Pierre Morel Wants to Be a 'Hunter-Killer'
Filed under: Action, Independent, Thrillers, Deals, Scripts, Newsstand, War
Liam Neeson's thriller Taken hasn't hit stateside yet -- but it looks like its director, Pierre Morel, already has another job. Relativity Media acquired the rights to Arne Schmidt's screenplay Hunter-Killer, based on Don Keith and Commander George Wallace's novel Firing Point. Hunter-Killer fills a giant gap in today's cinema -- there just aren't enough movies set on submarines. (Have you ever toured one? If you can stop yourself from imitating Sean Connery or Das Boot, they really are terrifying places to be.) The story follows an American submarine commander and a team of Navy SEALS who must avert all-out war, rescue the Russian President in the midst of a coup, and defeat a renegade Admiral. No word on casting yet, but it will be fun to see what up-and-coming action stars land the macho parts -- particularly since American cinema is reportedly quite short of them.
It sounds a bit like The Hunt for Red October, which isn't a bad thing -- and it's a pretty timely choice for Relativity in light of recent geopolitical events. After Eastern Promises, I thought we were going to see Russian mafia dramas replace the Italian and Irish ones ... but instead, the Russians are making a huge comeback as the villains of action cinema. Coincidence, or savvy optioning on the part of Hollywood? Who knows? It definitely feels like 1980 again ... and I'm okay with that. Are you?
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
10-01-2008 @ 8:19PM
paul said...
Might be wrong, probably am, but I'm thinking it's the novel Final Bearing.
Reply
10-01-2008 @ 8:36PM
Elisabeth said...
You might be right, Paul. I can't find any book by these authors that matches the spec script for this -- Variety was reporting it was Firing Point, but it very well could be wrong. The press release from Relativity implied the title was "Hunter-Killer" and nothing pops for that.