Monday greetings! It's time for the latest roundup of crime drama news, from stage to screen:
MOVIES
Fans of Don Winslow's latest novel, The Force, were rightfully pleased when news broke a few months ago that Fox was making the book into a film. However, they're going to have to wait a while since the studio has set a March 1, 2019, release date for the project. With Logan director James Mangold at the helm and David Mamet adapting the script, the story centers on a corrupt sergeant at the NYPD’s most elite crime-fighting unit who must choose between his family, his partners, and his life.
The UC Berkeley Art Museum and Pacific Film Archive noir series is highlighting films by women crime writers like Vera Caspary, one of several female pulp fiction writers who churned out genre stories, a list that includes Dorothy B. Hughes, Patricia Highsmith, Charlotte Armstrong, Elizabeth Sanxay Holding and Dolores Hitchens. Series curators Kathy Geritz and Judy Bloch were inspired by a pair of recent book projects edited by Sarah Weinman, the two-volume set Women Crime Writers: Eight Suspense Novels of the 1940s & 50s and an anthology of short crime fiction, Troubled Daughters, Twisted Wives: Stories from the Trailblazers of Domestic Suspense. (HT to SF Gate)
A scathing political thriller co-written by France's new Prime Minister Edouard Philippe is to be made into a film. In the Shadows, set during the final days of a neck-and-neck French presidential election, is being adapted for the screen by French actor Guillaume Gallienne.
Focus Features has bought an untitled original pitch for a contemporary political drama from Maggie Betts (Novitiate), who’ll direct and also co-write the script with Andy Bellin.
A trailer was released for The Foreigner, a new action-thriller starring Jackie Chan and Pierce Brosnan. The film was directed by Martin Campbell, who also directed the Bond films Casino Royale and GoldenEye. Chan plays a humble London businessman, whose long-buried past erupts in a revenge-fueled vendetta when the only person left for him to love — his teenage daughter — is taken from him in a senseless act of politically-motivated terrorism. In his relentless search for the identity of the terrorists, Quan is forced into a cat-and-mouse conflict with a British government official (Brosnan), whose own past may hold clues to the identities of the elusive killers.
A trailer was also released for the indie thriller Good Time, which has Pattinson racing against the clock through New York City to save his brother, who's been locked up at Rikers.
Studiocanal UK has released a new trailer for the heist film Logan Lucky, starring Channing Tatum, Adam Driver, and Daniel Craig, Katie Holmes, Katherine Waterston, Riley Keough, Hilary Swank, and Sebastian Stan in a story about the shenanigans perpetrated by the famously unlucky Logan brothers.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Johnny Depp will produce a new TV series that's based on the James Renner book True Crime Addict: How I Lost Myself in the Mysterious Disappearance of Maura Murray. The book follows Renner's obsession with the disappearance of a popular UMass student named Maura Murray, and the new clues he dug up in the case. It also examines how his work interfered with his personal life that began to unravel as he hunted for the truth.
Sony Pictures Television Networks has ordered Carter, a police-procedural series starring Jerry O’Connell and Sydney Poitier. The drama will air on SPTN’s international networks, including AXN. Carter features O’Connell as a detective on a hit American TV show who is forced to return to his hometown after an embarrassing public meltdown in Hollywood. Once back, Carter taps into his acting experience to become a real-life detective, partnering with long-time friend and no-nonsense veteran of the force, Sam St. Clair (Poitier).
YouTube has given a series order to Impulse, a thriller drama from Universal Cable Productions and executive producer Doug Liman. The series is based on the third novel in the Jumper series by Steven Gould and tells the story of Henry (Maddie Hasson), a rebellious 16-year-old girl who has always felt different from her peers and has longed to escape from her seemingly quaint small town. Henry soon discovers she has the extraordinary ability to teleport. The new series is slated to premiere on subscription-video service YouTube Red in 2018.
The third season of AMC's critically acclaimed series Better Call Saul came to an end last week on what seemed to be the death of a major character and a whole lot of stories still unfinished. The season ended without news of a renewal, leaving actors and fans up in the air, but now, AMC has made an announcement that they've officially renewed Better Call Saul for Season 4.
Hawaii Five-0 Season 8 is going to look a lot different thanks to the news that original cast members Daniel Dae Kim and Grace Park will not be returning. Both actors were seeking deals for equal pay, but were unable to make those deals work. Kim and Park were believed to be making 10-15 percent less than co-stars Alex O'Loughlin and Scott Caan.
Oscar-winning Moonlight actor Mahershala Ali is in early negotiations to star in a potential third season of HBO’s praised drama series True Detective. Although a third season has not yet received a formal green light, Ali’s casting likely would make that more likely.
Game Of Thrones alum Tom Wlaschiha has been tapped to co-star in TNT’s hourlong mystery drama pilot The Deep Mad Dark, produced by John Wells. In the pilot, written by Megan Martin and directed by Niels Arden Oplev, Wlaschiha will play the mysterious character of Joda, who beguiles and threatens the order of his neighbor, Dr. Polly Lewis.
The Good Wife alum Josh Charles is the latest to join the cast of Dick Wolf-Rene Balcer’s limited series Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders. He’ll play Dr. Jerome Oziel, the Menendez brothers’ controversial psychiatrist, who plays a pivotal role in the case.
Penn Badgley (Gossip Girl) is making a return to TV in new Lifetime thriller, You, starring as obsessive bookstore manager Joe Goldberg, who uses social media and the internet to make the woman of his dreams, Beck, fall in love with him. But it's not long before Joe goes to extreme lengths to make himself a part of Beck's life, quietly taking care of any problem or person that threatens to stand in their way – even if it means murder. The series is based on the best-selling novel of the same name by Caroline Kepnes.
Julian Gale (Enrique Murciano), who joined the cast of the The Blacklist in Season 5, recently tweeted that he would not be returning to the show, and it sounds like it might not have been entirely his decision. The Blacklist premieres Wednesday, October 4th on NBC.
Rob Lowe’s A&E mystery reality series The Lowe Files will premiere on A&E August 2. The nine-episode series follows Lowe and his two sons, Matthew and John Owen, as they travel the country exploring infamous unsolved mysteries.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
Don Winslow has been in the news quite a bit lately after the release of his critically-acclaimed latest novel, The Force. He joined Slate's podcast The Gist to discuss writing cop fiction in the age of Black Lives Matter and about the deep research that goes into writing modern crime fiction.
PBS Newhour's Book Shelf segment welcomed Scott Turow, whose new thriller was inspired by a war-crime mystery.
The BBC's Becky Want spoke with author Martina Cole about her latest thriller, Get Even.
Radio Times featured a "Dark Chick List" podcast that included a review of the latest novel from The Girl on the Train author, Paula Hawkins; Cardiff-based authors Kate Hamer and B.E. Jones discussing their new works; and Sarah Pinborough on reader reactions to her surprising and successful creepy thriller, Behind her Eyes.
Steve Cavanagh and Luca Veste, hosts of Two Crime Writers and A Microphone, welcomed special guest Clare Mackintosh, who talked about her bestseller I Let You Go, as well as ditching the difficult second book, twists and reveals, pressure, reviews, and much more.
A Stab in the Dark's Paul Hirons sat down with double CWA Dagger winner, Bill Beverly, to talk about his debut novel, Dodgers, his influences for this exceptional coming-of-age tale, and the state of America today.
THEATER
British actor Jonno Davies will make his New York debut this fall in a stage adaptation of A Clockwork Orange, based on the novel by Anthony Burgess that also inspired Stanley Kubrick's film, Playbill reported. Davies will reprise his role from the acclaimed London run of the Alexandra Spencer-Jones production. Performances, which begin September 2 at New World Stages and open officially September 25, are scheduled to run through January 6, 2018. Additional casting and creative team will be announced at a later date.
The Houston, Texas Alley Theatre will present the comedy thriller Alfred Hitchcock’s The 39 Steps from July 21 to August 20. Using over 150 eccentric characters (played by four actors) the play is about a man with an ordinary life who meets a woman with a strong accent who says she's a spy. When he takes her home, she is murdered. Soon, a mysterious organization called "The 39 Steps" is hot on the man's trail in a nationwide manhunt that climaxes in a death-defying finale.