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
Academy Award winner, Forest Whitaker, is set to co-star with Tom Hardy in the Netflix action film, Havoc, from Gareth Evans, the director of the critically acclaimed martial arts film, The Raid. Hardy stars in the project as a bruised detective who, after a drug deal gone wrong, must fight his way through a criminal underworld to rescue a politician’s estranged son. In doing so, he unravels a deep web of corruption and conspiracy that ensnares his entire city.
Chris Pratt will team up with brother-in-law, Patrick Schwarzenegger, on Amazon's The Terminal List. The series, which is currently shooting, is based on the Jack Carr novel that follows James Reece (Pratt) after his entire platoon of Navy SEALs is ambushed during a high-stakes covert mission. Reece returns home to his family with conflicting memories of the event and questions about his culpability. However, as new evidence comes to light, Reece discovers dark forces working against him, endangering not only his life but the lives of those he loves. Schwarzenegger will play Reece’s baby-faced youngest team member.
Derek DelGaudio is set to join the ensemble cast of Steven Soderbergh’s next film, the New Line Max Original feature KIMI, with Zoë Kravitz on board to star. Although a recent Deadline report said that plot details are being kept under wraps, an earlier Variety article indicated the plot centers on an agoraphobic tech worker (Kravitz), who discovers recorded evidence of a violent crime during an ordinary data stream review and tries reporting it up the chain of command at her company. Met with resistance and bureaucracy, she realizes that in order to get involved, she will have to do the thing she fears the most — leave her apartment.
After landing rights to her directorial debut, Netflix is looking to get back into business with Halle Berry. The streamer has set her to star opposite Mark Wahlberg in the thriller, Our Man From Jersey. David Guggenheim penned the script, with Wahlberg and his partner Stephen Levinson producing. Plot details are being kept under wraps, but the film is described as a blue-collar James Bond. Insiders say the plan is to shoot the film early next year in London.
Katie Holmes, through her Noelle Productions banner, has optioned The Watergate Girl: My Fight For Truth and Justice Against A Criminal President, the best-selling autobiography by former Watergate prosecutor, Jill Wine-Banks. Holmes will also star in the project as Wine-Banks, then a 30-year-old (and known as Jill Wine Volner), the only woman on the team that prosecuted the highest-ranking White House officials. Called “the mini-skirted lawyer” by the press, she fought the casual sexism of the day to receive the respect accorded her male counterparts — and prevailed despite her house being burgled, her phones tapped, and her office trashed.
Kenneth Branagh’s mystery ensemble-cast movie, Death on the Nile has seen its premiere date pushed back again, this time to February 11, 2022. The 20th Century Studios production, which also stars Gal Gadot, Tom Bateman, and Annette Bening, has changed release dates several times due to the pandemic. However, Deadline reports that the new release date has nothing to do with co-star Armie Hammer, who has been besieged by an alleged sex scandal.
Meanwhile, those films that have been able to premiere in theatres with limited seating are doing surprising well. Among the recent successes are the Brad Furman-directed crime thriller, City of Lies, which evolves around the real-life death of hip hop icon Notorious B.I.G.; and the Cold War spy thriller, The Courier, starring Benedict Cumberbatch and Rachel Brosnaha.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
CBS confirmed that Dick Wolf’s FBI franchise is growing and has given a series order to FBI: International, the third iteration of the successful FBI brand, for the 2021-22 broadcast season. The network also announced it is renewing the mothership series, FBI, for a fourth season and FBI: Most Wanted for a third season. FBI: International is scheduled to debut in a crossover episode of those other two shows next year.
The Act creator Michelle Dean is adapting Matthew McGough’s book, The Lazarus Files: A Cold Case Investigation, for a TV series. The book tells the story of one of the most infamous murder cases in LAPD history, which remained unsolved until DNA evidence implicated a shocking suspect – Stephanie Lazarus, a detective within the LAPD’s own ranks. McGough, an investigative journalist, met and interviewed Lazarus in 2008, when she was a well-respected detective in the LAPD’s Art Theft Detail. A year later, Lazarus was arrested for a cold case murder she had committed 23 years earlier. McGough researched not only the murder, but also the LAPD’s cover-up and its systemic failure to investigate one of it's own.
Netflix has taken international rights to Steven Moffat’s limited BBC series, Inside Man. Stanley Tucci has been set in the title role, joined by Doctor Who actor, David Tennant, and Dracula star, Dolly Wells. Rounding out the headline cast is Lydia West, who featured in the acclaimed Channel 4/HBO Max series, It’s A Sin. Steven Moffat (Sherlock, Doctor Who) is penning and directing the project, which is said to center around three characters, a prisoner on death row in America, an English Vicar, and a maths teacher trapped in a cellar, who all cross paths in the most unexpected way.
The Chelsea Detective will become the latest British crime series to be streamed by Acorn-TV. Created and co-written by Peter Fincham, The Chelsea Detective stars Adrian Scarborough as Detective Inspector Max Arnold, who plies his trade in Chelsea to uncover the murky underbelly of a well-heeled borough of London.
This is an odd little project: CBS Studios and German producer Syrreal Entertainment are teaming to create a series for RTL streamer TV Now in which David Hasselhoff will star as himself in a fictional international conspiracy story. It follows the actor as he lands a lead role in a German stage show, which plunges him into the center of an international conspiracy of former cold war assassins, while around him the fabric of reality seems to break down. German actor Henry Hübchen also stars as a version of himself.
Evan Peters is set as the title character in Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, a Netflix limited series co-created by longtime collaborators Murphy and Ian Brennan. Monster chronicles the story of one of America’s most notorious serial killers (Peters), largely told from the point of view of Dahmer’s victims, and dives deeply into the police incompetence and apathy that allowed the Wisconsin native to go on a multiyear killing spree.
David Thewlis has been cast to star opposite Olivia Colman in the HBO and Sky crime drama, Landscapers. The four-part limited series, inspired by real events, tells the story of a seemingly ordinary couple who become the focus of an investigation when two dead bodies are discovered in the garden of a Nottingham house. Additional cast members include Kate O’Flynn, Dipo Ola, Samuel Anderson, Karl Johnson, Felicity Montagu, and Daniel Rigby.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
Small press and self-published authors were in the spotlight on the latest episode of Writer Types. Writers including Mick McCrary, Jonathan Brown, Delia C. Pitts, Murphy Morrison, and Greg Hickey all chatted with host, Eric Beetner. Plus Gabriel Valjean, Mark Atley, Eric Dezenhall and Sandra Wells also stopped by.
Read or Dead tackled mysteries and thrillers that transport you to a particular time and place.
Jacqueline Winspear was the featured guest on Speaking of Mysteries, discussing The Consequences of Fear, the 16th installment of Winspear’s addictive series featuring detective and frequent intelligence asset, Maisie Dobbs.
Suspense Radio and Meet the Thriller Author both chatted with master of suspense, Dean Koontz, about his latest book, The Other Emily, which takes readers on a twisting journey of lost love, impossible second chances, and terrifying promises.
Wrong Place, Write Crime welcomed Danny Gardner to chat about his newest novel, Ace Boon Coon, and the inspiration behind it.
Queer Writers of Crime spoke with William D. Prystauk about his series featuring a pansexual private investigator who solves crimes in New York City’s BDSM and LGBT communities.
On the Writer's Detective Bureau, host Adam Richardson answered questions about SWAT snipers on rooftops, how the FBI and SEC handle white-collar investigations, and when autopsies are and are not performed
Jackie Flaum joined It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club for a discussion about her first novel, Justice Tomorrow, featuring investigators Madeline Sterling and Socractes Gray, who head a team sent to a Georgia town in 1965 to look into the lynching of a local civil rights leader's son.
After a hiatus, the Alfred Hitchcock Magazine podcast series is back with a tale by Joseph S. Walker, nominated for an Edgar Allan Poe Award for Best Short Story.
American spy author, Paul Vidich, spoke with Crime Time FM host, Paul Burke, about his fascination with the Cold War and his new Moscow-set thriller, The Mercenary, the fourth in the George Mueller series.
THEATRE
Agatha Christie's And Then There Were None is set to return to the stage in the UK, to be presented September 11-13 at Royal and Derngate in Northampton ahead of a UK tour. Director Lucy Bailey noted, "Set in 1939, this is Agatha Christie's most popular novel but also one of her darkest, reflecting the impending sense of doom of a world on the brink of war. Its depiction of a group of strangers stranded in a crisis of their own making feels very in tune with today's climate emergency."