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
20th Century Studios has picked up an untitled Hawaii-set crime thriller, from a script by journalist and author Nick Bilton inspired by actual events, and has attached Leonardo DiCaprio, Dwayne Johnson, and Emily Blunt to star, and Martin Scorsese to direct. The project is said to be in the mold of Scorsese’s Goodfellas and The Departed and centers on a mob boss vying for control of the Hawaiian islands in the 1960s and 1970s. The formidable and charismatic mobster rises to build the islands’ most powerful criminal empire, waging a brutal war against mainland corporations and rival syndicates while fighting to preserve his ancestral land. His ruthless quest for absolute power ignited the last great American mob saga, where the war for cultural survival takes place in the unlikeliest of places: paradise.
David Leitch's new high-profile action thriller, based on a script by Mark Bianculli, has signed Nicholas Hoult to star. Plot details are being kept under wraps, but the project is said to involve a bank heist and will likely follow in the same vein as Leitch's previous projects, Bullet Train, Deadpool 2, and most recently, The Fall Guy.
TELEVISION/STREAMING
In a competitive situation, Amazon MGM Studios has landed for development Murdle, a scripted adaptation of G. T. Karber’s multi-volume collection of murder mystery puzzles. Written by Jon Croker (Paddington) and based on a story by Karber, Murdle is "a quirky, voice-driven series in the vein of Knives Out and The Gentlemen" and centers on two rival members of a London-based detective club, who are forced to work together despite their very different approaches to solving murders.
Studio Lambert has optioned bestselling true crime author Hallie Rubenhold’s new book, Story of A Murder: The Wives, the Mistress and Dr Crippen. The book looks into the case of Belle Elmore, a music hall performer whose mutilated remains were uncovered in a North London cellar in 1910. A transatlantic manhunt ensued for her husband, Dr. Crippen, and his young lover and secretary, Ethel le Neve, posing as Crippen’s son with cropped hair. Although Dr. Crippen has always been at the center of the story, Rubenhold’s book brings the women to life and places them at the center and seeks to address the question: Was Ethel truly as innocent of the murder as she wanted the world to believe? Award-winning screenwriter Amanda Coe (Black Narcissus) is adapting the book as a drama series.
Hulu has given a series order to a drama written and executive produced by Liz Meriwether (New Girl). Emmy Rossum is executive producing and in negotiations to headline the untitled project loosely inspired by the 1987 movie, Black Widow. In the Hulu series, an FBI agent—the role Rossum is poised to play—uses the secrets from a female serial killer’s past to try to find her.
The BBC has announced a new crime family drama titled Mint, starring Emma Laird (Mayor of Kingstown, The Brutalist), Sam Riley (Firebrand), Laura Fraser (Breaking Bad), Lewis Gribben (Somewhere Boy), Lindsay Duncan (Sherwood) and Ben Coyle-Larner (also known as musician Loyle Carner). Charlotte Regan (Scrapper) created, wrote, and will direct the project, described as a darkly comic and unconventional drama about a crime family’s inner life. At the center is Shannon (Laird), the naïve and fiercely romantic daughter of the area’s dominant crime family. Shannon is desperately searching for love in the shadow of her gangster father, Dylan (Riley), devoted mum Cat (Fraser), older brother Luke (Gribben), and the indomitable family matriarch, grandma Ollie (Duncan). Having grown up protected within the surreal, yet violent confines of the "family business," things are shaken up when Arran—played by acting newcomer Coyle-Larner —arrives on the scene.
Emmy winners John Lithgow (Conclave) and Jimmy Smits (Sons of Anarchy) are set to reprise their roles of Arthur Miller aka the Trinity Killer, and Miguel Prado, the ADA-turned-lawbreaker hellbent on revenge, in the Showtime original series Dexter: Resurrection. New additions also include Uma Thurman as Charley, Peter Dinklage as Leon Prater, Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine as Blessing Kamara, Kadia Saraf as Detective Claudette Wallace, Dominic Fumusa as Detective Melvin Oliva, and Emilia Suárez as Elsa Rivera. Previously announced stars are Neil Patrick Harris, who will play Lowell, Krysten Ritter as Mia Lapierre, Eric Stonestreet as Al, David Dastmalchian as Gareth, and David Magidoff as Teddy Reed. Lithgow received an Emmy Award, Critics’ Choice Award, and a SAG Award as well as a Golden Globe nomination for his role, although, since his character was killed off, it is suspected his role will come via flashbacks.
PODCASTS/RADIO
Suspense Radio host Tracey Devlyn sits down with New York Times bestselling author Chris Bohjalian to chat about his new historical fiction novel, The Jackal's Mistress.
BBC Radio chatted with author Tricia Voute about what inspired her new book, The Accused: The Mark Roussel Mysteries, set in Guernsey.
Debbi Mack's guest on the latest Crime Cafe podcast was crime writer Brenda Chapman, discussing her journey from writing for her daughters to becoming a published author, her inspiration for various protagonists, and her writing process. She also shared insights into her latest series, the Hunter and Tate Mysteries, set in Ottawa
On the Spybrary podcast, former MI6 officer turned critically acclaimed novelist, Charles Beaumont, returned to the Spybrary podcast on the launch day of his second novel, A Spy at War, the highly anticipated sequel to his bestselling debut, A Spy Alone.
Murder Junction spoke with Stig Abell about his latest novel, The Burial Place, and the inspiration for another of his upcoming books, Josephine Tey's The Daughter of Time.
On the Pick Your Poison podcast, Dr. Jen Prosser investigated what poison makes bones crumble and glow-in-the-dark? And what living thing thrives inside Chernobyl?