It's the start of a new week and that means it's time for a brand-new roundup of crime drama news:
THE BIG SCREEN/MOVIES
Director-producer Anthony Hemingway is in talks to helm Train Man, a legal drama based on the true story of Darius McCollum, a man with Asperger syndrome whose fascination with subways and trains led to him posing as various New York City Metro officials in order to operate subway trains. McCollum, who was arrested on several occasions, became a folk hero for people who are on the spectrum. Simon Stephenson wrote the screenplay, which will follow the lawyer hired to defend McCollum. The long-gestating project at one point had Julia Roberts eyeing the lead, but as of now, no cast is attached.
The King’s Man, starring Ralph Fiennes and directed by Matthew Vaughn, is moving its release date from September of this year to February 26, 2021. The period spy action comedy film, written by Vaughn and Karl Gajdusek, is a prequel and the third film in the Kingsman series. The movie features an ensemble cast that includes Fiennes, Gemma Arterton, Rhys Ifans, Matthew Goode, Tom Hollander, Harris Dickinson, Daniel Brühl, Djimon Hounsou, and Charles Dance.
Frank Grillo (Captain America), Melissa Leo (The Fighter), Josh Hartnett (Black Hawk Down), and William Forsythe (The Rock) are leading the cast in the crime action-thriller, Ida Red, which has been filming in Oklahoma during the pandemic. Written and directed by John Swab (Body Brokers), the film follows career criminal Ida "Red" Walker (Leo) who is battling a terminal illness while serving a 25-year prison sentence in Oklahoma. Under Ida’s tutelage, her son, Wyatt Walker (Hartnett) has sustained the family business, alongside his uncle, Dallas Walker (Grillo). When a job goes awry, local detective and Wyatt’s brother-in-law, Bodie Collier (Slaine), is joined by FBI agent Lawrence Twilley (Forsythe), to track down the responsible party.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Noel Clarke (Bulletproof) is set to star as a surveillance detective in ITV’s Viewpoint, a Rear Window-esque crime drama based on an idea from Emmy-winning director, Harry Bradbeer. Co-created and written by Ed Whitmore (Manhunt), the five-part drama follows a police surveillance investigation into a tight-knit Manchester community.
Curtis "50 Cent" Jackson is producing Twenty Four Seven starring rapper T.I. in the role of Derrick Parker who was involved deeply in rap history, including the shooting of Tupac Shakur. The project is inspired by the book, Notorious C.O.P.: The Inside Story of the Tupac, Biggie, and Jam Master Jay Investigations from NYPD’s First “Hip-Hop Cop,” by Derrick Parker with Matt Diehl.
ABC has ordered a new limited series called Women of the Movement which debuts sometime in 2021. The six-episode series chronicles the journey of Mamie Till Mobley on her long, arduous journey seeking justice for the murder of her son Emmett Till, who, at the age of just 14, was lynched in 1955 for allegedly flirting with a white woman.
Fox has put in development Interceptor, a one-hour Coast Guard drama written by Katie J. Stone, David Daitch, and John Pruitt. The project follows a rookie Coast Guard Special Forces team, as diverse as the nation they are sworn to protect, who must battle the drug infested waters off the coast of Florida, and navigate the streets of Miami, all while working through the trials of their personal lives.
Taryn Manning (Orange Is the New Black) is set to bring the "Karen" meme to life in a new suspense thriller where she’ll play a Southern white woman who terrorizes her Black neighbors. Karen is from writer-director Coke Daniels and is described as a social commentary with a "powerful message." In the film, Manning will play Karen White, an entitled white woman from the South set on ousting her Black neighbors, who are Black Lives Matter supporters, from her neighborhood.
NBCUniversal is developing Joe Exotic (working title), a limited series starring and executive produced by Kate McKinnon, which has received a joint straight-to-series order by the NBCUniversal Television and Streaming divisions. Interest in Joe Exotic skyrocketed this past spring because of the massive popularity of the Netflix docuseries, Tiger King, about the real-life characters depicted in the Joe Exotic limited series. Joe Exotic is one of two high-profile scripted series adaptations of the stranger-than-fiction true story, along with one starring Nicolas Cage as real-life convicted felon, Joe Exotic.
NBC released its fall schedule which includes a three-hour Wednesday block of Dick Wolf dramas, beginning with Chicago Med and capping off the night with Chicago P.D. on November 10. Law & Order: SVU returns on Thursday, Nov. 12, with The Blacklist capping off the week on Friday, Nov. 13 with its Season 8 premiere.
With Hollywood production sideswiped by the coronavirus pandemic for five months, the fall premiere dates for new TV series and new seasons of returning shows are in a state of flux, but Deadline had a list of the currently scheduled lineup including crime dramas such as LA's Finest, which is the Bad Boys spin-off starring Gabrielle Union and Jessica Alba (Spectrum Originals) on September 9; the Kiwi crime drama, One Lane Bridge (Sundance Now) on September 18; Fargo (FX, Season 4) on September 27; Gangs of London and The Salisbury Poisonings (AMC+) on October 1; the sci-fi crime drama neXt (Fox), on October 6; Coroner (The CW) on October 7; and Mystery Road (Acorn, Season 2) on October 12.
However, Christopher Meloni's Elliot Stabler spin-off, Law & Order: Organized Crime, has been delayed. The anticipated drama was expected to debut this October on NBC, following Law & Order: SVU, but NBC announced Thursday that the show was being pushed until 2021.
A trailer was released for Enola Holmes, based on the book series by Nancy Springer and starring Millie Bobby Brown in the title role, a "wild child," as big brother Sherlock Holmes (Henry Cavill) describes her. When Sherlock’s teen sister, Enola, discovers her mother missing, she sets off to find her, becoming a super-sleuth in her own right as she outwits her famous brother and unravels a dangerous conspiracy around a mysterious young Lord.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
Two Crime Writers and a Microphone started off a new season by welcoming S.A. Cosby, author of Blacktop Wasteland, to talk about poverty, fruit loops, and drunk heroes.
Read or Dead tackled adaptation news (including the Dan Mallory movie), and took a walk down memory lane with middle grade mystery books.
Suspense Radio's Beyond the Cover spoke with author Laura Griffin about her latest book, Hidden, the first installment in her new Texas Murder Files Series.
Meet the Thriller Author chatted with Lydia King, a practicing physician and author of young adult fiction, adult fiction and non-fiction, and poetry, as they discussed her latest novel, Opium and Absinthe.
Paul Haynes joined It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club following the sentencing of the Golden State Killer. Haynes conducted research for I'll Be Gone in the Dark, Michelle McNamara's book on the subject, and then helped finish the book after Michelle's untimely death.