Tradecraft For August 31, 2007
Alex Rider Creator Inks US TV Deal
The Hollywood Reporter reports that Anthony Horowitz, prolific novelist and television writer and creator of the bestselling "Alex Rider" series of teen spy adventures, has signed a deal with Sony to develop a one-hour drama for American TV with Sex and the City showrunner Darren Star. Even though Horowitz may be better known to spy fans for his young adult novels, he's spent years in the UK television industry creating such hits as Midsomer Mysteries and Foyle's War (both of which have aired on PBS' Mystery! here in the US) and contributing to the long-running Poirot series. The writer tells the trade, "Most of the best ideas on television are coming out of America, and if you're passionate about television, that's the place to be." His project with Star sounds like it has more in common with his UK TV mysteries than with last year's (unwarranted) flop Alex Rider: Stormbreaker, which Horowitz adapted from his own novel. The writer describes the new series as "an American-based police show with lighter-touch elements and an European angle." (Whatever that means!)
Horowitz's seventh Alex Rider novel, Snakehead, is due out this fall.
24 Cast Additions
Janeane Garofalo, Jeffrey Nordling and Star Trek: Enterprise's John Billingsley have all joined the cast of 24 for the upcoming seventh season, says The Hollywood Reporter. Garofalo will play "a government agent who is part of the team investigating the crisis befalling Jack Bauer and company in the upcoming season." That sentence alone sounds almost convoluted enough to have come from the 24 writers' room! The Reporter points out that Garofalo is a notorious leftie, and 24 showrunner Joel Surnow an equally notorious "right-wing nutjob" (as he describes himself), so the pair make strange bedfellows. Oddly enough, though, I suspect that people with different political leanings have managed to work together before, even in Hollywood...
Actually just watched the Alex Rider movie the other night. I've never read any of the books though.
ReplyDeleteWhat did you think of it? I enjoyed it on its own merits quite a bit, certainly found it more legit than things like Cody Banks (shudder!)... But I ultimately thought it fell short of what it COULD have been based on the books. I recommend reading the second one, Point Blanc. It's better than Stormbreaker, and the movie version of SB gave you all the character intros you really need to know to plunge into Book 2. It's an amazingly fast read, although no one who's read or seen OHMSS will find it difficult to predict the plot! I wish Stormbreaker hadn't flopped (or been dumped!) in the US, because I really would have liked to see a film of Point Blanc. Maybe it will still happen...
ReplyDeleteI actually enjoyed it a lot. I wasn't sure if I would be thrilled with a kid spy, but I like watching spy movies. I was pretty pleased with it. I thought the boy who played Alex did a good job. It had a good supporting cast, even though I had a hard time getting over Mickey Rourke's horrible appearance. I detested Cody Banks. I watched maybe the first 30 minutes of that one and stopped it. Never watched the sequel. I definitely would like to read the books. I actually didn't know the movie was based on a book until I rented the movie. I would like to read them. Thanks for the recommendation about the second book. Read and seen OHMSS, one of my Bond favorites. I didn't think Stormbreaker was given much of a chance. How did it do in the UK? Do you know? I wish they would do some sequels. Movies that have done much worse have had sequels greenlighted. I would like to see more of Alex's adventures.
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