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
Sony Pictures has landed rights to the upcoming Run, Rose, Run in a highly competitive situation. Run, Rose, Run is an adaptation of the novel by James Patterson and Dolly Parton also stars Parton in a leading role. The story is about a young woman who heads to Nashville to pursue her music-making dreams and is taken under the wing of a female musical icon. The sources of their heart-wrenching songs are secrets both have tried to hide.
Two-time Primetime Emmy nominee, David Oyelowo, will star opposite Kaley Cuoco in the Studiocanal and Picture Company thriller, Role Play. Amazon Prime Video is in final talks to take the US and several major offshore territories. Role Play centers around a married couple whose life turns upside down when secrets come out about each other’s pasts. Oyelowo will play Cuoco’s husband in the film, which is directed by Thomas Vincent from a screenplay by Seth Owen.
Captain America, The Purge, and Copshop lead, Frank Grillo, is set to star in the action movie, MR-9, which is set to film in the U.S. and Bangladesh. Writer-director Asif Akbar’s spy action-thriller is based on the popular Masud Rana novels written by late novelist, Qazi Anwar Hussain. Plot details are being kept under wraps, but Deadline reported that Grillo will play the nemesis of secret agent Rana, code named MR-9, of the Bangladesh Counter Intelligence Agency. The film is adapted from the Hussain's original first novel, Masud Rana: Dhonghsho Pahar (Demolition Hill). Hussain published 550 novels in the series, which is influenced by the James Bond franchise.
Sam Worthington, Burn Gorman, Jean Reno, and Jacob Batalon are set to join Kevin Hart in Lift for Netflix. They join the previously announced cast members, Gugu Mbatha-Raw, Vincent D’Onofrio, Billy Magnussen, Úrsula Corberó, Yun Jee Kim, Viveik Kalra, and Paul Anderson. F. Gary Gray will direct, with Dan Kunka and Jeremy Doner penning the script. Hart will play a master thief who is wooed by his ex-girlfriend and the FBI to pull off an impossible heist with his international crew on a 777 flying from London to Zurich.
TELEVISION/STREAMING SERVICES
Lesley Manville is set to appear in Alfonso Cuarón’s upcoming Apple series, Disclaimer, joining previously announced series leads Cate Blanchett and Kevin Kline, as well as other cast members Sacha Baron Cohen, Kodi Smit-McPhee, Hoyeon, and Louis Partridge. Based on the psychological thriller of the same name by Renée Knight, Blanchett will star as Catherine Ravenscroft, a successful and respected television documentary journalist whose work has been built on revealing the concealed transgressions of long-respected institutions. When an intriguing novel written by a widower (Kline) appears on her bedside table, she is horrified to realize she is a key character in a story she'd hoped was long buried in the past. Manville will play Nancy, a woman devastated by her young son’s untimely death.
Juno Temple (Ted Lasso), Jon Hamm (Mad Men), and Jennifer Jason Leigh (Atypical) are set as leads in the upcoming fifth installment of Fargo, FX’s acclaimed limited series created and executive produced by Noah Hawley. As usual, Hawley is not revealing much about the plot of the new season, which is the series’ most contemporary to date. Set in 2019, it answers two questions: When is a kidnapping not a kidnapping, and what if your wife isn’t yours? Temple, Hamm and Leigh will play the central characters of Dot, Roy, and Lorraine, respectively. Previous seasons of Fargo have been headlined by Billy Bob Thornton, Kirsten Dunst, Ewan McGregor and Chris Rock, among others.
Lifetime has given a green light to Girl In Room 13, a movie inspired by actual events that will star Emmy winner Anne Heche, Larissa Dias, and Max Montesi. The film, directed by Elisabeth Rohm, explores the dark underworld of the $150-billion-dollar human trafficking industry. The project is part of the Broader Focus initiative and Stop Violence Against Women campaign, and is set to premiere this fall.
HBO Max has ordered a second season of Tokyo Vice. It stars Ken Watanabe and Ansel Elgort and is loosely inspired by American journalist Jake Adelstein’s nonfiction firsthand account of the Tokyo Metropolitan Police beat. The series captures Adelstein’s (Elgort) daily descent into the neon-soaked underbelly of Tokyo in the late ’90s, where nothing and no one is truly what or who they seem. Rinko Kikuchi, Rachel Keller, Ella Rumpf, Hideaki Ito, Show Kasamatsu, and Tomohisa Yamashita also star in the series filmed in Tokyo.
Sam Waterston will continue as DA Jack McCoy on Law & Order's upcoming 22nd season on NBC. In doing so, Waterston is extending his Law & Order run to 18 seasons to become the longest-tenured cast member on the mothership series. Waterston and Anthony Anderson both initially signed one-year deals, but as previously announced, Anderson is not coming back for Season 22. The new installment of the series continues the classic bifurcated format and once again examines "The police who investigate crime and the district attorneys who prosecute the offenders." Camryn Manheim, Hugh Dancy, and Odelya Halevi also star.
United States Of Al's Parker Young has been tapped as a lead opposite Michaela McManus in Criminal Nature, ABC’s drama pilot from Rashad Raisani, 20th Television, and A+E Studios. Written by Raisani, Criminal Nature (fka untitled National Parks project) is described as a "propulsive, soapy procedural set in the stunning world of America’s great outdoors." The story revolves around the agents who work for the ISB — an elite law enforcement unit responsible for solving all serious crimes that occur in America's 81,000 square miles of protected land. Young will play Clay, Audrey’s (McManus) ex-boyfriend. As much of a cowboy as he is a cop, Clay been temporarily reassigned to Audrey’s team for the duration of their current investigation into the "Wild Flower Killer."
Prime Video has unveiled the full trailer for its upcoming eight-part series, The Terminal List, the highly-anticipated title starring Chris Pratt set to premiere Friday, July 1 on the streamer. Based on Jack Carr’s best-selling novel by the same name, The Terminal List follows James Reece (Pratt) after his entire platoon of Navy SEALs is ambushed during a high-stakes covert mission. As Reece returns home to his family with conflicting memories of the event, he begins to question his culpability. However, when new evidence begins to surface, Reece discovers dark forces are working against him, endangering his life and the lives of those that he loves the most.
Apple+ TV revealed the first trailer for Black Bird, a six-part series created by celebrated crime novelist, Dennis Lehane. When high school football hero, decorated policeman’s son, and convicted drug dealer Jimmy Keene (Taron Egerton) is sentenced to 10 years in a minimum security prison, he is given the choice of a lifetime – enter a maximum-security prison for the criminally insane and befriend suspected serial killer Larry Hall (Paul Walter Hauser), or stay where he is and serve his full sentence with no possibility of parole. In addition to Egerton and Hauser, the series also stars Sepideh Moafi, Greg Kinnear, and the late Ray Liotta, in one of his final roles.
Gabriela Quezada has been promoted to series regular ahead of the premiere of the Walker prequel, Walker Independence. Starring Matt Barr and Katherine McNamara, Walker Independence is set in the late 1800s and follows an affluent Bostonian named Abby Walker (McNamara), whose husband is murdered in front of her while on their trek out West. Consumed by a need for vengeance, Abby crosses paths with Hoyt Rawlins (Barr), described as a "lovable rogue in search of a purpose." The pair soon find themselves in Independence, Texas, where they encounter a diverse and eclectic cohort of citizens hiding from their demons and chasing their dreams, all while becoming agents of change themselves in the small town.
Sofia Milos (CSI: Miami) is joining the mafia series, Astoria, from actor/writer, Theo Nicholas Pagones (Ten Days in the Valley). Astoria centers on Aristotle Antonopoulos (Pagones), the son of a Greek mob boss who is fighting for control of the drug and shipping cartel. Aristotle rises to the head of the family amidst a power onslaught from his drug-crazed, alienated sister, Chrysanthi (Milos), and the ruthless and deadly Albanian Mafia. The series is set in Queens, New York, and Athens, Greece.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
In honor of Pride month, the Mysteryrat's Maze Podcast is featuring an LGBTQ+ author and main character with an excerpt from "The Player" by Joe Cosentino, read by actor Duncan Hodge.
It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club chatted with Maureen Jennings, who worked as a psychotherapist before turning her hand to writing. Her first series was set in Victorian-era Toronto and has been adapted for television, first as three movies of the week, and now The Murdoch Mysteries series
Speaking of Mysteries welcomed Scott Blackburn to talk about his debut crime fiction novel, It Dies With You, in which Hudson Miller reluctantly returns to his hometown of Flint Creek, North Carolina, after his father is shot and killed.
Vaseem Khan, author of the Baby Ganesh Agency Investigation series and Malabar House series, is interviewed by Robert Justice on the Crime Writers of Color podcast.
On Queer Writers of Crime, Philip's June book recommendation is a police procedural by Catherine Maiorisi, a title that passes the "Shreve Series Test" (stands on its own).
Wrong Place, Write Crime featured Jamie Mason discussing her suspense novels, secret talents, and philosophical approach to storytelling.
My Favorite Detective Stories spoke with Shannon Baker, the award-winning author of The Desert Behind Me and the Kate Fox series, along with the Nora Abbott mysteries and the Michaela Sanchez Southwest Crime Thrillers. She is the proud recipient of the Rocky Mountain Fiction Writers 2014 and 2017-18 Writer of the Year Award.
On Crime Time FM, Paul Burke reviewed May's new crime fiction releases.