Warlock
A gritty Baltimore urban-fantasy series where cursed art, bloodlines, buried gates, grief, addiction, and supernatural inheritance collide in the streets of Charm City.
Why this property plays
Warlock gives Port City a darker franchise lane: street-level supernatural stakes, Baltimore atmosphere, emotional trauma, horror imagery, and a hero who is powerful because he has already survived too much.
Baltimore as myth
Charm City becomes more than a backdrop — churches, murals, rowhomes, streets, gates, and old institutions all carry supernatural weight.
Visual engine
Cursed murals, haunted portraits, black-eyed faces, gates, pendants, symbols, and church-lit darkness give this series immediate screen language.
Emotional core
Xavier Steele is not a shiny chosen-one hero. He is bruised, haunted, grieving, and trying to survive the thing that chose him.
Expansion-ready
The books open a larger mythology: bloodlines, Circle records, buried pacts, dead faces, family history, and whatever is still waiting behind the Gate.
The published books
Two entries. One expanding mythology. The first book opens the Gate. The second makes the dead look back.
Warlock: Volume 1
Xavier Steele did not ask to be chosen. But when a cursed mural nearly kills him and a pendant he has never seen before burns a mark into his chest, he realizes something ancient has set its eyes on Baltimore — and on him.
Strange symbols surface across the city. People disappear. Old rituals claw back into Xavier’s bloodline. The biggest danger may not be what is coming through the Gate. It may be what is already inside.
The Thirteenth Face
Months after the Gate was sealed beneath St. Dominic’s, Xavier Steele is trying to live with the cost of becoming the Warlock. Then a painting appears in Tbilisi: a portrait of Maya with black, endless eyes.
Soon, faces appear across Baltimore — old photos, police sketches, church icons, school walls, abandoned rowhomes, security footage, and children’s drawings. Some are missing. Some are dead. Some have not disappeared yet.
Screen potential & story-world value
This is Port City’s supernatural Baltimore lane: grounded, haunted, character-driven, and visually nasty in the best way.
Why it translates
Warlock has a strong adaptation engine: a damaged protagonist, a real city with mythic pressure, supernatural crimes, cursed imagery, and a mythology that expands book by book.
Best fit: premium urban fantasy series
A dark, serialized streaming series where each season reveals another layer of Baltimore’s hidden supernatural structure.
Also strong: horror-thriller feature
The cursed mural / Gate mythology could support a contained feature with franchise continuation baked in.
Audience lane
Urban fantasy readers, supernatural thriller fans, Baltimore story lovers, and viewers who like magic with damage.
Brand value
It gives the slate a darker supernatural franchise beside USSS, Justice Jones, Beekeepers, and Baltimore Knights.
Baltimore turns supernatural.
Two books are already out. The mythology is opening. The look is strong. The city has teeth. That makes Warlock: Charm City Chronicles a serious urban-fantasy development lane inside the Port City slate.