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
Emmy and Honorary Oscar winner, Tyler Perry (A Jazzman’s Blues), has set another new film, titled Mea Culpa, starring Kelly Rowland (Think Like A Man), Trevante Rhodes (Moonlight), Sean Sagar (The Gentlemen), Nick Sagar (The Princess Switch trilogy), and RonReaco Lee (Nappily Ever After). The film, which is written, directed, and produced by Perry for Netflix, follows a criminal defense attorney who, in the hopes of becoming partner, takes on the case of an artist who may or may not have murdered his girlfriend.
Prime Video has secured the return of Dave Bautista (Knock at the Cabin), Chloe Coleman (Avatar: The Way of Water), Kristen Schaal (What We Do in the Shadows), Ken Jeong (The Afterparty) and others for their My Spy sequel, My Spy: The Eternal City. The original My Spy told the story of JJ (Bautista), a hardened CIA operative who found himself at the mercy of precocious nine-year-old Sophie (Coleman), after being sent undercover to surveil her family. Schaal played JJ’s tech specialist colleague Bobbi, with Jeong as his boss, David. In the sequel from Amazon Studios, a now-teenage Sophie convinces JJ to chaperone her school choir trip to Italy where they both unwittingly end up pawns in an international terrorist plot targeting CIA Chief, David Kim, and his son, Collin — who also happens to be Sophie’s best friend.
TELEVISION/STREAMING
Author Harlan Coben is back at Netflix with his fifth novel adaptation, as the streamer takes on Fool Me Once for a limited thriller series starring Michelle Keegan, Richard Armitage, and Joanna Lumley. The story follows Maya Stern (Keegan), a woman who is trying to come to terms with the brutal murder of her husband Joe (Armitage). But when Maya installs a nanny-cam to keep an eye on her young daughter, she is shocked to see a man she recognizes in her house — her husband. Detective Sergeant Sami Kierce (Adeel Akhtar) is leading the homicide investigation into Joe’s death while grappling with secrets of his own. Meanwhile, Maya’s niece and nephew, Abby and Daniel, are trying to find the truth about their mother’s murder, several months earlier, and uncovering the possible connections between both cases. In keeping with previous Coben adaptations, Fool Me Once will relocate the story from the U.S. to the U.K.
The BBC has unveiled a two-part adaptation of Agatha Christie’s Murder Is Easy. The thriller, which will get two hour-long episodes, will film this summer and be adapted by screenwriter Sian Ejiwunmi-Le Berre and directed by Meenu Gaur (Zinda Bhaag, World on Fire). Casting details will be announced later. The story is set in 1954 on a train to London, where a man going by the name of Luke Fitzwilliam meets Miss Pinkerton, who tells him that a killer is on the loose in the sleepy English village of Wychwood under Ashe. The villagers believe the deaths are mere accidents, but Miss Pinkerton knows otherwise – and when she’s later found dead on her way to Scotland Yard, Luke feels he must find the killer before they can strike again.
Mandalay Television has optioned Mike Grist’s series of action thriller novels, including Saint Justice, for television. The six-book series follows ex-CIA operative Christopher Wren, as he chases down the worst cult leader in history who is trying to destroy American democracy by dividing and pitting the US population against each other. Only Wren can stop the anarchism when he discovers the leader of the cult is his father, whom he escaped from as a young teenager. Wren’s internal battlefield leads him to finding redemption and atoning for the dark events of his own past.
Sweden’s Jens Jonsson will direct The Doctrine, a political thriller series adapted from Magnus Montelius’s novel, Eight Months. The novel, published in 2019, presented a then-far-fetched idea that Sweden would join NATO; given world events, the premise is now eerily contemporary. Jonsson said the series was a spy thriller about "how Russia could infiltrate Swedish politics." The cast will feature Anna Sise, Josefine Neldén, and August Wittgenstein.
In a competitive situation, Hae Wons’s bestselling Korean novel, Sad Tropic, will be adapted as a TV series in the U.S. This comes on the heels of the novel being adapted as a Web Toon in Korea. The action-packed, female-centric novel follows Sunny Kwon, a North Korean defector and decorated assassin, who double crosses a crime syndicate to rescue a child from her abusive captors. Now the two of them are on the run from the world’s most dangerous organization.
CBS has renewed its flagship drama series NCIS, along with NCIS: Hawai’i and CSI: Vegas for the 2023-2024 season. They join previously announced renewals for drama series Fire Country, The Equalizer, FBI, FBI: International, and FBI: Most Wanted. The renewals also follow the new-series order for The Never Game, based on the novels of Jeffery Deaver and starring Justin Hartley as a lone-wolf survivalist, who roams the country as a "reward seeker."
The Flight Attendant star, Deniz Akdeniz, has been cast as a series regular opposite Kaitlin Olson and Daniel Sunjata in ABC's character-based procedural drama pilot based on TF1’s popular detective series HPI ("High Intellectual Potential"). The untitled HPI remake centers on Morgan (Olson), a single mom with three kids and an exceptional mind who helps solve an unsolvable crime when she rearranges some evidence during her shift as a cleaner for the police department. When they discover she has a knack for putting things in order because of her high intellectual potential she is brought on as a consultant to work with a by-the-book seasoned detective, Karadec (Sunjata), and together they form an unusual and unstoppable team
ITV has ordered a second season of Karen Pirie, based on Val McDermid’s books and starring Lauren Lyle as the young and fearless Scottish investigator with a quick mouth and tenacious desire for the truth. Series Two will be based on A Darker Domain, with Karen reopening the investigation into the unsolved kidnapping of a wealthy young heiress and her baby son back in 1985.
Nordic programmer Viaplay has launched a subscription streaming service in the U.S., delivering subscribers thousands of hours of programming including so-called "Nordic noir" series like Trom, a crime drama starring Ulrich Thomsen (The Blacklist, Banshee), and the Norwegian thriller, Furia. Subtitles will be provided for the series, films, and documentaries on the platform, and new subscribers will be eligible for a 7-day free trial. The offering, which is available across an array of digital platforms and connected-TV providers, will expand to Canada on March 7.
PODCASTS/VIDEO/RADIO/AUDIO
On Read or Dead, hosts Katie McLain Horner and Kendra Winchester featured crime books by Black authors.
Esme Addison was interviewed by Robert Justice on Crime Writers of Color about her Enchanted Bay Mysteries, a seaside cozy series full of humor and heart, mermaids and magic.
Chris Lloyd stopped by Crime Time FM to chat with Paul Burke about his new historical thriller, Paris Requiem; Eddie Giral; wartime Paris; living in Catalonia; and the little people of history.
Criminal Element featured a video talk by Mark Greaney, author of Burner (the Gray Man series), as he discussed research into money laundering, foreign intelligence operations, visiting sites on location across the globe, and more.
On Meet the Thriller Author, Freida McFadden, a practicing physician specializing in brain injury who has penned multiple bestselling psychological thrillers and medical humor novels, discusses her latest novel, The Housemaid's Secret.
Dr. DP Lyle has started a new series for his Criminal Mischief podcast titled Forensics For Crime Writers, discussing various aspects of forensic science and how it might be used in crime fiction. The first episode deals with the coroner.
On the latest episode of It Was a Dark and Stormy Book Club, author Ann Claire chatted about her book, Dead and Gondola, the first in her Christie Bookshop Mystery series.