It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a new roundup of crime drama news:
THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES
Emmy Award-winning director Jason Bateman (Ozark) is in early talks to direct Ryan Reynolds in Clue, the live-action feature adaptation of the Hasbro board game for Fox/Disney. Bateman also plans to star in the film. Bateman will develop the Clue script with Reynolds, who’s producing through his Maximum Effort banner, along with Allspark Pictures, the film division of Hasbro. Clue is a comedy and murder mystery inspired by the popular board game, but it’s not connected to the 1985 Clue film starring Tim Curry.
Warner Bros is rebooting its 1991 neo-noir gangster film, New Jack City, which Snowfall actor and filmmaker Malcolm M. Mays is writing. The original movie, directed by Mario Van Peebles, boasted a star cast that included Wesley Snipes, Ice-T, Chris Rock, Flavor Flav, Allen Payne, Judd Nelson, and Peebles. The plot revolves an arrogant New York City drug lord during the 1980s crack epidemic and a detective who goes undercover in the gang.
Will Smith will take on the role of New York City crime boss Nicky Barnes in his next Netflix film, The Council. Peter Landesman will executive produce and wrote the screenplay that tells the never-before-told story of a crime syndicate consisting of seven African-American men who ruled Harlem in the 1970s and early ’80s. It wasn't an ordinary crime syndicate – the men dreamed of a self-sufficient and self-policing African American city-state, funded by revolutionizing the drug game.
David Strathairn, who earned an Oscar nomination for Good Night, and Good Luck, has joined the cast of Nightmare Alley, the noir thriller being written and directed by Guillermo del Toro. Bradley Cooper is headlining the Fox Searchlight production, an adaptation of the 1946 noir novel by William Lindsay (first adapted in the 1947 film noir starring Tyrone Power). Toni Collette, Rooney Mara and Cate Blanchett also star in the cast. The story is set in a world of carnival hustlers and con men, telling the story of a "mentalist" (Cooper) who teams up with a female psychiatrist (Blanchett) to trick people into giving them money.
Actor Emilio Insolera has joined the cast of 355, the Simon Kinberg-directed global spy thriller starring Jessica Chastain, Penelope Cruz, Diane Kruger, Lupita Nyong’o, Bingbing Fan, Sebastian Stan, and Edgar Ramirez. Based on an idea by Chastain, the plot centers around female spies from agencies around the world who must use all their considerable talents and training to stop an event from occurring that could thrust our teetering world into total chaos.
A new teaser released for Netflix's upcoming El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie gives us our first look at Jesse Pinkman (Aaron Paul, reprising his role) in the moments after he left Walter (Bryan Cranston) and drove to freedom in the Breaking Bad TV series finale. El Camino: A Breaking Bad Movie will premiere on Netflix and in select theaters Oct. 11.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Showtime has given an eight-episode series order to Ripley, an adaptation of Patricia Highsmith’s bestselling series of novels, starring Sherlock alum Andrew Scott. The Night Of director, Steven Zaillian, will write and helm the series that centers on Tom Ripley, a grifter scraping by in early 1960s New York. The character was first introduced in Highsmith’s The Talented Mr. Ripley in 1955 and later appeared in four more of her novels. He was most famously portrayed on-screen by Matt Damon in the 1999 film by Anthony Minghella.
Rebus is set to return to TV screens after over a decade away. The detective drama starred Ken Stott in the role of DI John Rebus for three seasons when John Hannah quit the role after the first series. Rebus creator, Scottish author Ian Rankin, has confirmed its long-awaited comeback and that new episodes are on the way with Gregory Burke penning the scripts. It's said the new episode could have a Nordic Noir-style, while Rankin (who has penned 22 books featuring Rebus) will have a much bigger say in how the series is run. No broadcast date has been set yet, and there is no word on whether the show would return to ITV.
In a competitive situation with multiple networks bidding, CBS has landed Queens, a police drama from The InBetween creator/executive producer Moira Kirland, executive producer Matt Gross, and studio Universal TV. Written by Kirland, Queens centers on a veteran homicide detective in Queens who takes on the most challenging case of her life — mentoring her new partner, a rookie cop whose Millennial outlook on the world clashes with the veteran’s Gen-X mentality — as these women work to solve the borough’s toughest crimes while also attempting to right a wrong from their past.
Fox has given a script commitment with penalty to DEA, a drama from writer Craig Gore (S.W.A.T.). Written by Gore, DEA is an "operation of the week" show as Jack Riley and his DEA Task Force hunt down a drug kingpin, dismantling dangerous drug organizations in major cities across the U.S. Episodes will be "a combination of smart investigation, intense action, as we explore what drives our main characters (cops and criminals) on both sides of the law."
Freeform has ordered a new thriller pilot from executive producers Jessica Biel, Bert V. Royal, and Michelle Purple, titled Last Summer. It's described as an "unconventional thriller that takes place over three summers – ’93, ’94, ’95 – in a small Texas town when a beautiful popular teen, Kate, is abducted and, seemingly unrelated, a girl, Jeanette, goes from being a sweet, awkward outlier to the most popular girl in town." Each episode is told from the POV of one of the two main girls (Jeanette and Kate), which will have the viewers loyalties constantly shifting as more information is revealed.
CBS has put in development the crime programs Wet House and The Terminal. Cop drama Wet House hails from the Rizzoli & Isles duo of star Sasha Alexander and writer-producer Russell Grant and centers on a female detective who lands at a station for castoff cops with personal demons after she has a fight with a colleague. She soon discovers her new colleagues are not only exceptional police officers who serve and protect their community but also a family of flawed human beings who nevertheless take care of their own. The Terminal is based on a short story by bestselling author Lee Child and centers on an unflappable ex-Marine, the first female to earn the Medal of Honor. When she lands the job of head of security for JFK International Airport, she discovers that protecting what is widely considered the biggest soft target in the world will be the most challenging mission of her life.
Walker, Texas Ranger is getting a reboot, with Supernatural star Jared Padalecki set to headline and executive produce. The "reimagining" of CBS’ long-running 1990s action/crime series starring Chuck Norris is being shopped by CBS TV Studios, with the CW as a leading contender for the new show. The project will see Walker getting a female partner and "will explore morality, family, and rediscovering our lost common ground." At the center of the series is Cordell Walker (Padalecki), a man finding his way back to his family while investigating crime in the state’s most elite unit.
Awesome Media & Entertainment has optioned best-selling author Caroline Mitchell’s detective novel, Truth and Lies, in the hope of creating a female Luther. The story follows the young London detective, DI Amy Winter, the daughter of a husband and wife who were imprisoned for a string of heinous killings. As she investigates the disappearance of a teenage girl, she's forced to reconnect with her incarcerated mother, Lillian, in order to prevent another murder.
Amy Brenneman is set as a lead opposite Jeff Bridges and John Lithgow in FX’s drama pilot, The Old Man, which is based on the eponymous novel written by Thomas Perry. The story centers on Dan Chase (Bridges), who absconded from the CIA decades ago and has been living off the grid since. When an assassin arrives gunning for Chase, the old operative learns that to ensure his future he now must reconcile his past. Brenneman will play Zoe, a woman recovering from a bruising divorce, who rents a room to Chase not knowing he’s on the run - and then must draw on reserves she never knew she had in order to survive the day.
Julianne Nicholson (Monos), Jean Smart (Life Itself), Angourie Rice (Black Mirror), Evan Peters (I Am Woman), Cailee Spaeny (On the Basis of Sex), and David Denman (The Replacements) have been cast opposite Kate Winslet in HBO’s limited series, Mare of Easttown. Written and executive produced by Brad Inglesby, who also serves as showrunner, Mare Of Easttown stars Winslet as a small-town Pennsylvania detective whose life crumbles around her as she investigates a local murder.
Sherlock’s Rupert Graves is joining the third season of the Sky drama, Riviera. Graves will play Gabriel Hirsch, the carefree, charismatic and worldly ally of Julia Stiles’ Georgina Ryland. A year has passed since the second season finale, with Georgina having abandoned the cursed Riviera, leaving all its devastation and damage behind to start a new life. Now a rising star in international art restitution, she has reinvented herself as Georgina Ryland as she travels the world – from Venice to Argentina – on the hunt for stolen art works.
Amazon has given a formal Season 3 pickup to its thriller Absentia, starring and executive produced by Stana Katic. Geoff Bell (Kingsman: The Secret Service) and Josette Simon (Wonder Woman) have also joined the cast. The series centers on FBI agent Emily Byrne (Katic), with the new season opening three months after the dramatic events of Season 2 that sees Emily nearing the end of her suspension from the Bureau and working hard to be the best possible mother to her son. Everything is upended when one of Nick Durand’s (Patrick Heusinger) criminal cases hits too close to home and threatens the lives of the family Emily is desperately trying to hold together.
BET has canceled the legal drama, In Contempt, after one season. The series which debuted back in April 2018, starred Erica Ash as Gwen Sullivan, an outspoken and passionate public defender in a New York legal aid office.
Fox has added four more characters to its upcoming 9-1-1 spinoff starring Rob Lowe. Natacha Karam, Brian Michael Smith, Julian Works, and newcomer Rafael Silva are joining 9-1-1: Lone Star as series regulars. Karam will play Marjan Marwani, a devout Muslim firefighter, who is also described as an adrenaline junkie. Smith will portray transgender male firefighter Paul Strickland, who "has a gift for observation worthy of Sherlock Holmes." Works will portray rookie firefighter Mateo Chavez, while Silva plays Austin police officer Carlos Reyes.
Timothy Busfield (The West Wing) is set as a series regular opposite Nicholas Pinnock in ABC’s midseason legal drama series, For Life. Written by Hank Steinberg, For Life is a fictional serialized legal and family drama, inspired by the life of Isaac Wright Jr, about Aaron Wallace (Pinnock), a prisoner who becomes a lawyer and litigates cases for other inmates while fighting to overturn his own life sentence for a crime he didn’t commit. Busfield will play Roswell, a legal mentor and trusted friend of Wallace.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
Public radio station WLRN in Miami spoke with Alex Segura about his books featuring Cuban-American private investigator, Pete Fernandez.
A new Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast is up featuring the mystery short story "The Mystery of the Jade Cats" by Sharon K Garner and read by actor Ariel Linn. The story is told by a black cat - just in time to kick off the Halloween season.
Criminal Mischief: Episode #28, with host Dr. D.P. Lyle, focused on "The MacGuffin" in crime fiction.
Wrong Place, Write Crime host Frank Zafiro debuted a new season by welcoming guest, Trey R. Barker, to discuss pounding his heart out as a rock and roll drummer, working in a jail, being a book conference social butterfly, owning a bookstore, and being a cop who writes.
The Writer's Detective Bureau, hosted by veteran Police Detective, Adam Richardson, tackled the topics of "Bad Cops, Romantic Complications, and Interview Rapport."
It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club interviewed Faye Snowden, the author of three published mysteries with Kensington, whose new novel, A Killing Fire, features homicide detective, Raven Burns.
Meet the Thriller Author chatted with Jim Heskett, who writes award-winning mystery-thrillers (and as J.E. Heskett, post-apocalyptic thrillers), seasoned with a dash of snark.
Writer Types, hosted by Eric Beetner and S.W. Lauden, wlecomed three outstanding authors, including Laura Benedict (The Stranger Inside), J Todd Scott (This Side Of Night), and Catherine Ryan Howard (Rewind).
Read or Dead hosts Katie McClean Horner and Rincey Abraham gave "readalikes" for some of the best selling mystery writers like James Patterson, Louise Penny and more.
The Book People podcast snagged Lara Prescott, whose debut novel, The Secrets We Kept, was inspired by the true story of the CIA plot to infiltrate the hearts and minds of Soviet Russia, not with propaganda, but with the greatest love story of the twentieth century: Doctor Zhivago.