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
The action thriller, Hypnotic, is moving forward thanks to a deal between Solstice Studios and Studio 8. The story follows a detective who becomes entangled in a mystery involving his missing daughter and a secret government program while investigating a string of impossible high-end heists. The script was penned by Sin City director, Robert Rodriguez, and Max Borenstein (Kong: Skull Island). Discussions are ongoing regarding potential cast for the film.
Jodie Foster, Tahar Rahim, and Shailene Woodley are joining Benedict Cumberbatch in the political thriller, Prisoner 760. Directed by Oscar- and BAFTA-winning filmmaker Kevin Macdonald, Prisoner 760 follows Mohamedou Ould Slahi (Rahim), who is captured by the U.S. government and languishing in prison without charge or trial. Losing all hope, Slahi finds allies in defense attorney Nancy Hollander (Foster) and her associate Teri Duncan (Woodley). Together, they face countless obstacles in a desperate pursuit for justice. Their controversial advocacy, along with evidence uncovered by formidable military prosecutor, Lt. Stuart Couch (Cumberbatch), eventually reveals a shocking and far reaching conspiracy.
Oscar Isaac is set to star in a revenge thriller titled The Card Counter, the next film from Oscar-winner Paul Schrader. Schrader wrote the original screenplay and will also direct the film. Isaac is set to star as William Tell, a gambler and former serviceman who sets out to reform a young man seeking revenge on a mutual enemy from their past.
Lady Gaga has lined up her first acting role since A Star is Born, a film from director Ridley Scott about the assassination of a member of the Gucci family fashion empire. She'll play Patrizia Reggiani, who was the ex-wife of the wealthy Italian socialite and grandson to Gucci founder Guccio Gucci, Maurizio Gucci. In 1998, Reggiani was convicted with ordering the killing of her husband. The public trial led to her being called the "Black Widow" in the media, and she served 18 years in prison in connection to the murder after originally being sentenced to 29 years. The story about the Gucci murder is based on the non-fiction book by Sara Gay Forden, The House of Gucci: A Sensational Story of Murder, Madness, Glamour, and Greed.
Casey Affleck, Michelle Monaghan, and Sam Claflin have been added to 13 Films’ thriller, Every Breath You Take, from Sunshine Cleaning director Christine Jeffs. Affleck plays a psychiatrist whose career is thrown into jeopardy when his patient takes her own life. When he invites his patient’s surviving brother (Claflin) into his home to meet his wife (Monaghan) and daughter, his family life is suddenly torn apart.
Gerard Butler has found his latest action vehicle in the form of The Plane. The script comes from Charles Cumming and JP Davis (Violence Of Action), and is based on the book by Cumming. Butler will star as commercial pilot Ray Torrance, who after a heroic job of successfully landing his storm-damaged aircraft in a war zone, finds himself caught between the agendas of multiple militia who are planning to take the plane and its passengers hostage.
Isabel Arraiza has been added to the cast of The Little Things, the Warner Bros thriller that stars oscar winners Denzel Washington, Jared Leto, and Rami Malek. John Lee Hancock wrote and is directing the film, which centers around Deke (Washington), a burned-out Kern County, CA deputy sheriff who teams with Baxter (Malek), a crack LASD detective, to nab a serial killer. Deke’s nose for the "little things" proves eerily accurate, but his willingness to circumvent the rules embroils Baxter in a soul-shattering dilemma.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
ABC has put in development the legal thriller, Reasonable Doubt. Written by Raamla Mohamed, who was writer-producer on Scandal, Reasonable Doubt is co-executive produced by celebrity attorney Shawn Holley, a member of O.J. Simpson’s legal defense "Dream Team." The project follows Charlie Stewart, the most brilliant and fearless defense attorney in Los Angeles who bucks the justice system at every chance she gets.
CBS has put in development Cascadia, a crime drama from NCIS: Los Angeles executive producer Frank Military, series co-star Eric Christian Olsen, and CBS Television Studios. Cascadia revolves around an FBI special agent with an expertise in hunting psychopathic killers who returns to her hometown in the Pacific Northwest and stumbles onto a terrifying new breed of serial murders that threatens to expose a dark secret from her family’s past.
Amazon Studios has put in development Bone White, a drama based on Ronald Malfi’s novel and adapted by Henry Chaisson. The premise: after a telepathic distress call from his estranged twin brother jolts him out of his humdrum existence, an agoraphobic professor journeys deep into the Alaskan wilderness to uncover a vast supernatural mystery with the help of an intrepid police investigator.
Adam McKay is producing an untitled limited series about Jeffrey Epstein for HBO. Based on Miami Herald investigative reporter Julie K. Brown’s upcoming book about Epstein, the project will be executive produced by McKay and his producing partner Kevin Messick.
Shameless creator Paul Abbott is rebooting his award-winning BBC political thriller, State of Play, which inspired the Russell Crowe movie of the same name. In the original series, David Morrissey played politician Stephen Collins, whose researcher is killed on the London Underground. Journalist Cal McCaffrey (John Simm) and his editor Cameron Foster (Bill Nighy) investigate, uncovering a complex story that reveals links between government and big business.
Studio Soho has locked in a sales deal for In Absentia, a feature documentary from the six-time Oscar-nominated director of My Left Foot. The project digs into the murder of Sophie Toscan du Plantier, a French film and TV producer who was killed while at her isolated holiday cottage in West Cork, Ireland, just days before Christmas in 1996. The case has caused scandal and controversy in Ireland and France, and in May of this year, the French courts convicted Cork resident Ian Bailey in absentia of the murder and sentenced him to 25 years’ imprisonment. Bailey has protested his innocence for the past two decades and is living as a free man in Ireland, though remains under threat of extradition to France.
Fans of ABC's crime dramas Stumptown and The Rookie have cause for celebration: ABC announced it's given a full-season order to Stumptown, starring Cobie Smulders as an Army veteran who now work as a private investigator in Portland, and a spring season pickup to its police procedural, The Rookie.
Sky has renewed the crime medical thriller, Temple, for a second season. The Comcast-backed pay-TV platform has ordered another eight-episode run of the series, which stars Mark Strong, Daniel Mays, and Carice Van Houten, and is based on Norwegian scripted forma, Valkryien. Temple tells the story of Daniel Milton (Strong), a respected surgeon who finds himself drawn into the underground world of doomsday preppers and bank robbers when he tries to save his wife’s life, by setting up an illicit clinic with obsessive yet surprisingly resourceful misfit Lee (Mays), in the vast network of tunnels beneath Temple tube station in London. They are soon joined by Anna (Van Houten), a guilt-ridden medical researcher whose past is entangled with Daniel’s and fugitive bank-robber Jamie (Tobi King-Bakare).
Not quite as lucky in the renewal department is the Suits spin-off, Pearson, at USA. The cable network decided not to order a second season of the Gina Torres-led drama, which means the Suits universe is officially done. The series followed Gina Torres' Jessica Pearson from New York to Chicago where, stripped of her law license, the former managing partner of Pearson Hardman became a fixer for the Chicago mayor. It was a gritty political thriller versus Suits' glitzy corporate law drama.
Miles Gaston Villanueva (Law & Order True Crime: The Menendez Murders), is set for a key recurring role opposite Kennedy McMann and Riley Smith on the CW’s Nancy Drew. Nancy Drew centers on 18-year-old Nancy Drew (McMann) and is set in the summer after her high school graduation. She thought she’d be leaving her hometown for college, but when a socialite, Tiffany Hudson, is murdered, Nancy finds herself a prime suspect in the crime, along with a group of other teens present at the scene. Villanueva will play Owen, a young real estate mogul Nancy falls for until she learns he may not have an alibi for the night Hudson was killed.
Peacock, NBCUniversal’s upcoming streaming service, has set the cast for One Of Us Is Lying, its YA mystery drama pilot based on Karen M. McManus’ bestselling novel. Marianly Tejada, Cooper van Grootel, Annalisa Cochrane, Chibuikem Uche, Jessica McLeod, Barrett Carnahan, and Melissa Collazo will lead the ensemble cast. The project tells the story of what happens when five high schoolers walk into detention and only four make it out alive. Everyone is a suspect, and everyone has something to hide.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO
Debbi Mack interviewed crime writer and non-fiction author Richard T. Cahill on the Crime Cafe podcast.
Writer Types featured a Halloween episode with John Hornor Jacobs, Alma Katsu, and Daniel Kraus.
Speaking of Mysteries chatted with Michael Bowen about his political thriller, False Flag in Autumn, featuring Washington insider Josie Kendall.
Spybrary host Shane Whaley interviewed Steve Vogel, the author of Betrayal in Berlin: The True Story of the Cold War's Most Audacious Espionage Operation.
It Was a Dark and Stormy Bookclub spoke with Rea Frey, an award-winning author of several nonfiction books who turned her hand to writing thrillers, including her debut novel, Not Her Daughter, followed by her second novel, Because You're Mine.
THEATRE
The hit Broadway play, To Kill a Mockingbird, adapted by The West Wing writer Aaron Sorkin, will open in London's West End in spring 2020, marking the 60th anniversary of the publication of Harper Lee’s Pulitzer-winning novel. The story about Atticus Finch, a small-town lawyer in 1930s Alabama who defends a black man wrongly accused of rape, has been running for a year on Broadway with Jeff Daniels in the role of Finch and adult actors portraying the children in the story.
The Geffen Playhouse in Los Angeles is presenting the world premiere adaptation of Key Largo from November 6 through December 10. Key Largo is a bold reimagining of Maxwell Anderson’s Broadway hit that became the iconic noir film starring Humphrey Bogart and Lauren Bacall. Returning from World War II, disillusioned Frank McCloud travels to a hotel in Key Largo to pay his respects to the widow of a fallen friend. What McCloud doesn’t count on is an entirely different battle with mobsters who have overtaken the hotel, led by the ruthless Johnny Rocco (Academy Award nominee Andy Garcia). As a hurricane barrels toward the Keys, McCloud must face his demons in order to take down a monster.
The Alexandra Theatre, in Birmingham, UK, is staging Agatha Christie's iconic play, The Mousetrap, November 11-16. The scene is set when a group of people gathered in a country house cut off by the snow discover, to their horror, that there is a murderer in their midst. Who can it be?
Theatre Royal Brighton will present The Lady Vanishes, November 4-9. BAFTA-nominated Gwen Taylor and Andrew Lancel are reunited for the first time since their two years together in Coronation Street in this devilishly fun stage adaptation of Alfred Hitchcock’s classic film. When Socialite Iris’ travelling companion disappears, she’s bewildered to find fellow passengers deny ever having seen her. But with the help of musician Max, she turns detective, and together they resolve to solve this perplexing mystery.