Benderspink to Adapt The Straw Men

Benderspink has acquired the rights to develop a big screen film based on British author Michael Marshall Smith’s crime thriller The Straw Men. The book is a first in a trilogy about a an ex-homicide detective who is persuaded to come out of early retirement to solve a series of strange murders which are connected to the abduction of his daughter. The official book description follows:

“In Palmerston, Pennsylvania, two men in long coats walk calmly into a crowded fast food restaurant-then, slowly and methodically, gun down sixty-eight people. They take time to reload. On the Promenade of Santa Monica, California, a teenaged girl gives sightseeing tips to a distinguished English tourist. She won’t be going home tonight. In Dyersburg, Montana, a grief-stricken son tries to make sense of the accident that killed his parents-then finds a note stuffed in his father’s favorite chair. It says, “We’re not dead.” Three seemingly unrelated events, these are the first signs of an unimaginable network of fear that will lead one unlikely hero to a chilling confrontation with The Straw Men. No one knows who they are-or why they kill. But they must be stopped. Michael Marshall’s electrifying debut novel is an instant masterpiece of modern suspense. An epic thriller for anyone who has feared that someone is watching us.”

No screenwriter has been hired to adapt the project. If you want to check it out, the book is available in paperback on Amazon for only $7.99. The novel is also currently being adapted into a comic book by Zenescope Entertainment (the cool art above and below is from the covers of said comics). You can buy the first three issues of the comic book on zenescope.com.

source: Variety

  • This sounds very original. It would be refreshing to see.
  • I've heard alot about the Straw men but never buckled down and bought the book. Maybe this will be incentive.
  • south texas terror
    who drinks from the straw men?
  • atx
    Who Watches The Straw Men?
  • Han is Solo
    Watchmen called, they want their tagline back.
  • Goya
    I'm not sure if its true or not, but I've been told that Michael Marshall was another pen name for writer Bob Mayer, who penned the Area 51 series as Robert Doherty. I mention that only because the Area 51 series started off pretty cool posing an interesting question of "what if all of human history had been shaped by the influence of an alien race trying to further its own agenda?" and then devolved into "let's add some magical spheres and lazers pew pew!"

    Like I said, not sure if there was any truth to that claim. I only mention it because the Straw Men books did have a similar narrative style and tone and I felt they suffered from the same disease where the story starts off very interesting and then becomes quite formulaic. In the end you find yourself saying "well that was pretty ridiculous" more and more often. The Straw Men itself was really enjoyable though. I read it when I was really young and I remember it being one of the first times I felt such atmospheric tension from a book.

    I look forward to seeing this one and I recommend at least the first book to anyone interested in these kind of stories.
  • haha BURN!
  • ha can Nic Cage be in this please.
  • I'm impressed by the artwork. Let's hope the screenwriter goes off the novel and doesn't just skimp from the comic books.
  • Creepy artwork =
  • Just checking, Is it supposed to look like a hand with the fingertips skinned to the bone? It looks freaking awesome.
  • Siri
    I am a big fan of Michael Marshall Smith. I wish they had taken his earlier, whackier books to turn into a film, but i do understand they are taking this commercially safer route. The Straw Men was an engaging series, but Only Forward is (quite different and) in my top five favourite books EVER, so i was hoping they'd do that, when i heard Hollywood was interested in MMS way back. I'll just cross my fingers that this does well, and then they'll get to the one i mentioned and 'Spares' and 'One of Us'.

    I've been reading him for years now, and just when it matters, i can't think of the right words to make you all read him. He's Sci-Fi (without the space ships), but the character angle is always leading. He's very dark, but there's plenty of stuff to laugh about. Or at least smile grimly about. He's not Fight Club, but if i had to compare his stories to anything, i guess that's the one most people would associate his stories with.

    His 'Spares' is the idea of 'The Island' (Ewan & Scarlett) about the body doubles bred for harvest, but so much more dark and realistic it might just make you puke at some parts. It's all good!
  • This sound Interesting i might Catch the Books once i finish Watchmen.
  • Damn! For a second there I thought to myself "finally, a movie about ethical debating philosophy."
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