Lowell Cunningham
Lowell Cunningham (born May 21, 1959) is an American comic book writer and author best known for creating the science fiction comic book series The Men in Black.[1][2] Born in Franklin, Tennessee, Cunningham graduated from the University of Tennessee in 1985.[1][2] The concept for The Men in Black originated from a friend's remark about a suspicious car that evoked science fiction legends of government agents monitoring extraterrestrials.[2] He developed the series, which features a secret organization policing alien activity on Earth, and it was first published by Aircel Comics in 1990, illustrated by Sandy Carruthers (later acquired by Malibu Comics).[2] Cunningham's work gained widespread recognition when The Men in Black was adapted into a blockbuster film in 1997, directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, for which he received story credit.[1] Men in Black II (2002) was based on his original comic, while he contributed to the writing of the sequels Men in Black 3 (2012) and the spin-off Men in Black: International (2019).[1] The franchise, based on his original comics, became one of Columbia Pictures' highest-grossing series.[2] Beyond The Men in Black, Cunningham co-authored The Official Guide to the Babylon 5 Collectible Card Game with Sandy Clark, providing strategic insights into the game's mechanics.[2] He has also appeared as an actor in projects related to his work and contributed to other media in the science fiction genre.[1]Early life
Family and upbringing
Lowell Cunningham was born on May 21, 1959, in Franklin, Tennessee, to parents Ralph and Ruby Cunningham.[1][3] His father, Ralph, worked as an accountant and came from a farming background, while his mother, Ruby Lou, served as an office worker for the State of Tennessee.[3] The family led a normal middle-class life, with Cunningham growing up alongside his siblings, brother Lindsey and sister Celeste.[4] The Cunninghams resided in the suburbs around Franklin in Middle Tennessee during much of Cunningham's early years, where the family's suburban environment reflected modest influences tied to the region's rural heritage through his paternal lineage.[3] As a child in the late 1950s and 1960s, Cunningham experienced this stable family setting amid the evolving cultural landscape of mid-century America.[3]Childhood interests and inspirations
Lowell Cunningham grew up in the suburbs around Franklin in Middle Tennessee, where the region's clear, uncluttered night skies captivated him from a young age.[3] These expansive views of the stars fostered a deep enchantment with the cosmos, sparking his imagination about the vastness of space and the potential for life beyond Earth.[3] As a child, Cunningham's curiosity extended to distant planets and the possibility of extraterrestrial civilizations, often wondering if travelers from other worlds might visit Earth.[3] He recalls a specific moment of awe while observing a comet streaking across the sky, prompting thoughts of spaceships and inhabited worlds among the stars.[3] This early fascination with celestial phenomena was complemented by a voracious appetite for reading, beginning with comic books that numbered around 3,000 in his personal collection and later including pulp adventure reprints like The Shadow and Doc Savage during his high school years.[5] These childhood interests in science fiction and the unknown also introduced him to UFO lore and notions of government cover-ups surrounding alien encounters, concepts that would later influence his creative work.[3] Growing up in the Franklin area provided a supportive environment for nurturing such imaginative pursuits, blending rural serenity with access to stories that explored the mysteries of the universe.[6]Education and early career
Academic background
Lowell Cunningham attended the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, from which he graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree in philosophy in 1985.[3]Initial employment
Lowell Cunningham began his professional career with a position in the circulation department of the Knox County Library System in Knoxville, Tennessee.[3][2] He held this role for nearly three years, where his primary responsibilities included shelving books and managing daily operations, though he later recalled disliking the early morning schedule.[5] This immersion in literature strengthened his lifelong love of reading, providing a foundational influence on his future storytelling endeavors.[5] In the late 1980s, as Cunningham entered his late twenties and early thirties, he transitioned to a more routine position as a security guard at a blue jeans factory, working to support himself during this transitional phase before breaking into professional writing.[3]Comics and writing career
Creation of Men in Black
In the late 1980s, Lowell Cunningham conceived the Men in Black comic series, drawing inspiration from longstanding UFO folklore and government conspiracy theories surrounding mysterious figures in black suits who allegedly silenced witnesses to extraterrestrial encounters.[3] This concept stemmed from reports dating back decades in UFO circles, where "Men in Black" were described as enigmatic agents intimidating or erasing memories of those who claimed sightings of unidentified flying objects.[7] Cunningham's interest was further fueled by his childhood curiosity about the night skies over Tennessee, where the clear visibility of stars sparked a lifelong fascination with potential extraterrestrial visitors.[3] The series debuted in 1990 under Aircel Comics, marking Cunningham's breakthrough in the industry as writer, with illustrations by Sandy Carruthers.[7] It was structured as two three-issue black-and-white miniseries: the first released monthly from January to March (Initiation #1, Encounter #2, Invocation #3), and the second (The Men in Black Book II) from January to March 1991.[8] These issues were later collected into a 1991 graphic novel titled The Men in Black: Initiation · Encounter · Invocation, which compiled the complete storyline without additional content.[9] Aircel's publication of the series positioned it within the indie comics scene, emphasizing gritty, speculative fiction over mainstream superhero tropes.[10] At its core, Men in Black revolves around a clandestine organization of black-suited operatives who monitor and neutralize alien threats infiltrating Earth, maintaining secrecy through advanced technology like the neuralyzer—a compact device resembling a flashlight that erases human memories of extraterrestrial incidents.[3] The narrative follows Agent Kay, a veteran enforcer, as he recruits a skeptical DEA agent named Jay into the fold, thrusting him into high-stakes missions against interstellar invaders posing as humans or causing chaos.[10] This setup blends action, humor, and paranoia, portraying the agents as Earth's unseen guardians who eliminate dangers decisively while shielding the public from cosmic realities.[7]Other comic publications
Following the success of Men in Black, which marked a pivotal shift in his career, Cunningham produced several additional comic works in the early 1990s before largely stepping away from the medium.[11] He wrote the four-issue miniseries Planet of the Apes: The Forbidden Zone for Adventure Comics, an imprint of Malibu Graphics, with issues released from December 1992 to March 1993; the black-and-white story explores a hidden zone on the planet, blending science fiction adventure with themes from the Planet of the Apes franchise, illustrated by artists including Ken Hooper and Leonard Kirk.[12] Similarly, in 1991, he scripted Alien Nation: The Skin Trade, another four-issue black-and-white limited series from Adventure Comics, featuring private investigator Mason Jar unraveling a mystery involving alien immigrants in a gritty, noir-inspired narrative set in the Alien Nation universe, with art by Leonard Kirk.[13] Also in 1991, Cunningham wrote Alien Nation: The Public Enemy (four issues, Adventure Comics, illustrated by Sandy Carruthers), a prequel set on the alien slave ship before landing on Earth, introducing a Newcomer resistance group.[14] That year, he created Pentacle: The Sign of the Five (four issues, Eternity Comics, art by John Ross), a supernatural miniseries. Additionally, Subspecies (four issues, Eternity Comics, 1991, art by M.C. Wyman), adapted from the horror film, and Eliminator (three issues, Eternity Comics, 1992, art by Leonard Kirk), a sci-fi action series.[15][16] These early contributions highlighted Cunningham's interest in licensed science fiction properties, but his comic output diminished significantly after 1993, spanning nearly two decades with no major publications as he pursued other endeavors amid the growing Men in Black franchise.[11] Cunningham returned to comics in 2012 with Jack Ooze, an 8-page one-shot published by About Comics and illustrated by Ralph Miranda, available in both print-on-demand and digital formats.[17] The horror-comedy tale serves as an origin story for Assistant District Attorney Jack Ossman, who survives an assassination attempt by mobsters who dump him into a vat of experimental chemicals, transforming him into the semi-liquid vigilante "Jack Ooze" capable of oozing through cracks and reshaping his form to fight crime.[18] Drawing inspiration from Golden Age comics of the 1930s and 1940s, the short work was positioned as a nostalgic tribute to classic superhero tropes with a grotesque twist, though it received limited critical attention and mixed reader feedback, including a single low-rated review on major retail platforms.[19]Media adaptations and collaborations
Men in Black franchise involvement
Lowell Cunningham sold the film rights to his 1990 comic book series The Men in Black to producers Walter F. Parkes and Laurie MacDonald in 1992, who subsequently optioned them to Sony Pictures for adaptation into a feature film. While the option provided initial terms, Cunningham received compensation in the low six figures in 1997 upon the film's release, a sum that provided him financial security but was modest compared to the project's eventual scale.[3][20] The resulting 1997 film, directed by Barry Sonnenfeld and starring Will Smith and Tommy Lee Jones, marked the franchise's cinematic debut and achieved substantial commercial success, grossing $589 million worldwide against a $90 million budget. Cunningham made a brief cameo appearance in the film as an agent at headquarters. The franchise expanded with sequels Men in Black II in 2002 and Men in Black 3 in 2012, followed by the 2019 spin-off Men in Black: International, which shifted focus to new protagonists while maintaining the core premise. Collectively, the four films have generated over $1.9 billion in worldwide box office earnings, establishing the property as a cornerstone of sci-fi comedy.[21][22] In addition to the live-action films, the franchise included an animated television series, Men in Black: The Series, which aired from 1997 to 2001 on Kids' WB and was produced by Sony's Adelaide Productions as a tie-in to the first film. While Cunningham did not have a direct creative role in the series or sequels, he has continued to benefit from ongoing royalties stemming from the original rights sale, allowing him to live comfortably without further involvement in production. The multimedia expansion has amplified the franchise's cultural footprint, embedding the "Men in Black" archetype—agents policing extraterrestrial activity on Earth—into popular consciousness through film, animation, and merchandise.[23][20]Star Wars parody short films
Between 2000 and 2005, Lowell Cunningham co-wrote four low-budget Star Wars parody short films with director John E. Hudgens, marking his transition into live-action media as a creative diversion amid periods of reduced activity on the Men in Black franchise. These fan-oriented projects humorously reimagined iconic Star Wars elements through contemporary pop culture lenses, produced on shoestring budgets—such as approximately $1,000 for Sith Apprentice—and distributed primarily online via platforms like AtomFilms and TheForce.net, as well as at film festivals including Cannes.[24][25][26] The first, Crazy Watto (2000), satirizes used-car commercials by featuring the junk dealer Watto from The Phantom Menace hawking dubious galactic vehicles with over-the-top sales pitches, co-written by Cunningham alongside Sandy Clark, Heather Harris, and Hudgens.[27] Later that year, Cunningham's writing experience from the Men in Black adaptations informed his satirical edge in these parodies. In 2002, Darth Vader's Psychic Hotline parodied psychic infomercials like those of Miss Cleo, with Vader offering absurd Force-based advice to callers such as Luke Skywalker and Yoda; Cunningham not only co-wrote it with Hudgens but also voiced a cameo as an Imperial officer.[28][1] Also released in 2002, The Jedi Hunter lampooned The Crocodile Hunter by transforming Boba Fett into an Australian-accented Jedi tracker, complete with "crikey"-laden commentary during hunts, co-written by Cunningham, Hudgens, and Harris.[29] The series concluded with Sith Apprentice (2005), a spoof of The Apprentice reality show where Emperor Palpatine auditions Sith hopefuls like Darth Maul and Jar Jar Binks in boardroom-style challenges; co-written by Cunningham, Hudgens, and Denny Humbard, it featured practical effects and digital enhancements shot on a Canon XL1S camera.[30][25] Cunningham appeared in minor acting roles across several of these films, contributing to their collaborative, enthusiast-driven spirit.[26]Bibliography
Comics
Lowell Cunningham's contributions to comic books primarily consist of science fiction and horror series written during the early 1990s, with a later return to the medium in 2012. His most notable work is the original Men in Black series, published by Aircel Comics, which established the concept of a secretive organization monitoring extraterrestrial activity on Earth.[31]The Men in Black (Aircel Comics, 1990–1991)
- Book I: Initiation, Encounter, Invocation (3 issues, January–March 1990): This black-and-white miniseries introduces Agents Jay and Kay as they recruit a new member and combat alien threats, including a drug cult led by an extraterrestrial. Illustrated by Sandy Carruthers.[32]
- Book II: Wolf in the Fold, The Big Picture, The Forgotten (3 issues, May–July 1991): Continuing the adventures of the Men in Black, the storylines involve rogue agents, ravening aliens, and forgotten threats from the organization's past. Also illustrated by Sandy Carruthers, published under Malibu Comics after acquiring Aircel.