Adaptation attempts Garth Ennis, feeling
Preacher would translate perfectly as a film, sold the
film rights to
Electric Entertainment.
Rachel Talalay was hired to direct, with Ennis writing the script. Rupert Harvey and Tom Astor were set as producers. By May 1998, Ennis completed three drafts of the script, based largely on the
Gone to Texas story arc. The filmmakers found it difficult financing
Preacher because investors found the idea religiously controversial. Ennis approached
Kevin Smith and
Scott Mosier to help finance the film under their
View Askew Productions banner. Ennis, Smith and Mosier
pitched
Preacher to
Bob Weinstein at
Miramax Films. By then, Storm Entertainment, a UK-based production company known for their work on
independent films, joined the production with Electric Entertainment. The production and start dates were pushed back because of financial issues of the $25 million projected budget. With the full-length film adaptation eventually abandoned with budgetary concerns, Impressed with Johnson's pilot script, HBO had him write the
series bible for the first season. Johnson first planned "to turn each comic book issue into a single episode" on a
shot-for-shot basis. "I gave [HBO] the comics, and I said, 'Every issue is an hour'. Ennis said 'You don't have to be so beholden to the comic'. And I'm like, 'No, no, no. It's got to be like the comic'." Johnson also wanted to make sure that
one-shots were included as well. Johnson changed his position, citing new storylines conceived by Ennis. "Well, there would be nothing new to add if we did that, so Garth [Ennis] and I have been creating new stories for the series," he said. "I love the book so much and I was telling Garth that he has to make the stories we are coming up with as comics because I want to see them."
Columbia Pictures then purchased the film rights in October 2008 with
Sam Mendes planned to direct.
Neal H. Moritz and Jason Netter would have produced the film. The previous scripts written by Ennis would not have been used.
AMC television series On November 16, 2013, it was announced that
AMC would be shooting a pilot for
Preacher. On November 18, 2013,
Bleeding Cool confirmed that
Seth Rogen and
Evan Goldberg had developed the series pilot with
Sam Catlin, and that it would be distributed by
Sony Pictures Television. On February 7, 2014, it was made public that AMC was officially developing the series to television based on the pilot written by Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg. Rogen had no plans to co-star in the series. On May 9, 2014, AMC announced that
Preacher was picked up to series.
Preacher was slated to premiere mid to late 2015, as announced by Seth Rogen, with the script for the series complete and the pilot ordered by the studio. Comic creators
Steve Dillon and
Garth Ennis were to work on this project as co-executive producer. On April 17, 2015, Seth Rogen tweeted that
Dominic Cooper was cast in the role of
Jesse Custer,
Joseph Gilgun as
Cassidy,
Ruth Negga as
Tulip O'Hare,
Ian Colletti as
Arseface, and
W. Earl Brown as Sheriff Hugo Root. On September 9, 2015, Seth Rogen announced via Twitter that the series ordered to a ten-episode
first season and was due to premiere in mid-2016. The series premiered on AMC on Sunday, May 22, 2016, and concluded July 31. A
second season, with thirteen episodes, aired from June 25 to September 11, 2017. From June 24 to August 26, 2018, a ten-episode third season aired. In November 2018, the series was renewed for a fourth and final ten-episode season, with production relocating to Australia, and the season airing from August 4 to September 29, 2019.
GraphicAudio audiobook series In May 2020, all 98 issues of
Garth Ennis'
The Boys comic book series and the 8-issue
epilogue series
Dear Becky were adapted into seven full cast
audiobooks produced by
GraphicAudio, with all volumes numbering a combined 31 hours in length. In the second audiobook, the
Preacher epilogue from "
We Gotta Go Now" is adapted, with Michael John Casey voicing
Proinsias Cassidy. ==Legacy==