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SpectreVision Getting Weird With “Max Headroom” Series Reboot!

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Max Headroom reboot

Played by Matt Frewer, 1980s television personality Max Headroom is returning to life with a brand new reboot series from SpectreVision, Deadline is reporting this afternoon.

And yes, Frewer will be back as Max Headroom for the new series from SpectreVision, Elijah Wood and Daniel Noah‘s company which was behind Mandy and Color Out of Space.

Max Headroom was “the world’s first artificial intelligence TV personality,” played by Frewer under heavy makeup. The glitchy character hosted music videos and even served as the spokesman for New Coke in the ’80s, in addition to once having his own television show.

Christopher Cantwell (“Halt and Catch Fire”) will write and run the reboot for AMC Networks.

Deadline reminds, “Known for biting commentary, quick wit and manic glitching, the supposedly computer-generated TV host played by Frewer was first introduced in the 1985 British cyberpunk TV movie Max Headroom: 20 Minutes into the Future. He became an instant pop culture phenom and went on to host a music-video show, star in ads for New Coke, appear on the cover of Newsweek and headline his own primetime series, Max Headroom, which aired on ABC for two seasons from 1987-88.”

Matt Frewer is also on board to executive produce the return of “Max Headroom.”

Headroom most recently appeared in the film Pixels (2015).

Writer in the horror community since 2008. Editor in Chief of Bloody Disgusting. Owns Eli Roth's prop corpse from Piranha 3D. Has two awesome cats. Still plays with toys.

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‘The Terror’ Will Return for Season 4 With Another Literary Horror Story

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The Terror season 4

AMC’s horror series “The Terror” wrapped its third season last month, but plans are already in motion for season four.

Executive producer David W. Zucker has confirmed that “The Terror” Season 4 is moving forward in a new chat with ScreenRant, revealing that they’ve “just closed the deal on the book we’re gonna develop next” for the series.

Which novel they’re adapting remains shrouded in secrecy at this stage, however. 

That might not seem like much to go on at this stage, but the second season was an original story. Furthermore, there was a lengthy gap between seasons two and three, causing many to speculate that the third season would be the anthology series’ last. Unlike its first two, Season 3 shifted from airing on AMC to a dual Shudder and AMC+ weekly release plan, with neither streamer revealing viewership numbers.

So not only is this confirmation that the series is moving forward, but it won’t be another six years before we see Season 4.

The first season of the supernatural drama, based on Dan Simmons’ novel and aired in 2018, was set on the frigid decks of a Victorian Era sailing ship following a doomed course, while season two, “The Terror: Infamy,” which premiered in August 2019, centered on a malevolent, shape-shifting force that is locked up with prisoners in a Japanese internment camp.

Season 3, “The Terror: Devil in Silver,” tells the story of Pepper – a working class moving man, who through a combination of bad luck and a bad temper, finds himself wrongfully committed to New Hyde Psychiatric Hospital – an institution filled with the people society would rather forget. There, he must contend with patients who work against him, doctors who harbor grim secrets, and perhaps even the very Devil himself.

Dan Stevens (The Guest, Abigail) stars alongside Judith Light, CCH Pounder, Aasif Mandvi, John Benjamin Hickey, Stephen Root, Michael Aronov, Marin Ireland, Chinaza Uche, Hampton Fluker, Hayward Leach, and Philip Ettinger.

The six-episode new season is based on Victor LaValle’s novel, The Devil in Silver.

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