The big book of reel murders Stories that inspired great crime films

Book - 2019

Edgar Award-winning editor Penzler's new anthology rolls out the red carpet for the stories that Hollywood hits are made of. He delivers the director's cut of classic short stories that inspired some of Tinsletown's most memorable films. ... Including... works by:Authors include: Edgar Allan Poe, Cornell Woolrich, Aldous Huxley, Ian Fleming, Robert Louis Stevenson, Budd Schulberg, O. Henry, W. Somerset Maugham, and many more.--

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Subjects
Genres
Noir fiction
Short stories
Detective and mystery fiction
Published
New York : Vintage Crime / Black Lizard : Vintage Books, a division of Penguin Random House LLC [2019]
Language
English
Physical Description
xiv, 1181 pages : 23 cm
ISBN
9780525563884
  • The suspense is killing me
  • Stop, you're killing me
  • Isn't this thrilling?
  • Oh, the horror!
  • Isn't it a crime?
  • I love you to death - Is there a detective in the house?
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Movie and mystery buffs alike will savor Penzler's ninth Big Book anthology (after 2018's The Big Book of Female Detectives), which includes more than 60 stories that were adapted for the screen. The selections include both the usual suspects, such as Conan Doyle and Cornell Woolrich, and surprising ones, such as Budd Schulberg. Schulberg's 1954 short story, "Murder on the Waterfront," was the inspiration for the Oscar-winning Marlon Brando vehicle On the Waterfront, and his crisp screenplay dialogue is mirrored by gritty noir prose ("The police department had made contact with Runt, by means of a grappling hook probing the soft, rotten bottom of the river"). Unsurprisingly, most of the source material was changed significantly for the movies, such as Robert Bloch's "The Real Bad Friend," which morphed into the novel Psycho, before being made into a film by Alfred Hitchcock. Spoiler-averse readers may want to defer delving into Penzler's informative and insightful introductions for each entry, which give away plot developments in both the story and film adaptations. Penzler's scholarship and expertise enable him to both expose modern audiences to now-obscure talent such as Charlotte Armstrong, represented by "The Enemy," and to the origins of classic films such as Bad Day at Black Rock. This will be a welcome addition to many libraries. (Nov.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Indefatigable editor Penzler's latest 61-scoop sundae is a treasure trove of short stories that were filmed, though most readers won't care to sample more than a fraction of its contents.Acknowledging that "most of the greatest mystery crime films were adapted from novels or were original screenplays," Penzler (The Big Book of Female Detectives, 2018, etc.) introduces seven sections containing suspense stories, crime comedies, thrillers, horror stories, stories about criminals, fatal romances, and detective stories. A significant fraction of the volume's 1,200 pages are devoted to the editor's story-by-story introductions, but these short essays, which are filled with anecdotes, breezy evaluations, information about the production histories of the movies based on these stories, and the occasional spoiler, are often more interesting than the stories they introduce. As for the selections themselves, some (Edgar Allan Poe's "The Murders in the Rue Morgue," Arthur Conan Doyle's "The Five Orange Pips," G.K. Chesterton's "The Blue Cross," Richard Connell's "The Most Dangerous Game") are anthology chestnuts fans will already know. Most of these, along with Doyle's "The Adventure of the Six Napoleons" and Dashiell Hammett's "The House in Turk Street," are better than any of the film versions that provide the hook for their inclusion. Other stories changed beyond recognition in filmingEdgar Wallace's "The Death Watch" and "The Ghost of John Holling," Sapper's "Thirteen Lead Soldiers," Hammett's "On the Make," Barry Perowne's "The Blind Spot," Stuart Palmer's "The Riddle of the Dangling Pearl," Palmer and Craig Rice's "Once Upon a Train," Fredric Brown's "Madman's Holiday," Ian Fleming's "From A View to a Kill"and will provide mostly bewilderment from readers familiar with their film versions. Only a handfulE.W. Hornung's "Gentlemen and Players," Agatha Christie's "The Witness for the Prosecution," W. Somerset Maugham's "The Letter" and "The Traitor," Daphne du Maurier's "Don't Look Now," Irwin Shaw's "Tip on a Dead Jockey," and several of the eight noir tales by Cornell Woolrich, a welcome minianthology within this anthologyare memorable stories made into equally memorable films. The happiest discoveries for most readers will be the mostly forgotten stories that provided the basis for Broken Blossoms, Brother Orchid, Smart Blonde, The Killer Is Loose, Possessed, Gun Crazy, The Wild One, On the Waterfront, Bad Day at Black Rock, and (even before Robert Bloch's novel) Psycho. Who knew?The ideal audience: cinephiles who've never read any of these stories before. But everyone will find something to treasure. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.