Posts Tagged ‘David Peace’
Warner Bros. takes on war and Peace’s ‘Occupied City’
Like 4 Retweet 10Warner Bros. has picked up the film rights to author David Peace’s Japanese crime thriller, “Occupied City.”
Polly Johnsen is producing the project through her Polymorphic Pictures, which has a first-look deal with the studio.
Named one of the best young British novelists by Granta Magazine in 2003, Peace has been on a bit of a Hollywood tear lately. His gritty “Red Riding Quartet” of novels was spun into a trio of TV films last year by screenwriter Tony Grisoni, Revolution Films and Channel 4 Television. IFC Films distributed those films in the U.S. earlier this year.
Steve Zaillian is currently writing a new adaptation of the “Red RIding” novels for producer Ridley Scott and Columbia Pictures.
“Frost/Nixon” scribe Peter Morgan adapted Peace’s 2006 soccer-based novel “The Damned Utd” into a film that Sony Pictures Classics released last fall, “The Damned United.”
His most recent novel -- equally derived from actual historial material -- “Occupied City” depicts the shifting perspectives of people involved in the post-war case of Hirasawa Sadamichi, who was accused of poisoning and killing a dozen employees in a Tokyo bank, then robbing it, in 1948. It was published last year by Knopf.
King of literary-based films Scott Rudin ("Revolutionary Road," "The Hours") would produce, and Steve Zaillian, who's not been too shabby in the adaptation department either (“Schindler's List," "Hannibal," "A Civil Action”), is mulling the assignment.
Larsson's Millennium Series has already been spun into a trilogy of films, with different directors, in Sweden that have done incredibly well. And the appeal of the gritty, corruption-laden books have been on the lips of many a thriller-lit fan in the U.S. this year, ever since Random House published them Stateside.
That Larsson's stories were informed by his years as an investigative journalist and activist -- sadly, ended upon his death in 2004 -- has invested the pulpy material with an extra frisson. That, and the fact that these manuscripts were only discovered after his fatal heart attack.
The entire package has an appeal similar to that of the "Red Riding" trilogy, which was spun from a series of gritty novels by David Peace into a trilogy of films in the U.K. scripted by Tony Grisoni ("Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas"). I saw the first one up in Telluride at the annual festival in September, and it's fantastically cynical and labyrinthine in a way that fans of the perfect "Chinatown" would appreciate.
The Peace books are being re-adapted for American audiences, too. By the team of -- wait for it...
Sony and Zaillian (plus producer Ridley Scott).












