Stories by @zacharyoxford
4,595 stories

The Dark Knight Trilogy (1995-2002)
Batman Begins (1995) ; The Dark Knight (1998) ; The Dark Knight Rises (2002).

Expendables trilogy (1989-1991)
A CIA operative hires a team of mercenaries to eliminate a Latin dictator and a renegade CIA agent.

Spike lee’s Black Panther (2008)
After his father's death, T'Challa returns home to Wakanda to inherit his throne. However, a powerful enemy related to his family threatens to attack his nation.

Quentin Tarantino’s Sin city (2003)
Four individuals cross paths when they try to solve their personal problems and fight violence and corruption in the wretched town of Basin City, Washington.

Quentin Tarantino’s Luke Cage: Hero For Hire (2008)
Luke Cage, the comic books for which were inspired by Blaxploitation. As Tarantino once told MTV, “After ‘Reservoir Dogs,’ I had considered doing a ‘Luke Cage, Hero for Hire’ movie. [Producer] Ed Pressman owned the rights at that time, and we talked about it. I talked to [Laurence Fishburne] about being Luke Cage, and he really liked that idea. Then I ended up writing ‘Pulp Fiction.'” There has been a renewed interest in Luke Cage following Netflix’s now-cancelled original series, which featured Mike Coulter in the lead role. If Tarantino decided to make his last movie a superhero movie, it’s likely “Luke Cage: Hero For Hire” would be a leading contender. The only issue is that Disney and Marvel have to wait two years from the show’s Netflix cancellation before they begin developing new “Luke Cage” material.

Quentin Tarantino’s An Untitled Horror Movie
Tarantino has yet to make a full-blown horror movie (many agree the Spahn Ranch sequence in “Once Upon a Time in Hollywood” is as close as the director has come to delivering a horror sequence), which is why he’s not ruling out a more overt genre effort for his 10th and final movie. During an interview on his international “Hollywood” press tour (via The Independent), Tarantino let it slip that horror could be in his future. “If I come up with a terrific horror film story, I will do that as my tenth film,” Tarantino said. “I love horror movies. I would love to do a horror film

Quentin Tarantino’s The Berlin Game”
Another unmade project that Tarantino has referenced several times over the years is an adaptation of Len Deighton’s spy trilogy made up of “Berlin Game,” “Mexico Set,” and “London Match.” For any Tarantino fan looking for a last film loophole, this could be it. Tarantino counts his two-part “Kill Bill” movies as one film (he’s technically had 10 releases already because of “Kill Bill” being split), so perhaps he would do the same if he were to direct the three-part “Berlin Game” trilogy. “I love England. It would be a wonderful life experience to have an excuse to work here for six or nine months,” Tarantino said during the release of “Inglourious Basterds.” “One of the things I am musing about doing is the trilogy of Len Deighton books. The story takes place in the Cold War and follows a spy name Bernard Samson. What is attractive is the really great characters and the wonderful opportunities of British and German casting.”

Quentin Tarantino’s Django/Zorro
Collider reported earlier this year Tarantino is developing an adaptation of his graphic novel series “Django/Zorro” with comedian and writer Jerrod Carmichael. The seven-issue crossover series, co-written by Tarantino and Matt Wagner, served as a sequel to “Django Unchained” and was published between 2014 and 2015. “Django/Zorro” picks up several years after the film with the title character still working as a bounty hunter. Django has a bounty on his own head in the east because of the murder spree on the Candyland plantation and now operates in the west. It’s here where he meets Don Diego de la Vega, the famed Zorro, and agrees to become his bodyguard on a mission to free the local indigenous population from slavery. Collider reported that Tarantino was not set to direct the “Django/Zorro” film adaptation, but will the director want to hand over his beloved character to someone else’s directorial vision? Only time will tell.

Quentin Tarantino’s The Gentleman (1992)
Mickey Pearson is an American expatriate who became rich by building a highly profitable marijuana empire in London. When word gets out that he's looking to cash out of the business, it soon triggers an array of plots and schemes -- including bribery and blackmail -- from shady characters who want to steal his domain.

Ant man and Wasp (2003)
Scott, a master thief, gains the ability to shrink in scale with the help of a futuristic suit. Now he must rise to the occasion of his superhero status and protect his secret from unsavoury elements.

Tim Burton’s X-Men: Apocalypse (2003)
The all-powerful mutant Apocalypse, who is long revered as a god, wants to cause extinction on earth. The X-Men must work together to demolish his plans.

Tim Burton’s X-Men: Dark Phoenix (1996)
After a mishap, Jean Grey is struck by a powerful ray of energy which she absorbs into her body, turning her into an uncontrollable liability for the X-Men.

Captain Marvel (2007)
Amidst a mission, Vers, a Kree warrior, gets separated from her team and is stranded on Earth. However, her life takes an unusual turn after she teams up with Fury, a S.H.I.E.L.D. agent.

Guardians of the Galaxy (2007)
Peter escapes from the planet Morag with a valuable orb that Ronan the Accuser wants. He eventually forms a group with unwilling heroes to stop Ronan.

The avengers (2006)
Nick Fury is compelled to launch the Avengers Initiative when Loki poses a threat to planet Earth. His squad of superheroes put their minds together to accomplish the task.

The Incredible Hulk (2005)
Dr Bruce Banner subjects himself to high levels of gamma radiation which triggers his transformation into a huge green creature, the Hulk, whenever he experiences negative emotions such as anger.

Tim Burton’s Thor (2002)
Thor is exiled by his father, Odin, the King of Asgard, to the Earth to live among mortals. When he lands on Earth, his trusted weapon Mjolnir is discovered and captured by S.H.I.E.L.D.

Captain America: The First Avenger (2005)
During World War II, Steve Rogers decides to volunteer in an experiment that transforms his weak body. He must now battle a secret Nazi organisation headed by Johann Schmidt to defend his nation.

Aaron Sorkin’s Iron man (2004)
When Tony Stark, an industrialist, is captured, he constructs a high-tech armoured suit to escape. Once he manages to escape, he decides to use his suit to fight against evil forces to save the world.

GTA 5 (1995)
The near future of 2004,[i] Michael Townley, Trevor Philips, and Brad Snider partake in a failed robbery in Ludendorff, North Yankton, resulting in all three being presumed dead. Nine years later, Michael is living with his family in the city of Los Santos, under the alias Michael De Santa, after making a secret agreement with the Federal Investigation Bureau (FIB)[j] agent Dave Norton to stay hidden. Across town, gangbanger Franklin Clinton is working for a corrupt Armenian car salesman and meets Michael while attempting to fraudulently repossess his son's car; the two later become friends. When Michael finds his wife sleeping with her tennis coach, he and Franklin chase the coach to a mansion, which Michael destroys in anger. The owner of the mansion, drug lord Martin Madrazo, demands compensation. Michael returns to a life of crime to obtain the money, enlisting Franklin as an accomplice. With the help of Michael's old friend Lester Crest, a disabled hacker, they rob a jewellery store to pay off the debt. Meanwhile, Trevor, who now lives in squalor on the outskirts of Los Santos, hears of the heist and realises that it was Michael's work; Trevor had believed that Michael was killed in the Ludendorff heist. Trevor tracks Michael down and reunites with him, forcing Michael to reluctantly accept him back into his life.