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HBO Max is making a Gotham City police series with the director of 'The Batman'

GOTHAM: L-R: Ben McKenzie, Donal Logue and guest star Kelcy Griffin in the "Year Zero" season premiere episode of GOTHAM airing Thursday, Jan. 3 (8:00-9:00 PM ET/PT) on FOX. (Photo by FOX Image Collection via Getty Images)

HBO Max, the WarnerMedia-owned streaming service that launched in May, announced today that it has made a series commitment to an untitled TV show tied to the movie "The Batman" (currently scheduled for release in 2021).

The show will be set in the Gotham City police department, with a creative team that includes Matt Reeves, the movie's co-writer and director, along with "Boardwalk Empire" creator Terence Winter.

This sounds like familiar territory — the police department of a city overrun by colorful criminals was probably perhaps best explored in the "Gotham Central" comics series (written by Ed Brubaker and Greg Rucka and drawn by Michael Lark), but it was also the focus of the recent (bad) Fox TV show "Gotham."

However, the announcement from HBO Max emphasized that this will be an extension of the feature film, "ultimately launching a new Batman universe across multiple platforms." It's an approach that the streamer is also taking with "Dune: The Sisterhood," a series that ties into the upcoming "Dune" movie.

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"This is an amazing opportunity, not only to expand the vision of the world I am creating in the film, but to explore it in the kind of depth and detail that only a longform format can afford — and getting to work with the incredibly talented Terence Winter, who has written so insightfully and powerfully about worlds of crime and corruption, is an absolute dream," Reeves said in a statement.

It also remains to be seen whether the show is influenced in any way by the ongoing protests for racial justice. It might seem absurd to connect real-world political issues with a comic book TV show, but the protests have led to a Hollywood reckoning with how movies and television have glorified the police — for example, Andy Samberg recently said the writers and cast of "Brooklyn Nine-Nine" are trying to rethink the show to make something "that we all feel morally okay about."