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
Jason Statham and Miramax are partnering for a third time on The Bee Keeper, a spec script by Kurt Wimmer for which the studio shelled out seven figures. A September 2022 production start is being eyed, with filming in London and Atlanta. The Bee Keeper is described as "a lightning-paced thriller deeply steeped in the mythology of Bee Keeping...that explores universal themes with an unconventional story that will have fans sitting on the edge of their seats." Miramax is currently searching for a director.
Tyson Ritter has joined the cast of Prisoner’s Daughter, from director Catherine Hardwicke (Twilight), joining previously announced actors Brian Cox and Kate Beckinsale. The film is written by Mark Bacci and tells the story of Max (Cox), a tough but proud ex-con, who’s struggling to find a way to reconnect with his only daughter Maxine (Beckinsale), as well as his grandson. But as he begins an attempt at reconciliation, his violent past catches up to him once again. Ritter will play Maxine’s ex-husband, Tyler, who fights with her to stay connected to their son Ezra.
Showtime announced that the Ray Donovan feature-length movie will debut in the first quarter of 2022, which would be exactly two years after the TV series’ surprise cancellation that led to an outcry from fans. Showrunner David Hollander admitted at the time that the show’s creative team had been blindsided by the decision, as the seventh season had not been planned as a final chapter. Showtime's President of Entertainment, Gary Levine, is promising viewers a satisfying ending with the movie, in which Liev Schreiber returns as uber fixer Donovan, Jon Voight as Mickey Donovan, and Kerris Dorsey as Ray’s daughter Bridget.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICE
The Wire writer/producer, George Pelecanos, who has had an informal home at HBO for nearly two decades, has made it official with a recently signed two-year overall deal. Under the pact, Pelecanos will develop and produce original content for the network and has set for his first project a drama series based on John D. MacDonald’s novel, The Last One Left. Pelecanos will serve as co-writer along with Megan Abbott (The Deuce; Dare Me) and serve as showrunner. The logline: In 1967 Miami, a pleasure cruiser carrying a wealthy deal-maker and his guests explodes en route to the Bahamas with only the captain found alive. The mysterious Gold Coast resident, Crissy Harkinson, may know far more about the explosion than she’s telling, and when Sam Boylston, the brother of one of the victims, arrives to find answers, he joins forces with Francisca Torcedo, who works for Crissy and has her own suspicions about her ambitious employer.
In a competitive situation, Paramount+ has won rights to develop Yellow Bird, a series based on Sierra Crane Murdoch’s Pulitzer Prize finalist, Yellow Bird: Oil, Murder and a Woman’s Search for Justice in Indian Country. The series will focus on Lissa Yellowbird, newly released from jail and returning to her reservation in North Dakota in the midst of one of the largest oil booms in modern history. Her attempts to reconcile with her estranged family are complicated when she becomes obsessed with a young oil worker’s disappearance. "An amateur sleuth from the wrong side of the law, Yellowbird ultimately exposes a sweeping criminal conspiracy of murder and corruption, healing her own family in the process of helping the oil worker’s mother find closure regarding her son’s fate." The real-life Yellowbird has gone on to investigate cases of missing and murdered Indigenous women nationwide, which will be the focus of subsequent seasons.
Amazon Studios has put into development Infinite Thread, which began as a spec script written by Julius and Alston Ramsay, who will also serve as co-showrunners alongside Byron Balasco. The logline: "After a pair of twins are abducted, a determined sheriff deputy embarks on a quest into the unknown that will alter the course of human history. Infinite Thread is described as blending true crime and science fiction in its depiction of one man’s epic investigation into a crime that breaks the boundaries of time and space."
CBS Studios is developing Broadmoor, a drama series intended for the UK/International premium and streaming market. Inspired by true events, Broadmoor is based on the famous British high-security psychiatric hospital, originally known as the Broadmoor Criminal Lunatic Asylum. It features overlapping stories about the staff, the visitors and, of course, the patients that included maniacs, stranglers, slashers, and serial killers. Set against the backdrop of a crumbling 1970s-80s Britain on the edge of violent social change, the series follows a young woman who goes to Broadmoor "believing that murderous behavior can be understood, treated, even tamed, only to find she has entered a warehouse for England’s fears, the locked attic where its demons reside in a Gothic hell."
FX has rounded out the ensemble cast to join Andrew Garfield and Daisy Edgar-Jones in the studio’s new limited series, Under the Banner of Heaven, tapping new additions Sam Worthington, Denise Gough, Wyatt Russell, Billy Howle, Gil Birmingham, Adelaide Clemens, Rory Culkin, Seth Numrich, Chloe Pirrie, Sandra Seacat, and Christopher Heyerdahl. Inspired by the New York Times bestseller from Jon Krakauer, the story follows a detective whose faith is tested as he investigates a brutal murder that seems to be connected to an esteemed Utah family’s spiral into Mormon/LDS fundamentalism and their distrust of the government.
Tony winner Norbert Leo Butz is set as a series regular opposite Elle Fanning, Colton Ryan, and Chloë Sevigny in the Hulu drama, The Girl From Plainville. Based on the Esquire article by Jesse Barron, the project stars Fanning as Michelle Carter and is inspired by the true story of her controversial "texting suicide" case.The limited series will explore Carter’s relationship with Conrad "Coco" Roy III (Ryan) and the events that led to his death and, later, her controversial conviction of involuntary manslaughter. Butz will play Conrad "Co" Roy II, Coco’s father. Toughened by life and work at the docks and on the boats in Mattapoisett, MA, Co is forced to face his own mistakes as a father and sets out to come to terms with the death of his son.
During the recent Big Sky panel at a Television Critics Association event, actor John Carroll Lynch announced he will be returning for Season 2 of the crime drama, although the details on his return are being kept under wraps. The character Lynch played in Season 1 was sex trafficking Montana state trooper, Rick Legarski, who was shot in the head in the Season 1 finale. Even if he’s dead though, showrunner and executive producer, Elwood Reid, noted during the panel that Legarski has a twin, as alluded to in the first season. Reid also confirmed that this season’s "new baddie, who is going to bring in more baddies," is Ren, the character played by new series regular Janina Gavankar. Another addition to the cast coming in to shake things up is Logan Marshall-Green’s Travis, a man from Jenny (Katheryn Winnick)’s past, who was friends with her and her late husband Cody (Ryan Phillippe).
Rob Yang has landed a recurring role on the six-part second season of the BBC spy drama series, The Capture, which is now underway in the UK. Starring Holliday Grainger as Detective Inspector Rachel Carey, the second season of the surveillance thriller will see Carey trying to navigate a Britain under siege from hacked news feeds, manipulated media, and interference in politics. Yang will play the head of an internationally renowned Chinese tech company based in the UK. Grainger is returning alongside Ron Perlman, Ben Miles, Lia Williams, Nigel Lindsay, Cavan Clerkin, and Ginny Holder.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
The Read or Dead podcast discussed translated works of crime and mystery written by women authors, in celebration of Women in Translation Month.
This week's guest on Queer Writers of Crime was Garrett Hutson, who writes upmarket mysteries and historical spy fiction.
Patricia Sargeant, author of Murder by Page One, was interviewed by Robert Justice for the Crime Writers of Color podcast.
Speaking of Mysteries co-founder, Les Klinger, talked about the astounding series of vintage mysteries that he edited, wrote introductions for, and annotated for The Library of Congress Crime Classics.
Meet the Thriller Author welcomed John Gaspard, author of the Eli Marks mystery series, as well as the Como Lake Players mystery series under the pen name Bobbie Raymond.
Margaret Murphy stopped by My Favorite Detective Stories to chat about the psychological thrillers she writes under her own name, and forensic thrillers penned as Ashley Dyer and AD Garrett.
Crime Time FM discussed the film version of The Dry; upcoming books by Victoria Selman and Barry Forshaw; Bloody Scotland; Sherlock on film; The Da Vinci Code, and much more.
The latest Cozy Ink podcast focused on Alexis Morgan’s Abby McCree Mystery Series.
It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club spoke with Sheryl Ickes about Death of a Dispatcher, the first installment in her Becky and Rufus Cross-Country Mystery Series.