfectly balances the inherently whimsical nature of comic books with thought-provoking noir nuance. These episodes of The Animated Series, and by extension its sequel series, The New Batman Adventures (TNBA), are some of the best Dark Knight tales fans will find readily available.
Heart of Ice - BTAS

Read more
Underrated Batman villains that should be in Caped Crusader
Batman holding his cape under the moonlight in Caped Crusader key art.

The Batman has successfully ushered in a new age for the Dark Knight theatrically, but the brooding superhero is poised to expand his on-screen presence elsewhere. Under the producing capacity of The Batman's Matt Reeves, J. J. Abrams, Batman: The Animated Series co-creator Bruce Timm, and showrunner Ed Brubaker, DC will try to catch lightning in a bottle twice in the animated space with Batman: Caped Crusader.

The HBO Max series will attempt to go bolder than what the revered BTAS did in the '90s, and with that demands a strong lineup of villains. Batman has perhaps the greatest rogues' gallery in comics, but Brubaker should make the most out of the hero's toybox of underrated villains from his comic book mythos.
Black Mask

Read more
Viola Davis may headline HBO Max’s Peacemaker spinoff series
Viola Davis as Amanda Waller in 2016's Suicide Squad

Earlier this year, Peacemaker was such a big hit for HBO Max that it earned an early second season renewal. Now, the Peacemaker spinoff series is coming into focus. Deadline is reporting that Viola Davis is in negotiations to executive produce and star in the currently untitled show. If Davis signs on, she will reprise her role as Amanda Waller from The Suicide Squad films.

In the DC Expanded Universe, Waller is the head of Task Force X, a secret government program that blackmails supervillains into going on suicide missions for their nation. That's where the Suicide Squad nickname comes from. Waller has also demonstrated a ruthless streak in the films, and a willingness to murder her operatives if they disobey her orders in the field. She's not an easy character to like, but Waller isn't evil. Instead, she's amoral, and she doesn't feel the need to adhere to any heroic ideals because she never claimed to be a hero.

Read more