Fox and 'The Deep Blue Good-By'
Filed under: Comedy, Deals, Mystery & Suspense, 20th Century Fox
If you happen to be a fan of mystery novels from the 60's and 70's, then the name John D. MacDonald probably rings a bell. If not, it looks like you are going to get the chance to get to know him, but on the big-screen instead. The Hollywood Reporter announced that Fox is planning on a feature film version of McDonald's The Deep Blue Good-By, and that Gary Fleder (the man behind Kiss the Girls and Runaway Jury) is in talks to direct. Good-By was the first novel in McDonald's Travis McGee series. McGee is a Korean War vet and amateur sleuth who works as a "salvage consultant," recovering property and money for his clients (for a tidy fee) while operating out of a houseboat in Florida -- sadly without an alligator named Elvis. MacDonald wrote over 20 novels starring Travis McGee, so the project could be a great opportunity for Fox to get a new franchise up and running.
Fleder's feature debut was Things to Do in Denver When You're Dead back in 1995. Since then, Fleder has mainly made thrillers, but, he recently got the chance to flex his biopic muscles with the Ernie Davis biography, The Express, starring Dennis Quaid and Charles S. Dutton. Fleder might have the most experience when it comes to thrillers, but MacDonald was known for having a dark sense of humor in his capers. So if Fleder does sign for the film, he might have to lighten up a little this time around.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
6-15-2008 @ 12:42PM
Jimmy said...
If they actually keep the movies set in the same time period as the novels they could be interesting. I've read a few of the McGee novels and MacDonald had a fine, detailed eye for the period in which the novels were set and unlike so many modern-day detective series Travis McGee actually aged as the novels progressed. Sadly, that's not how Hollywood works. McGee will proably be brought into the modern age, turned into a Desert Storm vet, and the fun of McDonald's novles ruined.
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6-15-2008 @ 1:56PM
Peter Martin said...
I agree with Jimmy. By happenstance, I've been re-reading the McGee novels, and they definitely reflect the era. What also helped the McGee series stand out was MacDonald's keen critical eye on society, his long ruminations on the failings of the culture at large, and why he was content to be a self-professed "beach bum" and stay out of the rat race.
That would be difficult for any director to integrate into a movie, much less Fleder, who is a competent craftsman but has not demonstrated the touch of poetry that McGee deserves. McGee doesn't need wisecracks, he needs the breathing room to comment on what's going on around him, and I don't anticipate we'll get more than a whiff of that in any Hollywood adaptation.
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