Scott Lobdell Bio, Age, Net Worth, Happy Death Day, Signature, Art
Lily Fisher
Published Feb 24, 2026
Scott Lobdell Biography
Scott Lobdell is an American comic book writer. Lobdell also wrote the script to the 2017 slasher film Happy Death Day.
Scott Lobdell Age
Lobdell was born in 1960. As of 2019, he is 58-59 years.
Scott Lobdell Net Worth
Lobdell has a Net Worth of $4 Million.
Scott Lobdell Happy Death Day
Happy Death Day is a 2017 American comedy slasher film directed by Christopher Landon. The comedy is written by Scott Lobdell. It stars Jessica Rothe, Israel Broussard, and Ruby Modine.
The film was produced by Jason Blum through his Blumhouse Productions banner. The film is additionally in association with Digital Riot Media and Vesuvius Productions.
It is based on a college student who is killed on her birthday. The film starts showing the day repeatedly, at which point she sets out to find the killer and stop her death.
Originally announced in 2007 under the title half to Death, the film was released on October thirteen, 2017, by Universal Pictures. It grossed $125 million worldwide on a $4.8 million budget.
The film received mostly positive reviews, with critics deeming the film as amusive. Whereas acknowledging the familiar premise, and describing it as “Groundhog Day meets Scream”. A sequel, Happy Death Day 2U, was released on February 13, 2019.
Scott Lobdell Signature
Scott Lobdell Art
Scott Lobdell Bibliography
- Angel: Only Human
- The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix (4-issue mini-series)
- Alpha Flight vol. 3 #1–12
- Buffy the Vampire Slayer (with Fabian Nicieza) #47–59
- Daredevil #376–379
- The Darkness #23–38
- Excalibur #31, #35–41, #53, #58–60, #68–71, #75–82
- Fantastic Four #1–3, 4–5 (with Chris Claremont, 1998)
- Galaxy Quest #1–5
- Gen #45–54
- Generation X #1–28
- Ghostbusters: Displaced Aggression #1–4
- Iron Man #1–7 (1996)
- Manifest Eternity #1–6 (Wildstorm, 2006)
- Red Hood and the Outlaws (vol. 1) #1–38 (vol. 2) #1-(ongoing)
- Uncanny X-Men #286–349, 350 (with Steven Seagle), #390–393
- Wildcats #1–9 (1997)
- X-Factor
- X-Men (vol. 2)
Scott Lobdell Marvel Comics
In the 1990s, Lobdell became known for his work on Marvel Comics’ X-Men-related titles, specifically Uncanny X-Men. The main title itself, and therefore the spin-off series that he formed with artist Chris Bachalo, Generation X.
He wrote the primary twenty-eight problems with generation X, and at one point was writing both main X-Men titles for a lengthy run.
Generation X focused on a variety of young mutant students who tried to become superheroes in their own right at a separate school. With the guidance of veteran X-related characters Banshee and Emma Frost.
He additionally had run with the Excalibur and X-Factor titles. Scott Lobell was the first creative force behind most of the major X-title related storylines. Especially the major cross-overs, throughout the majority of the 1990s, including “X-Cautioner’s Song”, “Fatal Attractions”, “Phalanx Covenant”, “Age of Apocalypse”, the “Onslaught” saga, and “Operation: Zero Tolerance”.
He came back briefly to Marvel in 2001, to try and tie up loose ends he left behind and wrote one last storyline, dubbed “Eve of Destruction”.
Many of the concepts and even characters created by Scott Lobdell and fellow X-Men writer Fabian Nicieza were used throughout the run of the popular 1990s X-Men: The Animated Series. Lobdell is even referenced in episode #46 of the show, “One Man’s Worth”. Where he poses as a personality’s used to fuel Trevor Fitzroy’s mutant power to travel through time.
The scene shows Master mold saying “Lobdell, I have a job for you.” He is then grabbed by Fitzroy, who absorbs his life energy and creates a time portal.
Lobdell had writing stints on Marvel’s Daredevil, Alpha Flight and The Adventures of Cyclops and Phoenix mini-series with artist Gene Ha. He additionally wrote many of the primary issues of the “Heroes Reborn” reboots of each Iron Man and Fantastic Four.
Lobdell was responsible for having the Marvel Comics character North star come out as a homosexual. While the character’s orientation had been hinted at previously by different writers. Marvel had a “no openly gay characters” policy in place during the Jim Shooter editorial years. Lobdell broke from this having North star out himself publicly as a gay superhero in order to bring attention to the HIV/AIDS epidemic.
Royalties from that issue were donated to the Elizabeth Glaser Pediatric AIDS Foundation. He would later introduce the first new gay superhero of DC’s New 52 relaunch, codenamed Bunker, to the Teen Titans lineup. This would he most prominent gay character in the team’s history since Hero Cruz joined Titans LA.
Scott Lobdell Dc Comics
In 2011, Lobdell took on the writing duties for Red Hood and the Outlaws, which debuted as part of DC Comics’ company-wide title relaunch. The New 52 and a new Teen Titans comic starring Red Robin, Superboy, Wonder Girl, Kid Flash, and three new characters. His run on Teen Titans ended with Volume 4 Issue 30.
The series was relaunched soon afterward with writer Will Pfeifer and art provided by Kenneth Rocafort. The team now comprises Red Robin, Wonder Girl, Bunker, and new members Raven and Beast Boy.
On July 19, 2011, Lobdell announced a creator-owned book called Awesome that he was working on in conjunction with Ilias Kyriazis.
Scott Lobdell Facebook
Scott Lobdell Twitter
Tweets by ScottyLobdell