Showing posts with label Wallander. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wallander. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 18, 2016

Bullet Points: Pre-Anniversary Edition

• If you haven’t been keeping up with the multi-part celebration, in my Killer Covers blog, of The Rap Sheet’s rapidly approaching 10th anniversary, go check out the “cover countdown” here.

• Bristol, England’s annual CrimeFest is scheduled to begin on Thursday and run through Sunday. Our hyper-energetic UK correspondent, Ali Karim, has promised to provide plenty of photos from the event. And we’ll be sure to report the winners of five different awards being given out at the convention on Saturday night.

• Did you know that this coming Saturday, May 21, is National Readathon Day? Which is known around my humble abode as simply another good excuse to kick back with a book.

• Sunday evening will bring the 12th and concluding episode of Kenneth Branagh’s Wallander series—based on the late Henning Mankell’s novels about Swedish police detective Kurt Wallander—to PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! The ever-reliable Leslie Gilbert Elman has already recapped Season 4’s initial two Wallander installments (here and here) for Criminal Element. I assume she will deliver her final assessment of this British drama sometime early next week.

• This sounds, right off the bat, like a dubious venture—but who knows, it could turn out to be a box-office smash. From In Reference to Murder:
One of the world’s most famous crime novelists may be headed to the big screen once again: Agatha Christie, based on a script by Tom Shepherd, is in the works at Columbia Pictures. The action-adventure pic, which is being pitched as “Sherlock Holmes meets The Thomas Crown Affair,” finds a young, adventurous Agatha Christie joining Sir Arthur Conan Doyle on a mission to track down the whereabouts of a missing oil tycoon.”
The recent death of actor William Schallert (The Patty Duke Show, The Hardy Boys/Nancy Drew Mysteries, etc.) will be Topic A on this week’s installment of TV Confidential, the radio talk show hosted by Ed Robertson. This episode of TV Confidential will begin airing tonight, May 18, on a variety of stations, and then be archived here.

• Meanwhile, the blog Comfort TV presents “10 memorable moments from [Schallert’s] stellar career,” including his largely forgotten appearances on The Dick Van Dyke Show and The Partridge Family.

• Nancie Clare talks with Steve Hamilton, author of the new series opener The Second Life of Nick Mason, for the latest episode of her podcast Speaking of Mysteries. My own interview with Hamilton can be found in two parts, here and here.

The Wall Street Journal recaps the twisted story of how Hamilton’s Second Life came to be released by Putnam, following the author’s “ugly breakup” with his previous publisher.

• The Spy Command fires questions at author Larry Loftis, who it notes “has come out with a book, Into the Lion’s Mouth, about real-life World War II spy Dusko Popov, who was said to be an inspiration for Ian Fleming’s James Bond.” Read the exchange here.

• Several other interviews worth your attention: Veteran writer-producer David Levinson, whose television credits include episodes of The Bold Ones, Sons and Daughters, Sarge, Charlie’s Angels, and Hart to Hart, has a wonderful long conversation with Stephen Bowie of The Classic TV History Blog; Robert Goldsborough, author of the new Nero Wolfe novel, Stop the Presses!, chats with Jane K. Cleland of Criminal Element; Viet Thanh Nguyen, whose Vietnam-set spy novel, The Sympathizer, won both the Pulitzer Prize and a recent Edgar Award, engages in an often-moving discussion with Fresh Air’s Terry Gross; Gary Phillips revisits his fiction-writing history with Immix’s J. Sam Williams; and Glen Erik Hamilton answers questions from S.W. Lauden about his series protagonist, Van Shaw, and that character’s second appearance, in the recently released Hard Cold Winter.

Ah, the humorous frustrations of bookselling.

R.I.P., Darwyn Cooke, the illustrator and writer who—among so many other efforts—adapted into graphic-novel form several of Donald E. Westlake/Richard Stark’s tales about master thief Parker, including The Outfit. Cooke died from cancer at the tender age of 53. Good-bye as well to Portland, Oregon, resident Katherine Dunn, best known as the author of 1989’s “cult comic novel,” Geek Love. She passed away on May 11 at age 70. I would like to claim that I knew her; and yes, we did work together at one point for Willamette Week. However, Dunn—who wrote for that “alternative weekly” about boxing and Portland’s “underbelly”—was rarely spotted around the editorial offices. I couldn’t even remember what she looked like, until I saw this photograph, taken in the late 1960s, long before I knew her. Dunn’s demise is blamed on “complications from lung cancer.” UPDATE: Willamette Week has more to say about Dunn’s passing here.

From The Gumshoe Site:Jim Lavene collapsed and died on May 5 unexpectedly at a hospital in Concord, North Carolina. He and his late wife, Joyce (1954-2015), … wrote many cozy mysteries and created many series characters, including Sharyn Howard (a sheriff in North Carolina), Peggy Lee (not the singer but a garden shop owner), Glad Wycznewski (an ex-cop from Chicago), Jessie Morton (an assistant professor), Dae O’Donnell (a psychic mayor in a North Carolina town), Stella Griffin (a fire chief in a Tennessee town), Jessie Morton (an owner of a diner in Alabama), and others … One of their latest novels is Sweet Pepper Hero ..., a Stella Griffin mystery. He was 63.”

• Farewell, too, to advertising executive Bill Backer, who was responsible for the memorable 1971 “I’d Like to Buy the World a Coke” television ad. He died on May 13 at age 89.

• Is the 1955 film Kiss Me Deadly, based on Mickey Spillane’s 1952 novel of the same name and starring Ralph Meeker as private eye Mike Hammer, really “the most hard-boiled noir ever?” Yes, according to Den of Geek.

• Although she’s unlikely to outdo her in-the-altogether turn through 2013’s The Wolf of Wall Street, Australian actress Margot Robbie is apparently set to extend her appearance as “crazed supervillain and former psychiatrist” Harley Quinn beyond this summer’s DC Comics anti-hero team-up in the film Suicide Squad. Geek Tyrant reports that she’ll “produce and star in a spin-off movie that won’t be a Harley Quinn solo film, but instead will center on a handful of DC’s female heroes and villains. Word is that Robbie had such a strong reaction to the character that she dove into the comic books to learn everything she could and fell in love with DC’s female characters. She brought a female writer (identity currently unknown) on board to write a script for a spinoff, and when they took it to [Warner Bros.], the studio ‘snapped it up.’”

• British performer Toby Jones (Infamous, Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy, The Girl) is evidently slated to do a guest turn in Season 4 of the BBC-TV series Sherlock. He “will star in the second episode of the brand-new three-part season …,” according to Mystery Fanfare. Jones is quoted as saying, “I’m excited and intrigued by the character I shall be playing in Sherlock,” rumored to be a bad guy.

• Whoops! It seems that big plans to turn Cormac McCarthy’s 1985 Western epic, Blood Meridian, into a feature film have been spoiled by the fact that nobody in charge of the project bothered to acquire the necessary rights to that novel. “I was astonished,” remarks author-producer Lee Goldberg. “You’d expect something like this from amateurs … but from experienced professionals and a major international distributor? I can’t imagine how the movie got this far along without anybody in business affairs double-checking that someone had actually secured the rights to the book.”

• Having once supervised the production of a radio drama series (OK, so it was just a college project—are you happy now?), I occasionally like to listen to classic specimens of the breed. Helpfully, Adam Graham of The Great Detectives of Old Time Radio has put together this list of what he says are the top 10 episodes of the mid-20th-century series Adventures of Philip Marlowe, starring Gerald Mohr. I think I have only listened to a couple of these before. Lots more enjoyment still to come.

• Of the far-flung bookshops Britain’s Independent newspaper proclaims “every reader should visit in their lifetime,” I’ve been to precisely four, though I have traveled to the cities where others are located (foolish me for not stopping by!). But wait, am I miscounting, or does this story list 11 stores, not the headline-promised 12?

• I somehow missed noting two lists of awards finalists that Janet Rudolph of Mystery Fanfare caught. It seems there are three contenders for the 2016 Harper Lee Prize for Legal fiction (including Attica Locke’s Pleasantville). And there are more than two dozen crime and thriller works vying for this year’s National Indie Excellence Awards (commendations that require entrants to pay a fee).

New York Times Book Review editor Charles McGrath presents a delightful essay looking back at The Thin Man, the 1934 picture based on Dashiell Hammett’s last novel.

• And if I didn’t already highlight this fine piece about the 75th anniversary of John Huston’s 1941 Hammett adaptation, The Maltese Falcon … well, I should have done.

Ive mentioned before on this page that in 1976, I won free tickets to the Portland, Oregon, opening of Nicolas Meyer’s The Seven-Per-Cent Solution, a movie adapted from his 1974 Sherlock Holmes novel of the same name. I haven’t sat through that picture again in the last 20 years, but Steve Vineberg’s fresh assessment of it, in Critics at Large, has me in the mood for another screening.

• A new discovery: The blog Reading Ellery Queen, in which museum curator Jon Mathewson is busily assessing every Queen yarn, chronologically. He’s come as far as the 1967 novel Face to Face. I’ve added Mathewson’s site to The Rap Sheet’s General Crime Fiction links list, for future reference.

• Speaking of Queen … With his summer vacation approaching, teacher Brad Friedman writes in Ah Sweet Mystery Blog about two novels—1933’s The Siamese Twin Mystery and 1949’s Cat of Many Tails—that find mystery writer and amateur sleuth Ellery Queen seeking relaxation, but finding murder, instead.

• Still more thoughts on summer travel: Cross-Examining Crime has gathered together some quite entertaining “Golden Age [of Mystery] Advice on Staying at Country Houses.” Rule No. 8: “Check the owner of the county house is not a collector of weaponry.”

• I wasn’t a fan of the NBC-TV series Movin’ On during its originally broadcast period of 1972-1976, but thanks to YouTube, in recent years I have caught up with some episodes of that program about troubleshooting truckers played by Claude and Frank Converse, and have decided it had more merit than I understood when I was very young. Television Obscurities recounts the story of Movin’ On’s recent revival through the TV streaming service Hulu, and even offers up that show’s first weekly episode, “The Time of His Life.”

• Bookslut founder Jessa Crispin laments the demise of her once-thriving book review/author interview site. The final issue of Bookslut is now available online.

Better-educated Americans = more liberal Americans.

• This comes as a surprise: SF Signal, the very popular, almost 13-year-old “speculative fiction”-oriented Web site edited by one of my fellow Kirkus Reviews bloggers, John DeNardo, has announced that it’s shutting down.

• Finally, as we prepare to commemorate The Rap Sheet’s initial decade, let us also raise a glass to the recent 10th anniversary of Gravetapping, Ben Boulden’s excellent crime-fiction blog.

Sunday, September 23, 2012

Cold, Hard Truth

Tonight will bring the third and last episode in the current run of Wallander episodes, running under the umbrella of PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! series. This final installment, “Before the Frost,” will begin at 9 p.m. ET/PT. It’s based on a novel of the same name, written by Henning Mankell and published in English in 2005.

Sunday, September 16, 2012

Of Comebacks, Classics, and Commandments

• Tonight will bring Episode 2 of the latest Wallander series, “The Dogs of Riga,” starring Kenneth Branaugh. That 90-minute broadcast begins at 9 p.m. ET/PT as part of PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery!

• Speaking of Masterpiece Mystery!: Three new installments of the very popular World War II-era crime drama Foyle’s War, starring Michael Kitchen and Honeysuckle Weeks, are currently being filmed for Britain’s ITV and are expected to show in the States sometime next summer
under the Mystery! umbrella. Omnimystery News catches us up a bit on what to expect from those fresh episodes.

• It seems rather early to be announcing this, but registration is now open for ThrillerFest VIII, scheduled to take place from July 10 to 13, 2013, in New York City. According to a press release, “This year, spotlight guests will include 2013 ThrillerMaster Anne Rice, 2011 ThrillerMaster R.L. Stine, T. Jefferson Parker, and Michael Connelly.”

• Although it has zero to do with crime fiction, it’s worth noting that tomorrow marks the 40th anniversary of the debut of M*A*S*H.

• Better late than never: Yesterday was the 79th birthday of Henry Darrow, described by the Los Angeles Times as “the first Puerto Rican star of an hour-long TV series, playing the charismatic and devilish Manolito Montoya on the 1967-71 NBC western The High Chaparral.” Many of us, though, will recall Darrow best for his role as San Diego Police Lieutenant Manuel “Manny” Quinlan on Harry O.

• Hard Case Crime editor Charles Ardai picks Hollywood’s top seven femmes fatales for The Huffington Post. In the course of it, he manages to promote only two of his popular line’s titles.

• As Shotsmag Confidential notes, British publisher Orion has launched The Murder Room, “a dedicated Web site which makes out-of-print and hard-to-find classic crime novels available as e-books.” A list of available titles can be found here.

• There certainly are plenty of supposed “commandments” in regards to the writing of crime, mystery, and detective fiction. Here are several such lists, none of which--in my humble opinion, anyway--need to be followed slavishly.

• In advance of Bouchercon, taking place this year in Cleveland, Ohio, from October 4 to 7, the blog Murder, Mystery & Mayhem recaps the lists of contenders for a wide variety of commendations to be given out during that convention.

• As part of its “Classics in September” series, the blog Crime Fiction Lover features an interview with editor, publisher, and bookstore proprietor Otto Penzler. His interrogator doesn’t ask enough questions, and Penzler is too brief in his responses, but the results are still worth reading here.

• Another installment of “Classics in September” is this new tribute to Arthur Conan Doyle’s A Study in Scarlet.

• Blogger Rhian Davies reports that Charles Cummings has won the inaugural Scottish Crime Book of the Year award.

• It’s been a long while since I watched the pilot for the 1984-1986 private-eye TV series Riptide, starring Perry King, Joe Penny, and Anne Francis. But it has suddenly appeared on YouTube in its entirety, along with the introductory film for another Stephen J. Cannell series, Hardcastle & McCormick, and the pilot for the Cybill Shepherd/Bruce Willis series, Moonlighting. Sheesh! If you’re not careful, you could spend all day just watching old TV shows on the Web.

• Or maybe you’d prefer lower-tech entertainment.

• As a veteran newspaper guy, I’m glad to see that U.S. publishers remain optimistic about the future of their printed news medium. With the intent of helping out, I’ve recently returned to my tradition of spending a couple of hours just reading The New York Times on Sunday mornings. It’s much more peaceful than finding news online.

• And not long after I posted a list on this page of book-oriented blogs that deserve greater attention, the author of one such product--Jedidiah Ayres from Barnes & Noble’s Ransom Notes--wrote to tell me that “I got my pink slip this afternoon--no more Ransom Notes for me.” Ayres adds: “I’m not sore. Of course I’d rather continue with that gig, but I think they made a business decision and I couldn’t speak to the advisedness of that.” Well, at least Ayres still has his personal blog, Hard-boiled Wonderland.

Sunday, September 09, 2012

Bullet Points: Sunny Sunday Edition

• Series 3 of the British crime drama Wallander, starring Kenneth Branaugh, will debut this evening as part of PBS-TV’s Masterpiece Mystery! at 9 p.m. ET/PT. There are three, 90-minute episodes scheduled to run over succeeding Sundays. Tonight’s installment, “An Event in Autumn,” finds habitually forlorn Swedish police inspector Kurt Wallander hoping to make a fresh start in a home outside Ystad, accompanied by his new girlfriend, only to become involved in a pair of cases concerning slain women--one of whose skeleton turns up in his own backyard. This episode is
based on a short story, Händelse om hösten (The Grave), that Wallander creator Henning Mankell published in The Netherlands in 2004. The trailer for “An Event in Autumn” is embedded on the left. Next Sunday will bring viewers “The Dogs of Riga,” set mostly in Latvia and adapted from Mankell’s novel of that same name, while the show of September 23 is titled “Before the Frost,” also based on a Mankell novel--and certainly my favorite installment of Series 3. “Before the Frost” has Wallander already probing a particularly gruesome murder, when his estranged daughter Linda’s childhood friend suddenly appears at his home in the night, obviously troubled, and then vanishes soon afterward. Much of the plot revolves around religious cults and a strangely missing father, and presents Wallander a chance to find common cause with his only child.

• Meanwhile, Dorothy Hayes defends The Troubled Man, Mankell’s last Kurt Wallander novel, from readers who believe the character should have enjoyed a much longer literary career.

• Another defensive tactic: Ace Atkins, whose remarkably well-received 2012 novel, Robert B. Parker’s Lullaby, continues Parker’s series about Boston private eye Spenser, voices his support for Irish author John Banville’s assignment to write a new book starring Raymond Chandler’s classic Los Angeles P.I., Philip Marlowe.

• Issue No. 11 of Crimefactory has just been released in a Kindle edition as well as a PDF version. The magazine features new stories by Jonathan Woods, Matthew C. Funk, Robin Jarossi, John Kenyon and others, packed in beside an interview with Max Allan Collins and a discussion of boxing pulp novels. You can learn more here.

• Sony Pictures has optioned Olen Steinhauer’s three Milo Weaver novels--The Tourist, The Nearest Exit, and An American Spy--for big-screen adaptation. For anyone who hasn’t read these books, Omnimystery News explains that “Milo Weaver is a former ‘tourist,’ an undercover agent for the CIA on assignment to anywhere and everywhere around the globe. But do CIA agents ever retire ... at least in spy thrillers? Of course not.” Matt Corman and Chris Ord (Covert Affairs) will pen the script for the film version of The Tourist.

• A new issue of The Big Click is now available.

• I can’t say that the trailer for the forthcoming (in late December) movie Jack Reacher, based on Lee Child’s best-selling series of thrillers, makes me want to plunk down my hard-earned dough to see it in a theater. As one commenter wrote, “[Tom] Cruise couldn’t be any farther from the character Child wrote.”

• Are you a hopeful but unpublished writer? If so, then listen up: The William F. Deeck-Malice Domestic Grants Program is now calling for submissions to its 2012 grant program. These grants are “designed to foster quality Malice Domestic literature and to help the next generation of Malice Domestic authors get their first works published.” More information is available here.

• There’s a pretty good interview with UK author Russel D. McLean--whose third J. McNee novel, Father Confessor, is due out in the States in October--in Crime Fiction Lover.

• Are the best mysteries really written in English? Yes, contends editor, critic, and New York bookstore proprietor Otto Penzler. He presents his argument in Publishers Weekly.

• The Webzine Beat to a Pulp is open for short-story submissions between now and October 15. Tales must be new and not exceed 4,000 words in length. “Excerpts from upcoming novels” also accepted.

• Among the numerous TV pilots that never made it to series development was 1959’s The Fat Man, which Vintage45’s Blog recalls as an “uninteresting attempt to make a series out of the successful radio show and 1951 movie. Robert Middleton is Lucius Crane, a P.I. who is an intellectual and epicurean. While TV detectives of the day were quick with fist and gun, Crane is fast with brain and fork.” At least for now, you can watch all of that hour-long, ABC-TV pilot film, subtitled “The Thirty-Two Friends of Gina Lardelli,” on YouTube. As the person responsible for posting it asserts, “The show was apparently an attempt to merge Dashiell Hammett’s The Fat Man radio show (which Hammett apparently had very little to do with, anyway) with more than a few elements of Rex Stout’s Nero Wolfe and Archie Goodwin, and seemed to foreshadow Cannon.” If The Fat Man was indeed based on Hammett’s concept, then its producers took more than a few liberties. For instance, Hammett’s protagonist was named Brad Runyon, not Lucius Crane, and was voiced on the wireless by J. Scott Smart. Furthermore, he had no Archie-esque assistant named Bill Gregory, portrayed in this pilot by Tony Travis. (You can listen to episodes of Smart’s The Fat Man here. According to The Thrilling Detective Web Site, its writers included Robert Sloane, Dan Shuffman, and Frank Kane.) As a historical artifact, ABC’s Fat Man pilot--which also starred Rita Moreno--is worth watching. But it’s easy to understand why it failed to find a spot on the small-screen schedule.

Sunday, October 03, 2010

Last Hope of the Hopeless

Tonight’s U.S. television schedule includes the start of a second series of Wallander, the British crime drama that stars Kenneth Branaugh and is based on Henning Mankell’s novels about a depressed but still determined Swedish detective named Kurt Wallander. Three new 90-minute episodes have been queued up to run under the Masterpiece Mystery! umbrella on PBS-TV this month.

The first of those, tonight’s “Faceless Killers,” finds Inspector Wallander called out to a rural farmhouse, where an elderly couple have been assaulted and one of them has already died. The wife is busy taking her final, halting breaths when Wallander asks her, “Who did this?” He thinks she answered “farmer,” but it might have been “foreigner,” instead. When the latter suggestion is leaked to the media (against the inspector’s orders), it sets off a torrent of xenophobic hatred and incites violence against migrant workers around the town of Ystad. Wallander tries to stay above such shallow intolerance, but he can’t escape his own discomfort with “foreigners” as he endeavors to relate to his daughter Linda’s new boyfriend, an otherwise perfectly pleasant-seeming young chap of Syrian heritage. Rumors of the late farmer’s hidden riches, Wallander’s irritation with an unknown press informant within his department, and the inspector’s own doubts about his motives in this case complicate his investigation and push him even closer than normal to his psychological edge.

The consequences of all those events will be writ large on Wallander as he launches into next Sunday’s episode, “The Man Who Smiled,” which involves an apparent suicide, the missing financial records of a philanthropist interested in African “good works,” and black-market body parts. Finally, in “The Fifth Woman” (October 17), the agitated and lonely inspector is called out to the isolated residence of a retired automobile dealer and birdwatcher, who has been brutally impaled upon the ends of sharpened bamboo poles stuck into a ditch. Soon afterward, a florist is strangled and left tied to a tree. As the bodies accumulate, Wallander looks for a pattern, and finally thinks he has found one in a women’s support group. Meanwhile, he must deal with his father’s rapidly declining health and his ex-wife’s sudden reappearance in his life.

Although Branaugh’s Wallander can be a bit too intense and self-destructive at times, and it’s hard to imagine how he manages to face each bleak new day, there’s great power in his portrayal of Mankell’s man. For folks who’ve read the Wallander novels, these adaptations can seem a bit disjointed or thin (for instance, the third episode doesn’t adequately explain the meaning of the title “the fifth woman”). But they do capture the storytelling pace and psychological anxieties of the books. I’ve even come to accept the fact that everyone in this TV series speaks with a British accent, rather than a Swedish one. It may not be true to reality, but portraying mere reality was never Mankell’s intention.

Check your local TV listings to see what time and on what channel Wallander begins in your area.

READ MORE:Kenneth Branagh Brings Swedish Detective Kurt Wallander Back to American TV,” by John Timpane (Philadelphia Daily News).