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The Law at Randado
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Last Stand at Saber River
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Forty Lashes Less One
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Fifty-Two Pickup
Swag
Unknown Man No. 89
The Hunted
The Switch
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City Primeval
Gold Coast
Split Images
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Stick
Labrava
Glitz
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Touch
Freaky Deaky
Killshot
Get Shorty
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Rum Punch
Pronto
Riding the Rap
Out of Sight
Cuba Libre
Be Cool
Pagan Babies
Tishomingo Blues
Mr. Paradise
A Coyote’s in the House
The Hot Kid
Comfort to the Enemy
Up in Honey’s Room
Road Dogs
Djibouti
Raylan

Stories

The Complete Western Stories of Elmore Leonard
The Tonto Woman and Other Western Stories
When the Women Come Out to Dance
Trail of the Apache
Apache Medicine
You Never See Apaches…
Red Hell Hits Canyon Diablo
The Colonel’s Lady
Law of the Hunted One
Cavalry Boots
Under the Friar’s Ledge
The Rustlers
Three Ten to Yuma
The Big Hunt
Long Night
The Boy Who Smiled
The Hard Way
The Last Shot
Blood Money
Trouble at Rindo’s Station
Saint with a Six-Gun
The Captives
No Man’s Guns
The Rancher’s Lady
Jugged
Moment of Vengeance
Man with the Iron Arm
The Longest Day of his Life
The Nagual
The Kid
The Treasure of Mungo’s Landing
The Bull Ring at Blisston
Only Good Ones
The Tonto Woman
Hurrah for Captain Early
Karen Makes Out
The Odyssey
Sparks
Hanging Out at the Buena Vista
Fire in the Hole
Chickasaw Charlie Hoke
When the Women Come Out to Dance
Tenkiller
Showdown at Checotah
Louly and Pretty Boy
Chick Killer (2011)
Ice Man

Film and TV

Moment of Vengeance
3:10 to Yuma
The Tall T
Hombre
The Big Bounce (I)
The Moonshine War
Valdez is Coming
Joe Kidd
Mr. Majestyk
High Noon, Part II
Stick
52 Pickup
Desperado
The Rosary Murders
Glitz (TV)
Cat Chaser
Border Shootout
Split Images
Get Shorty
Last Stand at Saber River
Pronto
Touch
Elmore Leonard’s Gold Coast (TV)
Jackie Brown
Maximum Bob
Out of Sight
Karen Sisco
The Big Bounce (II)
Be Cool (2005)
The Ambassador
3:10 to Yuma (2007)
Killshot (2009)
Freaky Deaky
The Tonto Woman
Sparks
Justified
Life of Crime

Friday, December 19, 2008

Fire in the Hole - Movies or Series?

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I read yesterday’s Hollywood Reporter story about an Untitled Elmore Leonard project and assumed it was a TV series based on Raylan Givens and the novella, Fire in the Hole.  But mysterlynch on Crimespree Cinema has doubts;

Reading the article, it sounds like each will a movie, but that is not explicitly stated. A comment on Elmore Leonard’s site suggests that the Givens project might be a series. With Dinner being credited for each, I can’t imagine him tackling two series at once. They may be making a two-hour telefilm, with plans for a series if either takes off. I will try to get some clarification on this.

Since it’s more than likely a cable project, Fire in the Hole, may be a two hour launch for a series; so it would be movie length.  We’ll see.  A bit of trivia about Fire in the Hole.  It was originally published as an e-book original by Contentville Press in 2000.  Here’s a review from back then:


REVIEW BY KELLY KOEPKE
Elmore Leonard has admitted in interviews that he is an old-fashioned kind of writer, the sort that doesn’t use a computer and isn’t connected to the Internet. For 50 years he’s been writing with a pen and hasn’t found a reason to change—until now. His latest effort, an e-novella entitled Fire in the Hole, is classic Leonard, even if the medium is not.

U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens journeys back to his roots in an Eastern Kentucky coal-mining town to pursue Boyd Crowder, a white supremacist income tax evader who plans to blow up a Cincinnati IRS building. Crowder likes to shout “fire in the hole,” a coal mining phrase used before exploding a charge, whenever he blows up something.

In true Leonard fashion, Givens and Crowder have a begrudging respect for each other, a holdover from their coal mining days together. Crowder’s sister-in-law, Ava, carrier of a long-burning torch for Givens and a long-barreled rifle, confuses the mix. Throw in several rednecks, more shotguns and a rocket launcher, and the stage is set for a wild ride through Leonardland, where the talk is tough, honor is everything and a promise is a promise. This adrenaline-charged novella is full of sharply honed characters, plot twists and dialogue that only Leonard could have written, demonstrating that he has as much command of this new medium as he does the printed page.

Givens, previously seen in Pronto and Riding the Rap, is the marshal you hope is assigned to protect you. With his creased Stetson and Old West lawman personality, he only draws his gun to shoot (and kill). He’s people smart, but Crowder is too. His people shave their heads and wear swastika tattoos. They also have no love of the law or the government.

In signature Leonard style, the dialogue moves the action rather than the narrative along. And action—delivered in bursts, like the blasts of a gun and with just as much force—is the key to this novella. So strap yourself in, get comfortable and relinquish yourself to the world of Elmore Leonard, novelist, screenwriter and now e-novelist, as he returns to the genre of his roots, 21st century-style.

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