Warren Girard Ellis was born on 16 February 1968 in England and has built one of the more distinctive careers in contemporary comics, working across superhero publishers, creator-owned projects, prose fiction, and screen media. He broke into the industry in the early 1990s and became a steady presence at Marvel, writing runs on Astonishing X-Men, Thunderbolts, Moon Knight, and the "Extremis" arc on Iron Man — the last of which provided the conceptual backbone for the MCU film Iron Man 3 (2013). At WildStorm he created two of his most celebrated series: The Authority, which pushed superhero comics toward a harder-edged political sensibility, and Planetary, a genre-archaeology book that remains among the most inventive work of its era.
Aetheric Mechanics #[nn] (2008)
His creator-owned output also includes Transmetropolitan (1997–2002), a satirical science-fiction series drawn by Darick Robertson, and Red (2003–2004), later adapted into two feature films. Ellis extended his reach into prose with the novels Crooked Little Vein (2007) and Gun Machine (2013), and into screen writing with the Netflix animated series Castlevania (2017–2021). Throughout, his work has engaged seriously with transhumanist ideas — nanotechnology, mind transfer, human enhancement — and folkloric tradition, often woven together. A humanist and former patron of Humanists UK, he is based in Southend-on-Sea.