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Showing posts with label Dick Wolf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Dick Wolf. Show all posts

Monday, January 14, 2013

Dick Wolf...shelved miniseries becomes a book

NEW YORK POST

Miniseries derailed by 9/11 is back as a book

Dick Wolf, the brains and brawn behind “Law & Order,” was two weeks away from the beginning of production on a miniseries about terrorism in New York City.

The plot was suitably scary: A bomb goes off on the crosstown shuttle. Thousands die.
The first scene was in an al Qaeda training camp somewhere in Afghanistan.
Jerry Orbach, Jesse L. Martin, Mariska Hargitay, Chris Meloni, Vincent D’Onofrio — the cream of the “L&O” series — were all set to star in it. The whole thing would air over several nights on NBC.
Then, the World Trade Center came down.
On the afternoon of Sept. 11, 2001 — while fire companies were counting noses to find out how many guys were not coming back — Wolf made the phone calls to kill the project.
DRAMA KING: Dick Wolf, the creator of “Law & Order,” is out with a novel called “The Intercept.”
WireImage
DRAMA KING: Dick Wolf, the creator of “Law & Order,” is out with a novel called “The Intercept.”
“I know it sounds funny to say this now but . . . it was a more innocent time,” Wolf said last week.
“Nobody thought those people were really a threat to us. Back then, it was just a story.”
Twelve years later and Wolf has brought back that long-forgotten miniseries about a bomb threat in the heart of New York City.
But this time, it’s a book. Called “The Intercept,” it is Wolf’s first.
Less than two weeks after being published, it is already No. 24 on the New York Times Best Seller list. It helps to be your own brand.
The hero of the book is Jeremy Fisk, an NYPD detective with the intelligence division (and all the hallmarks of a continuing character).
“I guess you’d say the delayed inspiration for Fisk was John O’Neill,” the former FBI anti-terrorism agent who predicted al-Qaeda would try to strike again at the Trade Center after the 1993 attack,” he said.
Wolf and O’Neill used to sit late at night at Elaine’s, where O’Neill would talk about the coming threat from the Middle East.
“‘They’re not going to give up,’ he used to say back then,” Wolf says. “Nobody believed him.”
For Wolf, in the years before 2001, it was simply a good idea for a TV show. Nothing more.
O’Neill died when the towers came down — he was a security boss for the Port Authority by then, and Wolf, in his own way, is now the warning voice.
The most dangerous terrorist in “The Intercept” turns out to be, not a prayer rug-toting bad guy from a desert country, but a villain who was born and raised in Sweden.
The new threat, Wolf says, is the children of Middle Eastern and Balkan workers who immigrated to northern Europe in the 1970s and ’80s to find jobs and stayed.
“You don’t hear much about them, these kids who were raised in the West with a serious chip on their shoulders,” says Wolf.
“But there is this huge group of un-profile-able, hard-core Muslims who have a lot of people worried,” he says.
Is the book a thinly veiled script for a movie?
“I’d love to see it as a movie,” he says. “But it’s unlikely. It’s a very crowded intersection right now, terrorism stories.”

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

New series ‘Injustice’ For Dick Wolf...

Hmmmm....

By NELLIE ANDREEVA | Tuesday September 4, 2012 @ 3:00pm PDT
DEADLINE

Nellie Andreeva
Law & OrdermastermindDick Wolf is returning to the courtroom with Injustice, a U.S. version of a British format, which will be written by former Friday Night Lights executive producer David Hudgins.
The project, from Universal TV and studio-based Wolf Films, is described as an intricate legal drama/psychological thriller about a devoted criminal defense attorney with a dark past buried deep in his psyche and heart, who juggles his complicated family situation with his emotionally conflicted feelings about representing heinous criminals. The original, created by Anthony Horowitz, ran as a five-episode limited series on ITV1 in summer 2011. It starred James Purefoy as the barrister at the center of the story. (See the trailer below.) Hudgins is executive producing the NBC version with Wolf Films’ Wolf, Danielle Gelber and Peter Jankowski. Horowitz and Jill Green, producer of the original series, will serve as producers.
In addition to veteran Law & Order: SVU, WME-repped Wolf Films has new firefighter drama Chicago Fire on NBC this fall. The company renewed its dealwith NBCUniversal in May.
For Hudgins, Injustice stems from the new overall deal with Uni TV he signed in April. Hudgins worked on FNL for the entire run of the series, serving as co-showrunner with Jason Katims on the much-lauded final season. Hudgins also has served as a co-executive producer on Katims’ latest series, NBC’sParenthood, for the past two seasons.
This is the second adaptation of an European format at NBC/Uni TV for UTA-repped Hudgins, who wrote a U.S. version of praised Danish drama Borgen last season