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
Jesse Eisenberg, Adrien Brody and Riley Keough will star in Manodrome, a thriller from South African director, John Trengrove, as he makes his English-language directorial debut. The film is described as a "nihilistic thriller" about an Uber driver and aspiring bodybuilder (Eisenberg) who is inducted into a libertarian masculinity cult and loses his grip on reality when his repressed desires are awakened.
Following her breakout role as Daphne in the hit Netflix series, Bridgerton, Phoebe Dynevor has found her next big film role in Sony Pictures’s I Heart Murder, with Matt Spicer directing. The screenplay is written by Tom O’Donnell and Spicer, and although the plot is being kept under wraps, it’s described as a "female-driven thriller."
David Patrick Kelly (Twin Peaks) has been tapped as a lead in the upcoming Ray Donovan feature-length film for Showtime. Star Liev Schreiber returns in his titular role and co-writes the script along with series showrunner David Hollander, who also directs. The film picks up where Season 7 of the popular series left off following the series’ surprise cancellation last year. Kelly will play Matty Galloway, a long-time friend of Mickey’s (Jon Voight).
Open Road Films has set a release date of September 17 for its Gerard Butler action movie, Copshop, from Joe Carnahan. Written by Carnahan and Kurt McLeod, Copshop follows a wily con artist who is on the run from a lethal assassin. He devises a scheme to hide out inside a small-town police station—but when the hitman turns up at the precinct, an unsuspecting rookie cop finds herself caught in the crosshairs.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Colin Callender’s Playground and Red Arrow Studios International are joining forces to co-develop a series based on Georges Simenon’s classic Inspector Maigret novels and short stories. The character of Jules Maigret is a French cop who solves murders, using his understanding of human motives and emotional makeup, from the back alleys of Paris to the glamorous beaches of the South of France and beyond. His reputation is so highly regarded that officers come to shadow him and observe his uncanny ability to get under the skin of the criminals he is chasing. A previous screen adaptation starred Rowan Atkinson and aired on ITV
Film and TV rights for Faith Martin’s DI Hillary Greene crime series have been optioned by LA-based Southwell Neal Entertainment (SNE). The DI Hillary Greene book series currently has 18 novels and has sold over two million copies. Green is a "flinty, brilliant" detective living in Oxfordshire, and the titles follow Greene as she is partnered with former LAPD detective, John Sullivan.
Coming off her Oscar-nominated role in Hillbilly Elegy, Glenn Close has joined Tehran as a lead in Season 2 of Apple TV+’s international espionage thriller series. Close will play the new series role of Marjan Montazeri, a British woman, living in Tehran. The drama tells the story of Mossad agent, Tamar Rabinyan (Niv Sultan), who goes deep undercover on a dangerous mission in Tehran that places her and everyone around her in dire jeopardy. Close joins an ensemble cast that includes stars Sultan, Shaun Toub and Shervin Alenabi.
Remi Adeleke, the actor, filmmaker, and former Navy SEAL, has joined the cast of Amazon’s thriller series, Terminal List, in a recurring role. The project follows James Reece (Chris 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. Adeleke will play Terrell "Tee" Daniels, a member of the FBI’s elite Hostage Rescue Team, now operating on U.S. soil.
Big Sky’s Patrick Gallagher is set for a recurring role in Joe Pickett, the Spectrum Originals drama based on C.J Box’s novels. The ten-part series follows a game warden (Michael Dorman) and his family as they navigate the changing political and socio-economic climate in a small rural town in Wyoming. Surrounded by rich history and vast wildlife, the township hides decades of schemes and secrets that are yet to be uncovered. Gallagher, who plays Sherriff Walter Tubb on Big Sky, is playing another Sheriff in Joe Pickett – this time Sheriff Barnum, who clashes with the warden’s involvement in his murder case and doesn’t take kindly to the implication that he isn’t doing his job.
The CBS venerable drama series NCIS is adding two new regular cast members for the upcoming 19th season, Gary Cole and Katrina Law. Cole will play a new character, FBI Special Agent Alden Park. Law plays Special Agent Jessica Knight, who was introduced in the last two episodes of Season 18 as a recurring guest star with an option to become a series regular if the show got renewed. Law’s promotion follows the recent exit of longtime series regular Emily Wickersham, and a reduced on-screen presence for Mark Harmon’s Special Agent Gibbs next season.
Brian Tyree Henry and Kate Mara are set to lead Class of ’09, a limited drama series that will air on FX/Hulu. The eight-part series, which follows a class of FBI agents set in a near future where the U.S. criminal justice system has been transformed by artificial intelligence, comes from Tom Rob Smith, Nina Jacobson, and Brad Simpson. Spanning three decades and told across three interweaving timelines, the series examines the nature of justice, humanity, and the choices we make that ultimately define our lives and our legacy.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
Laura McHigh returned to Writer Types to co-host with Eric Beetner as they talked with award-winning writer SA Cosby (Razorblade Tears); Maureen Johnson (The Box In The Woods); and a had a discussion about LGBTQI+ authors with Greg Herren and Dharma Kelleher.
Bestselling author James Patterson stopped by Suspense Radio to talk about his latest book with President Clinton, The President's Daughter.
Queer Writers of Crime welcomed Dean Klinkenberg, a former academic turned author of a mystery series featuring an openly gay travel writer named Frank Dodge.
Over at Alfred Hitchcock Mystery Magazine's podcast, Art Taylor read his Derringer-winning novella, The Boy Detective & The Summer of '74, from the January/February 2020 issue, which has been nominated for the Agatha, Anthony, and Macavity awards.
Meet the Thriller Author spoke with Robyn Gigl, an attorney, speaker, and activist who has been honored by the ACLU-NJ and NJ Pride. Her debut legal thriller is By Way of Sorrow.
It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club featured Eric Dezenhall's False Light.
Jane Thynne (CJ Carey) spoke with Crime Time FM's Paul Burke about her new thriller, Widowland, and the personal inspiration behind the novel; as well as Philip Kerr; feminism; and editing history.
The Red Hot Chili Writers spoke with Alex Michaelides, author of the global hit, The Silent Patient, about his new book, The Maidens; and also chatted with barrister-writer Imran Mahmood, whose new book, I Know What I Saw, delves into the realities of the court system including judges with a wicked sense of humor.