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Spawn (1997 film)

Spawn is a 1997 American superhero film based on the Image Comics character of the same name. Directed by Mark A.Z. Dippé, the film stars Michael Jai White in the title role, alongside John Leguizamo, Martin Sheen, Theresa Randle, D. B. Sweeney, and Nicol Williamson in his final film role. The film depicts the origin story of the title character, a murdered US Marine who is resurrected as the reluctant leader of Hell's army. Spawn is one of the first films to feature an African American actor portraying a major comic book superhero.[6][7]

Spawn
Theatrical release poster
Directed byMark A.Z. Dippé
Screenplay byAlan B. McElroy
Story by
  • Alan B. McElroy
  • Mark A.Z. Dippé
Based on
Produced byClint Goldman
Starring
CinematographyGuillermo Navarro
Edited by
  • Rick Shaine
  • Michael N. Knue
  • Todd Busch
Music byGraeme Revell
Production
company
Dippe Goldman Williams[1]
Distributed by
Release date
  • August 1, 1997 (1997-08-01)
Running time
96 minutes[2]
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$40–45 million[3][4]
Box office$87.9 million[5]

The film was released in the United States on August 1, 1997. It received generally negative reviews and grossed $87.9 million worldwide against a production budget between $40–45 million.

Plot

U.S. Marine Corps Force Recon Lieutenant Colonel and CIA operative Al Simmons is assigned by his superior, Jason Wynn, to infiltrate a biochemical weapons plant in North Korea, despite Simmons' growing moral qualms with the nature of his work. Unknown to Simmons, Wynn has ordered his top assassin Jessica Priest to murder him while he is on the mission. Before Simmons dies, he is set on fire by Wynn and the flames cause the plant to explode. Simmons arrives in Hell, where one of the rulers of Hell - Malebolgia - offers him a Faustian deal: if Simmons becomes his eternal servant and leader of his army in Armageddon, he will be able to return to Earth to see his wife, Wanda Blake. Simmons accepts the offer and returns to Earth.

Upon his return as Spawn, he learns that five years have passed since his death. Wanda is now married to his best friend Terry Fitzgerald, who is living as the stepfather to his daughter Cyan. Spawn encounters a clown-like demon named Violator, sent by Malebolgia, who acts as his guide down the path to evil. Spawn also meets and befriends a young homeless boy named Zack and a mysterious old man named Cogliostro, a fellow Hellspawn who has successfully freed his soul and now fights for Heaven. Spawn learns that Wynn is now a weapons dealer and has developed a biological weapon called Heat 16. During a reception, Spawn attacks Wynn, kills Jessica, and escapes with the help of his necroplasm armor.

Following the attack by Spawn, Violator convinces Wynn to have a device attached to his heart that will release Heat 16 worldwide if his vital signs flatline as a deterrent against assassination attempts. Malebolgia wants Simmons to kill Wynn and initiate the apocalypse. Spawn confronts Violator, who turns into his demonic form and beats him down. Cogliostro rescues him and teaches him how to use his necroplasm armor with Zack. Spawn learns that Violator and Wynn are going to kill Terry, Cyan, and Wanda.

Terry sends an email incriminating Wynn to a fellow newsman. Just as the email is sent, Cyan and Wynn enter the room. Wynn destroys Terry's computer and takes the family hostage. Spawn, Cogliostro and Zack arrive and nearly kill Wynn, but Spawn extracts the device from Wynn's body instead and destroys it. With his plan foiled, Violator sends Spawn and Cogliostro to Hell, where they both battle the demon before subduing him. Spawn is then confronted by Malebolgia, and tells the demon that he will never lead Hell's army. Spawn escapes with Cogliostro just before they are overwhelmed by Malebolgia's forces. Violator, having recovered, follows them. A final battle ensues, ending with Spawn decapitating the demon with his chains. Violator's head taunts the group and threatens his return before melting and returning to Hell. Wynn is arrested, and Spawn, realizing there is no place for him in Wanda's world anymore, dedicates himself to justice rather than succumbing to his lust for vengeance and returns to the streets with Cogliostro and Zack.

Cast

 
Michael Jai White

Spawn creator Todd McFarlane makes a cameo appearance as a homeless man.

Production

Columbia Pictures showed interest in making a film adaptation of Spawn when the comic book was launched in 1992. Negotiations fell through as Todd McFarlane felt that the studio was not giving him enough creative control.[8] He eventually sold the film rights to New Line Cinema for $1 in exchange for creative input and merchandising rights.[9] New Line president Michael DeLuca, a comic book collector himself, expressed interest in having "a character that has as established an audience as Spawn", while declaring that success hinged on an adaptation that "maintains a PG-13 rating but retains its darkness."[8]

As visual effects were an important production concern, the film was to be produced by Pull Down Your Pants Pictures, a company formed by former Industrial Light & Magic artists Mark A.Z. Dippé, Clint Goldman, and Steve 'Spaz' Williams. Dippé was slated to direct the film, with Goldman as producer, and Williams as second unit director and visual effects supervisor.[10] Dippé and Williams, who at the time was the only one of the three still attached to ILM, called the film opportunity "our ticket out of the company".[11] The script would be written by Alan B. McElroy, who, along with writing the Spawn comic book, also wrote many episodes of the Todd McFarlane's Spawn animated series.[10]

Michael Jai White found Al Simmons' character appealing; he described Spawn as "the most tragic character I've encountered in any cinematic production." He says it was a challenge to make audiences sympathize with a government assassin who comes back from hell. White had to endure two to four hours of make-up work, including a full glued-on bodysuit, yellow contact lenses that irritated his eyes, and a mask that restricted his breathing.[12] He said that his long-time experience with martial arts helped him to endure the uncomfortable prosthetics, giving him "strong will and unbreakable concentration."[8] The makeup for John Leguizamo as Clown took eight hours to apply at first, but they later got the process down to about four hours. It left him with blisters and callouses on his face and neck. Leguizamo found the heavy prosthetics of his costume for the Clown to be claustrophobic, and the costume lacked any kind of a cooling system so he would sweat excessively. He compared the situation to wearing a full body condom.[13][14]

Spawn was originally green-lit with a budget of $20 million. The scale of the visual effects led New Line to continually increase the project's budget, which grew to $40–45 million — a third of which was spent on the effects. The shooting schedule was only 63 days. To cut production time by a week, Goldman lent $1 million to engage John Grower's Santa Barbara Studios to develop the digitally produced Hell sequences.[9] The visual effects shot count increased from 77 to over 400, created by 22 companies in the United States, Canada and Japan, requiring 70 people and nearly 11 months to complete. Industrial Light and Magic (ILM) did most of the work, creating 85 shots at a cost of $8.5 million. More than half of the final effects shots were delivered two weeks before the film's debut.[9]

The most difficult sequences to render in the film included the Violator, Spawn's digital cape, and some of Spawn's transformations.[9] Visual effects supervisor 'Spaz' Williams, with his previous experience of creating the T. Rex in Jurassic Park, was responsible for realizing the reptilian Violator. Working with KNB EFX Group over several months they created a small 24-inch reference model, as well as a full size 11-foot model for use in some of the practical shots. The small model was cut up and laser scanned, the data was then used by a team at ILM to create a digital armature of the creature, and to paint and give texture to the digital model. Only then could the character be animated, after which the work had to be converted to regular film stock. Further work was needed to integrate the footage with the rest of the scene, such as matching the lighting and grain of the other footage. The final shot of The Violator was delivered on July 21, 1997.[9] A team at ILM supervised by Christopher Hery and Habib Zargarpour modelled, animated and rendered realistic looking robes, glass elements and a computer generated Spawn. Originally intended as one long shot, the scene was later recut and extended.[15]

Differences from the comic

Terry Fitzgerald, Al Simmons' best friend before his death, is black in the comics. In the film, he is white, portrayed by D. B. Sweeney. Todd McFarlane explained that this change was made by the studio to avoid having too many black leads, as they believed this would give the false impression that film's target audience was the African American demographic.[16][17][18]

In the comics, Al Simmons' murderer is Chapel, a character created by Rob Liefeld for the comic Youngblood. Jessica Priest, a character created for the film, took Chapel's place in the movie.[19] The comic book's storyline was later retconned so that Jessica Priest was Al Simmons' killer, and Chapel's involvement was forgotten.[20]

Release

Theatrical

The original cut of Spawn earned an R rating from the Motion Picture Association of America resulting in the producers toning down the violence in the film to get a PG-13 rating.[10]

Home media

The film was released on VHS on May 5, 1998 in a PG-13 version and an R-rated Director's Cut version. The Director's Cut version included 45 minutes of additional footage, a "Making of Spawn" featurette, and an interview with Todd MacFarlane.[21] The Director's Cut version was released on DVD on January 9, 1998[22] and on Blu-ray on July 10, 2012.[23][24]

Reception

Box office

Spawn was released on August 1, 1997. It grossed $19,738,749 that opening weekend, ranking it second behind Air Force One. For its second weekend, the film dropped to number three in the box office, reflecting a decreased earnings of 54.7% and a gross of $8,949,953.[25] The film grossed $54.9 million in the United States and Canada and $32.9 million internationally, grossing $87.9 million worldwide[5] against a production budget between $40–45 million.[3][4]

Critical response

On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a score of 17% based on reviews from 46 critics. The website's consensus states: "Spawn is an overbearing, over-violent film that adds little to the comic book adaptation genre."[26] On Metacritic it has a score of 34 out of 100 based on reviews from 17 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[27] Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "C+" on an A+ to F scale.[28]

One of the few positive reviews was from Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun-Times, who awarded the film 3½ out of 4 stars. He wrote that the film's plot was "sappy" and little more than a set-up for some of the most innovative effects of the era, so much that Spawn verged on surrealistic art film. Ebert ended his review with "As a visual experience, Spawn is unforgettable."[29] Gene Siskel, his At the Movies co-host disagreed, and said the film lost him a mere two minutes after its introduction. Ebert praised the hellscape imagery and accused Siskel of being dismissive because of the genre, but having liked Batman, Siskel was unconvinced.[30] David Kaplan of Newsweek called the film "the summer's most spectacular concoction of visual effects and color" but said that those unfamiliar with the comics might find the story difficult to follow.[31]

Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle criticized the weak story, and called the film a visual assault, "is all about style, which will appeal to some viewers and overwhelm most others". Of the cast LaSalle says only John Leguizamo stands out, his "zaniness seems in tune with the action" and he is "lucky enough to have a flashy part".[32] Rita Kempley of The Washington Post calls the film a "muddled revenge fantasy" and criticizes the "nonsensical screenplay" and complains about the "thicket of narrative, punctuated by repetitive action sequences."[33]Todd McCarthy writing for Variety magazine criticized the film for its over-reliance on special effects. He called it "narratively knuckleheaded", and disliked the scatological humor, and found the action sequences numbingly repetitive with "no compensatory narrative or thematic balance". McCarthy expected the younger male target-audience would enjoy the film, but that as the film is "loaded with effects at the expense of character or narrative coherence" it would be a turn-off for other viewers.[4] Laura Miller of Salon.com called Spawn "a witless exercise in reheating leftovers". Miller called the comic character "a rehash of Spiderman"(sic) and the film a poor man's Batman. She declares "This movie sucks" and criticizes the special effects, compounded by the film taking itself too seriously. She is critical of the lack of dramatic structure, calling Spawn "a film helmed by technicians" and concludes that it is a film by "smart people pretending to be stupid".[34]

Michael Jai White is not a fan of the film: "There is no footage of me ever saying that I liked Spawn. I have never said that I thought that was a good movie".[35] John Leguizamo commented on the film: "The thing that Todd McFarlane brought to the comic book industry, which he saved in the early 1990s, was the edge. The darkness, the vulgarity, the violence. I think the movie would have profited for more violence, more vulgarity and being darker. Let it be truer to the comics."[36]

Accolades

At the Saturn Awards, Spawn was nominated for Best Make-up. The film was also nominated for three Blockbuster Entertainment Awards for Favorite Male Newcomer (Michael Jai White), Favorite Horror Supporting Actor (John Leguizamo) and Favorite Horror Supporting Actress (Theresa Randle).[37] At the Sitges - Catalan International Film Festival, Spawn was nominated for Best Film; the film was also nominated for & won the Best Special Effects award.[38]

In January 2018, Complex magazine listed Spawn at number 2 out of 22, on its list of "The Best Black Superheroes In Movies".[39]

Remake

A sequel, tentatively titled Spawn 2, has been in development hell since 1998.[40] Producer Don Murphy maintained that he was part of the project in 2001.[41] McFarlane stated that the film would have centered primarily on the detective characters Sam and Twitch, with Spawn only as a background character.[24]

In 2007, McFarlane Funding announced development of a new feature film adaptation of the character, titled Spawn, scheduled for release in 2008.[42][43] During an interview on the Scott Ferrall show on Sirius radio, McFarlane said: "It's coming out no matter what. Even if I have to produce, direct and finance it myself, it's going to come out."[44]

McFarlane announced on August 23, 2009 that he had begun writing the screenplay for a new movie based on the character, saying that "The story has been in my head for 7 or 8 years", that "The movie idea is neither a recap or continuation. It is a standalone story that will be R-rated. Creepy and scary", and that "the tone of this Spawn movie will be for a more older audience. Like the film The Departed."[45] Michael Jai White said in July 2011 that he was interested in returning to the role, expressing his support for McFarlane's film.[46] In July 2013, Jamie Foxx said he was "aggressively pursuing" the Spawn reboot.[47] In August 2013, McFarlane discussed his progress with the script, stating that the film would be "more of a horror movie and a thriller movie, not a superhero one".[48]

In February 2016, McFarlane announced he had completed the film's script.[49] In July 2017, Blumhouse Productions confirmed their involvement with the film, while announcing that McFarlane had also signed on to direct the project.[50] The movie was expected to begin production by February 2018.[51] In May 2018, it was announced that Jamie Foxx would portray the titular character.[52] In July 2018, it was reported that Jeremy Renner would be starring alongside Foxx as Detective Twitch.[53] On October 25, 2018, the filming start date was delayed to June 2019.[54] The film ended up missing its start date. In November 2019, the film restarted development due to the financial success of the R-rated comic book film Joker.[55][56] In December 2019, McFarlane hired an additional writer to help polish the script, before presenting it to a major Hollywood studio.[57][58] In March 2020, McFarlane stated Spawn will go into production sometime in 2020 with the intention for him to direct and Jamie Foxx still attached for the lead role.[59][60][61][62] In May 2020, producer Jason Blum stated that "There has been an enormous amount of activity on Spawn......But, suffice to say, it is a very active development."[63] In August 2021, it was revealed that Broken City screenwriter Brian Tucker had been hired to rewrite McFarlane's screenplay.[64] In October 2022, Scott Silver, Malcolm Spellman, and Matthew Mixon had been hired to rewrite the screenplay.[65]

Soundtrack

Spawn: The Album
Soundtrack album by
various artists
ReleasedJuly 29, 1997
Genre
Length62:11
Label
Producer
  • Happy Walters
  • various
Singles from Spawn: The Album
  1. "Long Hard Road Out of Hell"
    Released: July 22, 1997
  2. "(Can't You) Trip Like I Do"
    Released: October 7, 1997
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic     [66]
Entertainment Weekly(A) August 8, 1997
Rolling Stone      August 21, 1997

Spawn: The Album was released in July 1997 and featured popular rock and metal group of bands at the time including: Metallica, Korn, Slayer, Marilyn Manson, Stabbing Westward, Filter, Soul Coughing, Silverchair and Mansun in collaborations with well-known electronica / techno producers such as The Crystal Method, Roni Size, The Prodigy, DJ Greyboy, Atari Teenage Riot, Moby, Orbital and 808 State.[66] A similar concept was previously implemented on the rock/hip hop-infused Judgment Night soundtrack,[67][68] and later, on the Blade II soundtrack, forming a trilogy of genre-blending soundtracks produced by Happy Walters.[citation needed]

The album debuted at #7 on the U.S. Billboard 200 and stayed on the chart for 25 weeks.[67] The album is certified Gold for selling over 500,000 copies in America.[69]

The US version of the album features different cover art and the bonus track "This Is Not A Dream" by Morphine and Apollo 440.[citation needed] The Australian and Japanese versions, besides the bonus track, feature cover art based on images in Spawn #39 and a marquee of Spawn: In the Demon's Hand.[70][71] The Japanese version contains a third disk with three remixes. The McFarlane Collector's Club made an LP release available to its members, featuring the standard album art and a translucent red vinyl disc. In 2017 a 20th Anniversary edition was released with a translucent blue vinyl disc.[72]

"It was a bit rushed," declared The Prodigy's Liam Howlett of their collaboration with Rage Against the Machine. "I did it in three days when I usually need a week."[73] In addition, Moby was originally slated to collaborate with industrial rock band Gravity Kills (titled "Suffocating"). Although he only contributed some samples and keyboard lines to the track, ultimately, he instead chose the final track with Butthole Surfers.[74] The Gravity Kills track would later be leaked online.[citation needed]

Track listing

US limited and Australian editions bonus track
No.TitleArtistsLength
15."This Is Not a Dream" (The UK "Mix")Morphine and Apollo 4405:20
Total length:67:33

Chart positions

Legacy

Spawn is one of the first films to feature an African American actor portraying a major comic book superhero.[6][7][86] Although preceded by other black superhero films such as The Meteor Man (1993), Spawn was the first to be based on a major comic book. Steel, starring basketball player Shaquille O'Neal based on a DC character, was also released later in the same month as Spawn. Writing in 2018, Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail was critical of the fact that Michael Jai White was barely seen, and his face hidden by a mask or prosthetics.[87] Unlike Blade (1998) which came later and was promoted based on the popularity of action star Wesley Snipes and happened to be based on a comic, Spawn was promoted based on the popularity of the McFarlane comic. Film critic Scott Mendelson says that Spawn and other films not only paved the way for films such as Black Panther but that success of Black Panther represents a return to the status quo.[88]

References

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External links

spawn, 1997, film, spawn, 1997, american, superhero, film, based, image, comics, character, same, name, directed, mark, dippé, film, stars, michael, white, title, role, alongside, john, leguizamo, martin, sheen, theresa, randle, sweeney, nicol, williamson, fin. Spawn is a 1997 American superhero film based on the Image Comics character of the same name Directed by Mark A Z Dippe the film stars Michael Jai White in the title role alongside John Leguizamo Martin Sheen Theresa Randle D B Sweeney and Nicol Williamson in his final film role The film depicts the origin story of the title character a murdered US Marine who is resurrected as the reluctant leader of Hell s army Spawn is one of the first films to feature an African American actor portraying a major comic book superhero 6 7 SpawnTheatrical release posterDirected byMark A Z DippeScreenplay byAlan B McElroyStory byAlan B McElroy Mark A Z DippeBased onSpawnby Todd McFarlaneProduced byClint GoldmanStarringJohn Leguizamo Michael Jai White Martin Sheen Theresa Randle Nicol Williamson D B SweeneyCinematographyGuillermo NavarroEdited byRick Shaine Michael N Knue Todd BuschMusic byGraeme RevellProductioncompanyDippe Goldman Williams 1 Distributed byNew Line Cinema 1 Todd McFarlane Entertainment 1 Release dateAugust 1 1997 1997 08 01 Running time96 minutes 2 CountryUnited StatesLanguageEnglishBudget 40 45 million 3 4 Box office 87 9 million 5 The film was released in the United States on August 1 1997 It received generally negative reviews and grossed 87 9 million worldwide against a production budget between 40 45 million Contents 1 Plot 2 Cast 3 Production 4 Differences from the comic 5 Release 5 1 Theatrical 5 2 Home media 6 Reception 6 1 Box office 6 2 Critical response 6 3 Accolades 7 Remake 8 Soundtrack 8 1 Track listing 8 2 Chart positions 9 Legacy 10 References 11 External linksPlot EditU S Marine Corps Force Recon Lieutenant Colonel and CIA operative Al Simmons is assigned by his superior Jason Wynn to infiltrate a biochemical weapons plant in North Korea despite Simmons growing moral qualms with the nature of his work Unknown to Simmons Wynn has ordered his top assassin Jessica Priest to murder him while he is on the mission Before Simmons dies he is set on fire by Wynn and the flames cause the plant to explode Simmons arrives in Hell where one of the rulers of Hell Malebolgia offers him a Faustian deal if Simmons becomes his eternal servant and leader of his army in Armageddon he will be able to return to Earth to see his wife Wanda Blake Simmons accepts the offer and returns to Earth Upon his return as Spawn he learns that five years have passed since his death Wanda is now married to his best friend Terry Fitzgerald who is living as the stepfather to his daughter Cyan Spawn encounters a clown like demon named Violator sent by Malebolgia who acts as his guide down the path to evil Spawn also meets and befriends a young homeless boy named Zack and a mysterious old man named Cogliostro a fellow Hellspawn who has successfully freed his soul and now fights for Heaven Spawn learns that Wynn is now a weapons dealer and has developed a biological weapon called Heat 16 During a reception Spawn attacks Wynn kills Jessica and escapes with the help of his necroplasm armor Following the attack by Spawn Violator convinces Wynn to have a device attached to his heart that will release Heat 16 worldwide if his vital signs flatline as a deterrent against assassination attempts Malebolgia wants Simmons to kill Wynn and initiate the apocalypse Spawn confronts Violator who turns into his demonic form and beats him down Cogliostro rescues him and teaches him how to use his necroplasm armor with Zack Spawn learns that Violator and Wynn are going to kill Terry Cyan and Wanda Terry sends an email incriminating Wynn to a fellow newsman Just as the email is sent Cyan and Wynn enter the room Wynn destroys Terry s computer and takes the family hostage Spawn Cogliostro and Zack arrive and nearly kill Wynn but Spawn extracts the device from Wynn s body instead and destroys it With his plan foiled Violator sends Spawn and Cogliostro to Hell where they both battle the demon before subduing him Spawn is then confronted by Malebolgia and tells the demon that he will never lead Hell s army Spawn escapes with Cogliostro just before they are overwhelmed by Malebolgia s forces Violator having recovered follows them A final battle ensues ending with Spawn decapitating the demon with his chains Violator s head taunts the group and threatens his return before melting and returning to Hell Wynn is arrested and Spawn realizing there is no place for him in Wanda s world anymore dedicates himself to justice rather than succumbing to his lust for vengeance and returns to the streets with Cogliostro and Zack Cast Edit Michael Jai White Michael Jai White as CIA Agent Al Simmons Spawn John Leguizamo as Clown Violator Martin Sheen as CIA Director Jason Wynn Theresa Randle as Wanda Blake Nicol Williamson as Nicholas Cogliostro D B Sweeney as CIA Agent Terry Fitzgerald Melinda Clarke as CIA Agent Jessica Priest Miko Hughes as Zack Sydni Beaudoin as Cyan Simmons Fitzgerald Michael Papajohn as Glen Zack s Father Frank Welker as The Voice of Malebolgia Spawn creator Todd McFarlane makes a cameo appearance as a homeless man Production EditColumbia Pictures showed interest in making a film adaptation of Spawn when the comic book was launched in 1992 Negotiations fell through as Todd McFarlane felt that the studio was not giving him enough creative control 8 He eventually sold the film rights to New Line Cinema for 1 in exchange for creative input and merchandising rights 9 New Line president Michael DeLuca a comic book collector himself expressed interest in having a character that has as established an audience as Spawn while declaring that success hinged on an adaptation that maintains a PG 13 rating but retains its darkness 8 As visual effects were an important production concern the film was to be produced by Pull Down Your Pants Pictures a company formed by former Industrial Light amp Magic artists Mark A Z Dippe Clint Goldman and Steve Spaz Williams Dippe was slated to direct the film with Goldman as producer and Williams as second unit director and visual effects supervisor 10 Dippe and Williams who at the time was the only one of the three still attached to ILM called the film opportunity our ticket out of the company 11 The script would be written by Alan B McElroy who along with writing the Spawn comic book also wrote many episodes of the Todd McFarlane s Spawn animated series 10 Michael Jai White found Al Simmons character appealing he described Spawn as the most tragic character I ve encountered in any cinematic production He says it was a challenge to make audiences sympathize with a government assassin who comes back from hell White had to endure two to four hours of make up work including a full glued on bodysuit yellow contact lenses that irritated his eyes and a mask that restricted his breathing 12 He said that his long time experience with martial arts helped him to endure the uncomfortable prosthetics giving him strong will and unbreakable concentration 8 The makeup for John Leguizamo as Clown took eight hours to apply at first but they later got the process down to about four hours It left him with blisters and callouses on his face and neck Leguizamo found the heavy prosthetics of his costume for the Clown to be claustrophobic and the costume lacked any kind of a cooling system so he would sweat excessively He compared the situation to wearing a full body condom 13 14 Spawn was originally green lit with a budget of 20 million The scale of the visual effects led New Line to continually increase the project s budget which grew to 40 45 million a third of which was spent on the effects The shooting schedule was only 63 days To cut production time by a week Goldman lent 1 million to engage John Grower s Santa Barbara Studios to develop the digitally produced Hell sequences 9 The visual effects shot count increased from 77 to over 400 created by 22 companies in the United States Canada and Japan requiring 70 people and nearly 11 months to complete Industrial Light and Magic ILM did most of the work creating 85 shots at a cost of 8 5 million More than half of the final effects shots were delivered two weeks before the film s debut 9 The most difficult sequences to render in the film included the Violator Spawn s digital cape and some of Spawn s transformations 9 Visual effects supervisor Spaz Williams with his previous experience of creating the T Rex in Jurassic Park was responsible for realizing the reptilian Violator Working with KNB EFX Group over several months they created a small 24 inch reference model as well as a full size 11 foot model for use in some of the practical shots The small model was cut up and laser scanned the data was then used by a team at ILM to create a digital armature of the creature and to paint and give texture to the digital model Only then could the character be animated after which the work had to be converted to regular film stock Further work was needed to integrate the footage with the rest of the scene such as matching the lighting and grain of the other footage The final shot of The Violator was delivered on July 21 1997 9 A team at ILM supervised by Christopher Hery and Habib Zargarpour modelled animated and rendered realistic looking robes glass elements and a computer generated Spawn Originally intended as one long shot the scene was later recut and extended 15 Differences from the comic EditTerry Fitzgerald Al Simmons best friend before his death is black in the comics In the film he is white portrayed by D B Sweeney Todd McFarlane explained that this change was made by the studio to avoid having too many black leads as they believed this would give the false impression that film s target audience was the African American demographic 16 17 18 In the comics Al Simmons murderer is Chapel a character created by Rob Liefeld for the comic Youngblood Jessica Priest a character created for the film took Chapel s place in the movie 19 The comic book s storyline was later retconned so that Jessica Priest was Al Simmons killer and Chapel s involvement was forgotten 20 Release EditTheatrical Edit The original cut of Spawn earned an R rating from the Motion Picture Association of America resulting in the producers toning down the violence in the film to get a PG 13 rating 10 Home media Edit The film was released on VHS on May 5 1998 in a PG 13 version and an R rated Director s Cut version The Director s Cut version included 45 minutes of additional footage a Making of Spawn featurette and an interview with Todd MacFarlane 21 The Director s Cut version was released on DVD on January 9 1998 22 and on Blu ray on July 10 2012 23 24 Reception EditBox office Edit Spawn was released on August 1 1997 It grossed 19 738 749 that opening weekend ranking it second behind Air Force One For its second weekend the film dropped to number three in the box office reflecting a decreased earnings of 54 7 and a gross of 8 949 953 25 The film grossed 54 9 million in the United States and Canada and 32 9 million internationally grossing 87 9 million worldwide 5 against a production budget between 40 45 million 3 4 Critical response Edit On Rotten Tomatoes the film has a score of 17 based on reviews from 46 critics The website s consensus states Spawn is an overbearing over violent film that adds little to the comic book adaptation genre 26 On Metacritic it has a score of 34 out of 100 based on reviews from 17 critics indicating generally unfavorable reviews 27 Audiences polled by CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of C on an A to F scale 28 One of the few positive reviews was from Roger Ebert of The Chicago Sun Times who awarded the film 3 out of 4 stars He wrote that the film s plot was sappy and little more than a set up for some of the most innovative effects of the era so much that Spawn verged on surrealistic art film Ebert ended his review with As a visual experience Spawn is unforgettable 29 Gene Siskel his At the Movies co host disagreed and said the film lost him a mere two minutes after its introduction Ebert praised the hellscape imagery and accused Siskel of being dismissive because of the genre but having liked Batman Siskel was unconvinced 30 David Kaplan of Newsweek called the film the summer s most spectacular concoction of visual effects and color but said that those unfamiliar with the comics might find the story difficult to follow 31 Mick LaSalle of the San Francisco Chronicle criticized the weak story and called the film a visual assault is all about style which will appeal to some viewers and overwhelm most others Of the cast LaSalle says only John Leguizamo stands out his zaniness seems in tune with the action and he is lucky enough to have a flashy part 32 Rita Kempley of The Washington Post calls the film a muddled revenge fantasy and criticizes the nonsensical screenplay and complains about the thicket of narrative punctuated by repetitive action sequences 33 Todd McCarthy writing for Variety magazine criticized the film for its over reliance on special effects He called it narratively knuckleheaded and disliked the scatological humor and found the action sequences numbingly repetitive with no compensatory narrative or thematic balance McCarthy expected the younger male target audience would enjoy the film but that as the film is loaded with effects at the expense of character or narrative coherence it would be a turn off for other viewers 4 Laura Miller of Salon com called Spawn a witless exercise in reheating leftovers Miller called the comic character a rehash of Spiderman sic and the film a poor man s Batman She declares This movie sucks and criticizes the special effects compounded by the film taking itself too seriously She is critical of the lack of dramatic structure calling Spawn a film helmed by technicians and concludes that it is a film by smart people pretending to be stupid 34 Michael Jai White is not a fan of the film There is no footage of me ever saying that I liked Spawn I have never said that I thought that was a good movie 35 John Leguizamo commented on the film The thing that Todd McFarlane brought to the comic book industry which he saved in the early 1990s was the edge The darkness the vulgarity the violence I think the movie would have profited for more violence more vulgarity and being darker Let it be truer to the comics 36 Accolades Edit At the Saturn Awards Spawn was nominated for Best Make up The film was also nominated for three Blockbuster Entertainment Awards for Favorite Male Newcomer Michael Jai White Favorite Horror Supporting Actor John Leguizamo and Favorite Horror Supporting Actress Theresa Randle 37 At the Sitges Catalan International Film Festival Spawn was nominated for Best Film the film was also nominated for amp won the Best Special Effects award 38 In January 2018 Complex magazine listed Spawn at number 2 out of 22 on its list of The Best Black Superheroes In Movies 39 Remake EditA sequel tentatively titled Spawn 2 has been in development hell since 1998 40 Producer Don Murphy maintained that he was part of the project in 2001 41 McFarlane stated that the film would have centered primarily on the detective characters Sam and Twitch with Spawn only as a background character 24 In 2007 McFarlane Funding announced development of a new feature film adaptation of the character titled Spawn scheduled for release in 2008 42 43 During an interview on the Scott Ferrall show on Sirius radio McFarlane said It s coming out no matter what Even if I have to produce direct and finance it myself it s going to come out 44 McFarlane announced on August 23 2009 that he had begun writing the screenplay for a new movie based on the character saying that The story has been in my head for 7 or 8 years that The movie idea is neither a recap or continuation It is a standalone story that will be R rated Creepy and scary and that the tone of this Spawn movie will be for a more older audience Like the film The Departed 45 Michael Jai White said in July 2011 that he was interested in returning to the role expressing his support for McFarlane s film 46 In July 2013 Jamie Foxx said he was aggressively pursuing the Spawn reboot 47 In August 2013 McFarlane discussed his progress with the script stating that the film would be more of a horror movie and a thriller movie not a superhero one 48 In February 2016 McFarlane announced he had completed the film s script 49 In July 2017 Blumhouse Productions confirmed their involvement with the film while announcing that McFarlane had also signed on to direct the project 50 The movie was expected to begin production by February 2018 51 In May 2018 it was announced that Jamie Foxx would portray the titular character 52 In July 2018 it was reported that Jeremy Renner would be starring alongside Foxx as Detective Twitch 53 On October 25 2018 the filming start date was delayed to June 2019 54 The film ended up missing its start date In November 2019 the film restarted development due to the financial success of the R rated comic book film Joker 55 56 In December 2019 McFarlane hired an additional writer to help polish the script before presenting it to a major Hollywood studio 57 58 In March 2020 McFarlane stated Spawn will go into production sometime in 2020 with the intention for him to direct and Jamie Foxx still attached for the lead role 59 60 61 62 In May 2020 producer Jason Blum stated that There has been an enormous amount of activity on Spawn But suffice to say it is a very active development 63 In August 2021 it was revealed that Broken City screenwriter Brian Tucker had been hired to rewrite McFarlane s screenplay 64 In October 2022 Scott Silver Malcolm Spellman and Matthew Mixon had been hired to rewrite the screenplay 65 Soundtrack EditSpawn The AlbumSoundtrack album by various artistsReleasedJuly 29 1997GenreElectronic rock industrial rock industrial metal nu metalLength62 11LabelSonyImmortalEpicProducerHappy WaltersvariousSingles from Spawn The Album Long Hard Road Out of Hell Released July 22 1997 Can t You Trip Like I Do Released October 7 1997Professional ratingsReview scoresSourceRatingAllMusic 66 Entertainment Weekly A August 8 1997Rolling Stone August 21 1997Spawn The Album was released in July 1997 and featured popular rock and metal group of bands at the time including Metallica Korn Slayer Marilyn Manson Stabbing Westward Filter Soul Coughing Silverchair and Mansun in collaborations with well known electronica techno producers such as The Crystal Method Roni Size The Prodigy DJ Greyboy Atari Teenage Riot Moby Orbital and 808 State 66 A similar concept was previously implemented on the rock hip hop infused Judgment Night soundtrack 67 68 and later on the Blade II soundtrack forming a trilogy of genre blending soundtracks produced by Happy Walters citation needed The album debuted at 7 on the U S Billboard 200 and stayed on the chart for 25 weeks 67 The album is certified Gold for selling over 500 000 copies in America 69 The US version of the album features different cover art and the bonus track This Is Not A Dream by Morphine and Apollo 440 citation needed The Australian and Japanese versions besides the bonus track feature cover art based on images in Spawn 39 and a marquee of Spawn In the Demon s Hand 70 71 The Japanese version contains a third disk with three remixes The McFarlane Collector s Club made an LP release available to its members featuring the standard album art and a translucent red vinyl disc In 2017 a 20th Anniversary edition was released with a translucent blue vinyl disc 72 It was a bit rushed declared The Prodigy s Liam Howlett of their collaboration with Rage Against the Machine I did it in three days when I usually need a week 73 In addition Moby was originally slated to collaborate with industrial rock band Gravity Kills titled Suffocating Although he only contributed some samples and keyboard lines to the track ultimately he instead chose the final track with Butthole Surfers 74 The Gravity Kills track would later be leaked online citation needed Track listing Edit No TitleWriter s ArtistsLength1 Can t You Trip Like I Do The Crystal MethodFilterThe Crystal Method and Filter4 302 Long Hard Road Out of Hell Marilyn MansonTwiggy RamirezMarilyn Manson and Sneaker Pimps4 213 Satan Paul HartnollPhil HartnollOrbital and Kirk Hammett3 454 Kick the P A KornThe Dust BrothersKorn and The Dust Brothers3 215 Tiny Rubberband Butthole SurfersButthole Surfers and Moby4 126 For Whom the Bell Tolls The Irony of It All Cliff BurtonJames HetfieldLars UlrichMetallica and DJ Spooky4 397 Torn Apart Stabbing WestwardJosh WinkStabbing Westward and Josh Wink4 538 Skin Up Pin Up Paul DraperDarren PartingtonMansun and 808 State5 279 One Man Army Liam HowlettTom MorelloThe Prodigy and Tom Morello4 1410 Spawn Ben GilliesDaniel JohnsSilverchair and Vitro4 2811 T 4 Strain GoldieHenry RollinsHenry Rollins and Goldie5 1912 Familiar Brandon BoydMike EinzigerJose Antonio Pasillas IIAlex KatunichGavin DJ Lyfe KoppelAndreas StevensIncubus and DJ Greyboy3 2213 No Remorse I Wanna Die Jeff HannemanKerry KingAlec EmpireTom ArayaHanin EliasSlayer and Atari Teenage Riot4 1614 A Plane Scraped Its Belly on a Sooty Yellow Moon Mark de Gli AntoniMike DoughtyYuval GabayRoni SizeSebastian SteinbergSoul Coughing and Roni Size5 26Total length 62 13 US limited and Australian editions bonus trackNo TitleArtistsLength15 This Is Not a Dream The UK Mix Morphine and Apollo 4405 20Total length 67 33 Chart positions Edit Weekly charts Chart 1997 Peak positionAustralian Albums ARIA 75 15Austrian Albums O3 Austria 76 33French Albums SNEP 77 43German Albums Offizielle Top 100 78 38New Zealand Albums RMNZ 79 1Dutch Albums Album Top 100 80 73Norwegian Albums VG lista 81 15US Billboard 200 82 7 83 Year end charts Chart 1997 PositionAustralian Albums ARIA 84 95Certifications Region Certification Certified units salesAustralia ARIA 85 Gold 35 000 Shipments figures based on certification alone Legacy EditSpawn is one of the first films to feature an African American actor portraying a major comic book superhero 6 7 86 Although preceded by other black superhero films such as The Meteor Man 1993 Spawn was the first to be based on a major comic book Steel starring basketball player Shaquille O Neal based on a DC character was also released later in the same month as Spawn Writing in 2018 Barry Hertz of The Globe and Mail was critical of the fact that Michael Jai White was barely seen and his face hidden by a mask or prosthetics 87 Unlike Blade 1998 which came later and was promoted based on the popularity of action star Wesley Snipes and happened to be based on a comic Spawn was promoted based on the popularity of the McFarlane comic Film critic Scott Mendelson says that Spawn and other films not only paved the way for films such as Black Panther but that success of Black Panther represents a return to the status quo 88 References Edit a b c Spawn 1997 AFI Catalog of Feature Films Retrieved March 22 2020 SPAWN 12 Entertainment Film Distributors British Board of Film Classification August 13 1997 Retrieved July 20 2020 a b Spawn 1997 Box Office Mojo Internet Movie Database Retrieved August 30 2018 a b c McCarthy Todd July 30 1997 Spawn Variety Archived from the original on August 12 2014 Retrieved October 5 2018 a b Spawn 1997 The Numbers Retrieved July 10 2020 a b Michael Jai White is first Black comic superhero to star on the movie screen in Spawn Jet magazine Johnson Publishing Company September 22 1997 Retrieved September 28 2015 a b Chauncey Alcorn February 7 2018 Spawn star Michael Jai White talks Black Panther and the legacy of black superheroes in movies Archived from the original on February 9 2018 Yet it was White s groundbreaking role in Spawn in 1997 that will go down in history as the first portrayal of a major black comic book superhero on the big screen a b c Coker Cheo Hodari January 12 1997 As Once Dead Heroes Go He s Tough to Beat Los Angeles Times Archived from the original on August 26 2014 Retrieved August 18 2019 a b c d e Matzer Marla August 6 1997 Spawn of a New Era Studios Turning to Mix of Houses for Modest Budget Effects Films Los Angeles Times p 2 Retrieved October 5 2018 a b c Wolf Jean August 3 1997 Bringing The Dark Comic Spawn To The Screen Philly com Archived from the original on April 2 2015 Retrieved October 5 2018 The Spaz Who Spawned His Own Style Computer animator Steve Williams doesn t look or think like a typical designer SFGate July 27 1997 Retrieved May 1 2015 O Thompson Andrew September 1997 Spotlight Vibe 5 7 216 Retrieved May 1 2015 Gomez Patrick September 1 2020 Random Roles John Leguizamo on Moulin Rouge Romeo Juliet Ice Age The A V Club 10 actors in unrecognisable film roles Den of Geek January 5 2012 SPAWN VFX HQ Archived from the original on January 10 1998 Retrieved October 5 2018 late additions is a film that contains some brilliant visual effects alongside shots that make audiences cringe Manning Scott February 18 2018 Spawn s Whitewashed Cast in the Black Panther Age ScottManning com Archived from the original on February 19 2018 Todd McFarlane w Greg Capullo p Todd McFarlane i Spawn 59 March 1997 Image Comics Todd McFarlane w Greg Capullo p Todd McFarlane i Spawn 62 June 1997 Image Comics Beatty Scott August 1997 Spawn The Movie Figures Wizard No 72 p 86 Cronin Brian February 3 2013 The Abandoned An Forsaked So Who Killed Spawn Comic Book Resources Archived from the original on January 17 2017 Retrieved September 1 2021 McFarlane adapted that change into the comics themselves Fitzpatrick Elleen April 4 1998 Shelf Talk Billboard Vol 110 no 14 p 63 Retrieved May 30 2015 IGN Staff January 20 2000 Spawn DVD IGN Archived from the original on December 18 2017 Spawn Blu ray Director s Cut Blu ray com Retrieved May 1 2015 a b Hughes David October 31 2012 Comic Book Movies Virgin Film Ebury Publishing p 201 ISBN 978 1 4481 3279 9 Spawn 1997 Weekend Box Office Results Box Office Mojo Retrieved May 1 2015 Spawn 1997 Rotten Tomatoes Fandango Media Retrieved August 28 2020 Critic Reviews for Spawn Metacritic CBS Interactive Retrieved October 5 2018 SPAWN 1997 C CinemaScore Archived from the original on December 20 2018 Ebert Roger August 1 1997 Spawn Movie Review amp Film Summary 1997 Chicago Sun Times Archived from the original on February 5 2014 Retrieved October 18 2017 Siskel amp Ebert At the movies Season 11 Episode 47 Week of August 2 1997 Kaplan David August 4 1997 Movies MSNBC com MSN Archived from the original on August 24 2000 Retrieved October 5 2018 LaSalle Mick August 1 1997 YAWN In Spawn numbing special effects obliterate weak story San Francisco Chronicle Archived from the original on November 7 2012 Kempley Rita August 1 1997 Spawn Murky Depths The Washington Post Archived from the original on August 10 1997 Miller Laura September 1 1997 Spawn Salon com Archived from the original on October 5 2018 Retrieved October 5 2018 Parker Ryan July 16 2018 Michael Jai White Explains Gambol s Bizarre Death Scene in The Dark Knight The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved December 6 2018 Lis Martin October 23 2018 Exclusive John Leguizamo On What Went Wrong With 1997 s Spawn Movie ScreenGeek Retrieved December 6 2018 Blockbuster Entertainment Awards Nominees Announced prnewswire com Press release Archived from the original on February 14 2015 Retrieved October 5 2018 30ed Festival Internacional de Cinema de Catalunya 9 10 19 10 Sitges Retrieved July 6 2016 Victoria Johnson Frazier Tharpe January 26 2018 The Best Black Superheroes In Movies Complex Archived from the original on January 31 2018 Head Steve March 12 2001 Michael Jai White Gives IGN FilmForce the Latest on Spawn 2 IGN Retrieved March 21 2007 Murphy Don July 10 2003 Who Might Direct Transformers IGN Retrieved March 21 2007 Weinberg Scott June 4 2007 Todd McFarlane Funding a New Spawn Movie Rotten Tomatoes Archived from the original on August 19 2007 Retrieved September 4 2018 Todd McFarlane Begins Work on New Spawn Film Bloody Disgusting October 26 2007 Archived from the original on October 14 2007 Retrieved December 26 2017 Amaya Erik September 16 2016 Todd McFarlane Promises A Dark Spawn Movie Again Bleeding Cool Retrieved August 30 2018 Coming Soon August 23 2009 McFarlane Starts Writing New Spawn Movie ComingSoon net Retrieved May 1 2015 Kendrick Ben July 21 2011 Michael Jai White Wants to Return for a Hard R Rated Spawn Movie Screen Rant Retrieved May 1 2015 Davis Erik July 19 2013 Comic Con Interview Jamie Foxx on Spider Man Annie Sinister Six and a Booty Call Sequel Movies com Archived from the original on August 8 2013 Retrieved July 1 2020 via Wayback Machine McMillan Graeme August 26 2013 Todd McFarlane Suggests Spawn Remake Could Shoot Next Year The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on February 6 2017 Retrieved October 18 2017 Lucas Siegel February 14 2016 Exclusive Todd McFarlane Is Finished with New Spawn Movie Script Comicbook com Retrieved February 15 2016 Kit Borys July 21 2017 New Spawn Movie in the Works From Todd McFarlane Blumhouse The Hollywood Reporter Archived from the original on February 10 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 Evans Greg October 5 2017 Todd McFarlane Confirms February Start For Dark R Rated Spawn Pledges Daily Facebook Updates Comic Con Deadline Hollywood Archived from the original on February 10 2018 Retrieved February 10 2018 Fleming Mike Jr May 29 2018 Jamie Foxx Set For Spawn Creator Todd McFarlane s Dark Blumhouse Adaptation Deadline Hollywood Retrieved May 29 2018 Ramee Jordan July 9 2018 Jeremy Renner Set To Star In Spawn Movie Alongside Jamie Foxx GameSpot Retrieved July 11 2018 Scott Ryan October 25 2018 Spawn Shoot Has Been Delayed Until Summer 2019 MovieWeb Retrieved October 26 2018 Barfield Charles November 1 2019 Todd McFarlane Says Joker Has Created More Interest From Hollywood In His R Rated Spawn Reboot The Playlist Retrieved January 14 2020 Scott Ryan October 31 2019 Spawn Reboot May Finally Get Going Thanks to Joker Success MovieWeb Retrieved January 14 2020 Seigh Steve December 2 2019 Todd McFarlan s New Spawn Film Getting Cleaned Up By A Second Filmmaker JoBlo com Retrieved January 14 2020 Scott Ryan December 2 2019 Spawn Reboot Script Is Getting Polished Todd McFarlane Promises It s Still Coming MovieWeb Retrieved January 14 2020 Sprague Mike March 3 2020 Todd McFarlane says R rated Spawn reboot happening this year JoBlo com Retrieved March 5 2020 Scott Ryan March 3 2020 Spawn Reboot Will Shoot This Year Thanks to the Success of Joker MovieWeb Retrieved March 5 2020 Austin Lazybones2020 Roney March 7 2020 Shoryuken interview Spawn Creator Todd McFarlane talks Mortal Kombat 11 SoulCalibur II and defending the right to expression Shoryuken Retrieved March 10 2020 Cavanaugh Patrick March 9 2020 Jamie Foxx Still Attached to Spawn Movie Despite Reports ComicBook com Retrieved March 10 2020 Cavanaugh Patrick May 22 2020 Spawn Producer Jason Blum Teases Seismic Event for Production Exclusive ComicBook com Retrieved May 23 2020 Kit Borys August 13 2021 Spawn Movie Gets Broken City Scribe as New Writer Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved August 13 2021 Couch Aaron October 5 2022 Spawn Movie Finds New Writers with Joker Captain America 4 Scribes Exclusive The Hollywood Reporter Retrieved October 5 2022 a b Spawn The Album Original Soundtrack AllMusic a b Ward A A October 26 2016 Like its inspiration Spawn s soundtrack cobbled together coolness The A V Club The Onion Retrieved October 5 2018 MTV News Staff June 17 1997 Spawn Soundtrack of Odd Rock Electronica Combos MTV Gold amp Platinum Searchable Database May 01 2015 RIAA May 1 2015 Retrieved May 1 2015 Spawn The Album Amazon com Epic Sony November 25 1997 Retrieved October 14 2018 Spawn The Album Amazon com Epic Sony January 1 1997 Retrieved October 9 2018 Spawn The Album Amazon com Music On Vinyl Retrieved October 9 2018 Elliott Paul February 1998 Their year The Prodigy Q 137 p 94 Gravity Kills News Archive 2002 Retrieved June 26 2020 Australiancharts com Soundtrack Spawn Hung Medien Austriancharts at Soundtrack Spawn in German Hung Medien Lescharts com Soundtrack Spawn Hung Medien Longplay Chartverfolgung at Musicline in German Musicline de Phononet GmbH Charts nz Soundtrack Spawn Hung Medien Dutchcharts nl Soundtrack Spawn in Dutch Hung Medien Norwegiancharts com Soundtrack Spawn Hung Medien Soundtrack Chart History Billboard 200 Billboard Top 200 Albums Billboard Retrieved October 14 2018 ARIA Top 100 Albums for 1997 Australian Recording Industry Association Retrieved February 1 2021 ARIA Charts Accreditations 1997 Albums PDF Australian Recording Industry Association Retrieved November 28 2021 Jamie Lovett July 30 2017 Spawn Creator Todd McFarlane Takes Photo With Original Spawn Actor At Comic Con Archived from the original on July 30 2017 Retrieved October 5 2018 The Spawn movie is notable for being the first major comic book superhero movie to feature an African American in the lead role Barry Hertz February 14 2018 Seven black superheroes who came before Black Panther The Globe and Mail Archived from the original on February 14 2018 Scott Mendelson February 1 2018 How Blade And Spawn Paved The Way For Black Panther Forbes magazine Archived from the original on February 1 2018 Retrieved September 2 2018 External links EditSpawn at IMDb Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Spawn 1997 film amp oldid 1153232564, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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