If Hugh Jackman running around as a naked Wolverine in that last X-Men movie wasn't enough for you comics-loving pervs, get a load of this latest screen adaptation from the world of comics:

This week, Variety is reporting that Craig Yoe's non-fiction book Secret Identity: The Fetish Art of Superman's Co-Creator Joe Shuster is at the center of a film deal with The Gotham Group for a period drama about Shuster's life and work, and the crime spree that his kinky and violent artwork in undergroundcomics helped inspire.

Via Variety:

The book pegs Shuster as the secret artist behind "The Nights of Horror," a 16-volume series of mob-financed underground comics depicting scenes that range from S&M to brutal torture.

The comics were sold covertly under the counters of Times Square bookshops -- until they sparked a dragnet and crackdown on comics, several sensational trials and a Supreme Court censorship case in 1954.

All this came after the leader of a group dubbed the Brooklyn Thrill Killers pegged the comics as the inspiration for a crime spree that involved flogging women with whips, humiliating vagrants, the beating death of one man and the drowning of another.

Yoe, a comics archivist who stumbled across a cache of the underground comic at an estate sale and recognized Shuster's stylistic signature, doesn't reveal in the book how the late artist felt about the scandal. The film will use the crime spree and the artist to paint a period drama.
"Some people felt that when I discovered these books, I should have buried them in the back yard," Yoe said. "To me, it's part of his legacy, the idea that in addition to the great character of Superman, he had this whole different side to him, and did brilliant work, in secret."

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