It seems that Marvel's "The Inhumans" premiere episodes are too huge it cannot just be contained on the small TV Screen. Disney has announced its plan to debut Marvel's "The Inhumans," featuring Black Bolt as its lead star, in more than 1,000 Imax theaters in 74 countries. This deal makes it more exciting for fans to look forward to the upcoming Marvel's "The Inhumans" as an Imax release suggests a more incredible production that a small tube could not hold, requiring a big screen release.
Marvel's "The Inhumans," will have eight episodes and the first two episodes will be shown on Imax theaters beginning on Labor Day 2017, that is Sept. 4, 2017, and it will run for two weeks. After the Imax release, Marvel's "The Inhumans" will then be aired as a regular TV series on ABC.
Disney-ABC Television Group president Ben Sherwood boasts that the Imax release deems to be a quadruple win. Sherwood told The Hollywood Reporter that the Imax premiere of "The Inhumans" can result in a possible win for Imax, Marvel, ABC Studios and ABC as well. Sherwood emphasized that the Imax release of "The Inhumans" reflects their innovative effort to launch Black Bolton and his team, which Sherwood also teased that is it just one of their several efforts to launch programming. Moreover, the Imax release of "The Inhumans" possibly aims to get much attention.
To make the Imax release of "The Inhumans" realistic, the first two episodes will be filmed using Imax cameras. Fans of "The Inhumans" will be excited to know that the report also mentioned that the first two episodes of "The Inhumans" will include several action scenes, where some will be set on the moon. The premiere of "The Inhumans" will indeed be an incredible premiere where action scenes will be shown through the technology of Imax, which the viewers will greatly enjoy.
With regard to the plot, will the TV series of "The Inhumans" follow the storyline of its upcoming book version, "Black Bolt #1?" The book version "Black Bolt #1" will feature the titular hero being imprisoned with the highly dangerous criminals in the galaxy, as Black Bolt was cut off from his fellow Inhumans. The "Black Bolt #1" writer Saladin Ahmed, who also wrote "The Crescent Moon Kingdoms," told iO9 that fans of Marvel's "The Inhumans" will see a helpless and locked up Black Bolt at the beginning of the book series, a disposition that is extremely unusual for Black Bolt. Will the TV series of "The Inhumans" follow the same plot when it releases on Imax theaters next year?