Enemies Within by Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman

CAPITAL NEW YORK: 20th Century Fox TV options book about clandestine NYPD counterterror operations

20th Century Fox Television has bought the rights to a forthcoming book by Associated Press reporters Matt Apuzzo and Adam Goldman about clandestine counterterrorism operations conducted by the New York City Police Department, Capital has learned.

The book, Enemies Within: Inside the NYPD's Secret Spying Unit and bin Laden's Final Plot Against America, is based on a series of articles the duo wrote for the Associated Press beginning two years ago.

Attached to the 20th Century Fox Television project are producers Erwin Stoff and Tom Lassally of 3 Arts Entertainment. Stoff was executive producer of The Devil's Advocate, The Matrix and, more recently, 47 Ronin.Lassally was executive producer of "American Candidate" (a TV series) and the forthcoming movie Edge of Tomorrow.

The book will hit shelves Sept. 3 and is published by Touchstone, an imprint of Simon & Schuster. It will include reporting based on hundreds of secret NYPD documents that Apuzzo and Goldman obtained after winning the Pulitzer Prize for investigative reporting last year for their initial series of AP reports.

Which means that there is a lot more to come from these two.

"We used this new material to write the book," Goldman told Capital. "We’ll be making many of the documents public."

The book is sure to be controversial, as the original article series was. In particular, the News Corp-owned New York Post has been critical of the Associated Press' reporting on the NYPD. Though the Postand 20st Century Fox are now owned by separate companies, both are controlled by Rupert Murdoch.

Goldman declined to specify how much the book sold for but said "there were multiple offers." The deal was inked in September 2012.

New York magazine will publish an excerpt in its next issue, which lands on Monday.

"After 9/11, police commissioner Ray Kelly called on former senior CIA officer David Cohen, who along with then current CIA officer Larry Sanchez, created the city’s own CIA," reads a teaser circulated by the magazine's publicists this afternoon. "They believed that to catch the few, the NYPD would spy on many. Their Demographics Unit ended up a failure, both as a matter of police work, but more importantly, of the civil liberties of New Yorkers."

 

Screw Everyone by Ophira Eisenberg

VARIETY: NPR Host to ‘Screw Everyone’ With New Movie (EXCLUSIVE)

By Dave McNary

Ophira Eisenberg’s comic memoir “Screw Everyone: How I Slept My Way to Monogamy” is headed for the big screen with Zucker Prods. acquiring feature rights.

Eisenberg, host of the weekly National Public Radio and WNYC game show “Ask Me Another,” recounted more than a decade and a half of relationships in “Screw Everyone” with an attitude of saying “yes” to nearly everything before getting married. The tome starts in the seventh grade in Calgary, Canada, with her first boyfriend and first kiss.

“If we were talking about food, I’d be considered ‘adventurous,’ in wine circles, ‘unpretentious,’ and in dating terms, ‘a slut,’” she said in the introduction.

Janet Zucker told Variety that she’s started meeting with writers about the adaptation. She decided to seek the rights to “Screw Everyone” while reading the book during production of a TV version of Hallmark Channel’s “Dear Dumb Diary,” on which she’s an exec producer.

“Those are two pretty different projects but we tend to have a pretty eclectic slate,” she added, noting that recent Zucker Co. feature projects include romantic comedy “Friends with Benefits,” political thriller “Fair Game” and P.J. Hogan’s comedy-drama “Mental.”

“I think Ophira is really funny and her book says a lot about how women are dealing with relationships now,” Zucker added.

CyberStorm by Matthew Mather

Fox Acquires Self Published Sci-Fi Novel ‘CyberStorm’ For Chernin Entertainment

By MIKE FLEMING JR

EXCLUSIVE: 20th Century Fox has acquired CyberStorm, a self-published book by Matthew Mather that I’ve been told Chernin Entertainment will take on as producer. Described as a frighteningly realistic depiction of what would happen in the event of a global digital meltdown from an organized attack, the book follows a New York man and his family as they try and survive the crash isolated in Manhattan with millions of scared and confused people around him. The original e-book has caught on fast since it came out in March, and is now up there with the likes of the World War Z, Ender’s Game and Game Of Thrones e-books in Amazon sci-fi sales. It’s moving about 1500 copies a day. Mather, a cybersecurity expert and author who started out his career working at the McGill Center for Intelligent Machines, is now exploring a traditional print publishing deal after inking rights pacts for Turkey, Spain and Germany. The Fox deal was made by Sean Daily at Hotchkiss and Associates with Paul Lucas at Janklow & Nesbit Associates.

Fox finances Chernin Entertainment-released films and they are currently basking in the success of their most recent tie-up The Heat, the Melissa McCarthy-Sandra Bullock buddy comedy that opened June 28 to a cool $40 million. A sequel to that one is already in the works.

Devil in the Grove by Gilbert King

DEADLINE: Lionsgate Acquires Pulitzer Prize Winner ‘Devil In The Grove;’ Seminal Civil Rights Case For Thurgood Marshall

By MIKE FLEMING

Lionsgate has acquired screen rights to Devil In The Grove: Thurgood Marshall, The Groveland Boys, And The Dawn Of A New America, the Pulitzer Prize-winning book by Gilbert King about the effort of Thurgood Marshall and the NAACP’s legal team to save the lives of four black men falsely accused of raping a white woman in Florida in 1949. Adam Cooper & Bill Collage will write the script. Allison Shearmur is producing. The project is high priority at Lionsgate where production president Erik Feig and production and development director Jeyun Choi are overseeing it.

Devil In The Grove will yield a great role for a fortyish African-American actor to play the iconic Marshall, in a case fought to the Supreme Court before he made history with Brown Vs. Board of Education, which finally eliminated segregation in public schools. The scribes are also planning a strong role of Mabel Norris Reese, a journalist who covered the case. Initially outraged by the rape charges, she wrote honest stories as the evidence made it clear the “victim” had invented the allegations.

The film has overtones of To Kill A Mockingbird, in a story emblematic of the racism present in the Deep South during the time when Jim Crow labor laws made possible places like the segregated Groveland, Florida. Empowered by cheap labor, that town became a thriving citrus empire, with a racist sheriff ruling with an iron hand. In 1949, a quartet of young black men called The Groveland Four were accused of rape by a 17-year-old girl. The Klan tore through Groveland, sending black men fleeing to the swamps as they burned homes, determined to find the four and lynch them. One was shot down, and the others beaten badly into confessing. Despite the powderkeg atmosphere, Groveland became an establishing ground for Marshall, who despite the danger and his vital status in the growing civil rights movement, got heavily involved after one of his NAACP associates was murdered by the Klan. Even though the evidence was flimsy, one of the men was sentenced to life and the other two were given death sentences. Marshall fought that all the way to the Supreme Court. When a new trial was ordered, the sheriff, McCall, shot both of the men as they were being transported. He claimed the handcuffed men attacked him, but the lone survivor said he simply blasted away. The survivor was eventually exonerated.

The writers, whose Moses script Exodus will be the next film that Ridley Scott will direct with Christian Bale starring at Fox, found the book in manuscript form, and they couldn’t get a rise out of the town. Then, just as it was being relegated to the remainder pile, Devil In The Grove shockingly won the Pulitzer and the author’s film agent, Sean Daily at Hotchkiss And Associates (he sold it for lit agent Farley Chase) told the scribes that there was interest. Some 18 months after they first shopped the book, they went to town on it again. “In a way, Thurgood Marshall seems a rightful companion to Moses and George Washington [their script on him, called The General, has Darren Aronofsky attached], because Marshall really was a founding father of a new America,” Cooper said. They feel it is in good hands with Lionsgate and with Shearmur, who has been a strong influence on book adaptations like The Hunger Games. Cooper & Collage are repped by WME and Jeff Frankel.

Pulitzer Prize-winning author Gilbert King's DEVIL IN THE GROVE, recounting Thurgood Marshall's heroic defense of four young black men accused of raping a white girl in 1949 Florida, to Lionsgate/Summit (THE HURT LOCKER, THE LINCOLN LAWYER) with Allison Shearmur Productions producing, by Sean Daily of Hotchkiss and Associates on behalf of Farley Chase at Chase Literary Agency.

The Book of Negroes by Lawrence Hill

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Controversial 'The Book of Negroes' Novel Getting Miniseries

BET and CBC will start shooting the Clement Virgo-directed project -- previously planned as a movie -- in South Africa in the fall.

BANFF, Alberta – The controversial Lawrence Hill novel The Book of Negroes will be adapted into a miniseries for BET in the U.S. and the CBC in Canada, after earlier plans for a big-screen adaptation.

Canadian producer Conquering Lion Pictures initially optioned the film rights to the award-winning novel in 2009, with Clement Virgo on board to direct a movie as an international co-production.

But now Conquering Lion Pictures and Out of Africa Entertainment will turn the 2007 novel about a young girl taken from Africa and forced into slavery on a South Carolina plantation before she escapes to freedom in Nova Scotia into a miniseries.

Entertainment One will handle worldwide sales.

"We are excited to partner with Conquering Lion Pictures, Out of Africa Entertainment and Entertainment One on this historic project and to bring the acclaimed Book of Negroesto life for the BET audience,” said Loretha Jones, president of original programming at BET Networks.

Production will start in South Africa in the fall, with The Book of Negroes structured as a Canada-South African co-production.

Conquering Lion Pictures initially aimed to structure the intended movie adaptation likely as a Canadian-European co-production.

The miniseries is written by Virgo, with Hill getting a co-writer credit.

The executive producer credits will be shared by Damon D'Oliveira, Virgo, Lance Samuels, Daniel Iron, Carrie Stein and Bill Niven.

Canadian writer Hill’s novel, while selected by Oprah magazine in 2010 as a top summer read, has stirred controversy.

The Dutch group Federation for Honour and Reparation of Slavery in Surinam two years ago torched the cover of the novel, rather than the entire book, to protest what they claimed is the offensive use of the word “negro” in the book title.

Hill’s novel was published in the Canadian and U.K. markets with the title The Book of Negroes.

But historical sensitivity led Hill’s novel to be published in the U.S. market as Somebody Know My Name.

The Testing by Joelle Charbonneau

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD DAILY: Paramount Acquires Joelle Charbonneau Novel ‘The Testing’

By MIKE FLEMING JR

EXCLUSIVE: Paramount Pictures has acquired The Testing, a novel by Joelle Charbonneau. Deal got made last night, with no producer attached, and it was Peter Kang’s first acquisition since moving to the studio from Fox. The book will be published this week and already has been named a #1 Indie Next 2013 Summer YA Pick and one of the Top 10 Young Adult Books for Summer by USA Today. Foreign publishing rights have already been sold in the UK, France, Israel, Korea, The Netherlands, Turkey, and Germany. The logline: In the rebuilding of the United States after natural disasters and biological war, the best and brightest high school graduates are put through a series of tests, both physical and mental, to determine whether they have what it takes to become the leaders of future generations.The tale focuses on 16-year-old Malencia Vale, and her hometown is excited because she might be chosen for The Testing, a United Commonwealth program that seeks out possible leaders of the slowly revitalizing postwar civilization. When she is chosen, her father finally tells her about his own nightmarish half-memories of The Testing. Armed with his dire warnings, she bravely heads off to Tosu City, far away from friends and family, where danger, romance and sheer terror awaits. Hey, this sounds like it’s got elements of The Hunger Games (which Paramount let go of) and Ender’s Game. Hollywood is running out of franchises, and this certainly seems to have that youth demographic potential. Deal was brokered by Hotchkiss And Associates’ Sean Daily with Stacia Decker at the Donald Maass Literary Agency.

Calling Me Home by Julie Kibler

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Warner Bros. Picks Up Rights to 'Calling Me Home'

Roy Lee and his Vertigo Entertainment are attached to produce the adaptation of Julie Kibler's book, which is described as a cross between "Driving Miss Daisy" and "The Help."

Warner Bros. has picked up the rights to Julie Kibler's book Calling Me Home for an adaptation to be produced by Roy Lee of Vertigo Entertainment.

The book is described as a cross between Driving Miss Daisy and The Help, and Warners' development is noteworthy in two ways.

It signals the studio's newfound willingness to seek out the adult audience that made Argo a best picture Oscar winner and financial hit and goes against its usual mode of developing big spectacle tentpoles.

It is also a new path for Lee, the producer who initially made his name with successful remakes of Asian thrillers and now produces larger-canvas genre fare such as the Oldboy remake and the upcoming Lego animated movie. (He also produced the 2006 romantic time-travel drama The Lake House, starring Sandra Bullock and Keanu Reeves.)

Calling Me Home, which is Kibler's debut novel and inspired by events in her family, revolves around the relationship between an 89-year-old woman named Isabelle McAllister and her hairdresser, a black single mother named Dorrie Curtis.

McAllister enlists Curtis' help to drive her from her home in Arlington, Texas, to a funeral in Cincinnati. Along the way, McAllister reveals the secrets of her past, in which she fell in love with the black son of her family's housekeeper to tragic consequences. The book alternates between the present and the late 1930s.

Home was released Feb. 12, garnering strong reviews from Kirkus and Publishers Weekly. The weepie is proving to be a reader favorite on book sites like GoodReads, and many are pegging it as this year's Help, which became a word-of-mouth sensation and eventual best picture Oscar nominee.

The studio and Lee now will seek out a writer to adapt the material.

Kibler is repped by Jody Hotchkiss of Hotchkiss and Associates and the Elizabeth Weed Agency.

Proof of Heaven by Eben Alexander

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD DAILY: Universal Acquires ‘Proof Of Heaven’; Bestseller About Dying Surgeon Who Glimpses Afterlife

By MIKE FLEMING JR

Universal Pictures has won a bidding battle for movie rights to Proof of Heaven: A Neurosurgeon's Journey Into The Afterlife, the runaway bestselling non-fiction book about a man who glimpsed the afterlife during a near death health crisis. Mary Parent and Cale Boyter will produce through Disruption Entertainment. Deal was six figures and three studios chased the book.

The film will be written by Ryan Knighton, an interesting story in his own right. He first made a name for himself adapting his own memoir, Cockeyed, about his 15-year gradual descent into blindness. He's currently adapting the Peter Spiegelman novel Thick As Thievesfor Fox 2000, Imagine and Film 360.

Proof of Heaven has topped The New York Times bestseller list since it was published in late October by Simon & Schuster. It is a first person account by Eben Alexander, a neurosurgeon who taught at Harvard Medical School and other universities, embracing science over faith. Despite being a Christian, he did not embrace religious theories of the afterlife. That was until he contracted a rare bacterial meningitis that penetrated his cerebro-spinal fluid and attacked his brain. He lay near death, comatose for seven days in 2008. He awoke with a clear recollection of what he described as a journey to heaven.

Several studios went after a book for its huge appeal to a faith-based readership. Studios have tried to cover this subject matter-the 1983 film Brainstorm comes to mind-but this will be presented as a true account. The book has been published in 30 countries, with more coming.

Parent just produced the Guillermo del Toro-produced Pacific Rim for Warner Bros and Legendary, and the Darren Aronofsky-directed Noah for Paramount and New Regency. She recently boarded Legendary's Godzilla as producer.

Hotchkiss and Associates brokered the book deal for the Ross Yoon Agency and attorney Tom Collier, and Knighton is repped by Hotchkiss and Associates, Mosaic and attorney Lev Ginsberg. Uni exec Kristin Lowe will oversee the project.

The Genius Files by Dan Gutman

THE HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Warner Bros. Adaptation of Children's Book 'Genius Files' Finds Writer

Commercial director Robert Rugan will pen a script based on Dan Gutman's book with Mike Karz producing.

Robert Rugan, a rising star in the commercial directing world, has been hired to pen the script for Warner Bros.' adaptation of The Genius Files.

Gulfstream Pictures' Mike Karz (New Year's Eve) is producing the project, which is based on the book series by Dan Gutman.

The first tome, published in January 2011, revolves around 12-year-old twins who are recruited to be part of a secret government experiment that uses young geniuses to solve complex national problems. The pair must fight for their lives while on a road trip with their family.

The book was "discovered" when Warner Bros. Pictures president Greg Silverman was shown a copy by his son Cooper and his friend, Jed Siegel, both fourth graders at Oakwood School.

Rugan has done commercial spots for companies ranging from HBO and IFC to Visa and Nikon; his envelope-pushing comedic spot for Durex won two CLIO Awards and the CyberLion at Cannes.

But even though he's receiving attention for his reel, Rugan isn't directing Genius Files, he's writing it. And he got the gig based on his original spec Beauregard Thibodeaux and the Curse of the Rougarou, to which he is attached as director.

He is repped by Verve, Kaplan/Perrone and attorney David Matloff.

Sweet Hell on Fire by Sara Lunsford

TV rights to Sara Lunsford's SWEET HELL ON FIRE: A MEMOIR OF THE PRISON I WORKED IN AND THE PRISON I LIVED IN, the true story of the author's time as a corrections officer in a maximum security prison for men, to CBS Television Studios with Kennedy/Marshall (LINCOLN, THE BOURNE LEGACY) producing, by Sean Daily at Hotchkiss and Associates on behalf of Deidre Knight at The Knight Agency.

The Returned by Jason Mott

Deadline Hollywood Daily: ABC Developing High-Concept Drama From Brad Pitt’s Plan B & Brillstein Entertainment

In a late buy, ABC has put in development The Returned, a serialized drama produced by Brad Pitt's Plan B, Brillstein Entertainment Partners and ABC Studios. Written by Aaron Zelman (AMC's The Killing), The Returned is based on the debut novel by Jason Mott, which is slated to be published next September by Mira Books. The rights to the book sparked a bidding war among several production companies and studios. Brillstein and Plan B were able to land the property in their first teaming together, and the project was taken to ABC Studios where Brillstein is based. Executive producing alongside Zelman are JoAnn Alfano and Jon Liebman from BEP and Dede Gardner and Jeremy Kleiner from Plan B.

The Returned is one of several projects BEP has set up this season, including two with CSI creator Anthony Zuiker: soap Tabooat ABC and an Alice In Wonderland sequel at NBC. Zelman is repped by UTA and Circle of Confusion.

Publisher's Marketplace

Jason Mott's THE RETURNED, about a family caught in the center of a worldwide event in which people's deceased loved ones are returning to life, to ABC with Aaron Zelman (THE KILLING, DAMAGES) writing and Plan B Entertainment (TREE OF LIFE) and Brillstein Entertainment (RINGER) producing, by Sean Daily at Hotchkiss and Associates on behalf of Michelle Brower at Folio Literary Management.

I Hunt Killers by Barry Lyga

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD DAILY: ABC Family Developing Series Adaptation Of Novel 'I Hunt Killers' From Joel Silver

By NELLIE ANDREEVA

EXCLUSIVE: ABC Family has teamed with producer Joel Silver to develop I Hunt Killers, a drama series based onBarry Lyga's young-adult novel. The project, from Silver Pictures and Warner Horizon, centers on the teenage daughter of an imprisoned notorious serial killer, a likable girl who becomes a suspect after a string of copy-cat murders. (In the book, the teen is a boy). It will be written by Dexter scribe Arika Mittman, which is appropriate as I Hunt Killers has a similar feel, but with a teenage twist. Silver executive produces, with Mittman serving as co-executive producer and Lyga as consultant.

I Hunt Killers was published by Little Brown this past spring (watch the book's trailer below), with a sequel, Game, set to come out next spring. The book was brought to Silver by the company's feature department, and the project was set up at Warner Bros where Silver was under a deal. ABC Family has had success with series adaptations of young-adult novels, including flagship drama Pretty Little Liars,also produced by Warner Horizon. On the TV side, Silver has had most success with a show with a teenage girl at the center, UPN's Veronica Mars. Mittman is repped by WME and manager Todd Feldman.

Thick as Thieves by Peter Spiegelman

VARIETY: Fox 2000 boards 'Thick as Thieves' Ryan Knighton to pen adaptation of Peter Spiegelman heist thriller

By DAVE MCNARY

Fox 2000 has come onboard for a movie version of Peter Spiegelman's heist thriller "Thick as Thieves," setting up the project with Imagine Entertainment and Film 360.

Brian Grazer, Erica Huggins and Anna Culp will produce for Imagine. Guymon Casady, Ben Forkner and Darin Friedman will produce for Film 360.

Peter Craig, who penned "The Town," is exec producing.

Fox has tapped Ryan Knighton to pen the adaptation of the novel. Knighton is currently finishing another Fox project, adapting Paul Hoffman's nonfiction work "Wings of Madness" and recently adapted "47 Rules of Highly Effective Bank Robbers" for Mandalay.

Spiegelman's fifth novel, "Thick as Thieves" was published last year by Knopf. Story centers on an ex-CIA agent who -- following the death of his mentor -- reluctantly takes the mantle as the leader of an elite crew planning a job against one of the world's most dangerous bankers. He discovers that those in his crew are not what they seem to be, including his lover; he must keep them close enough to finish the job and find the mole before he becomes the next target.

Project was developed at Film 360.

Rodney Ferrell is overseeing for Fox 2000.

Hotchkiss and Associates along with Dawn Saltzman at Mosaic repped Knighton. Hotchkiss also made the deal for the novel on behalf of the Denise Marcil Agency

Carson The Magnificent by Bill Zehme

DEADLINE HOLLYWOOD DAILY: Johnny Carson Estate In Feature Deal For Biopic On Iconic Late-Night Host

By MIKE FLEMING JR.

EXCLUSIVE: Heeeeeeere's a feature film project that has potential. John McLaughlin and producer Tom Thayer have teamed up with the estate of Johnny Carson on a feature film about the life of the venerable Tonight Showhost. The film will be scripted by McLaughlin, who wrote the Darren Aronofsky-directed Natalie Portman-starrer Black Swan and most recently adapted the Sacha Gervasi-directed Hitchcockfrom Steve Rebello's book. Thayer produced that movie, which stars Anthony Hopkins and Helen Mirren, and he will produce the Carson project. They'll shop McLaughlin's script to buyers right after the holidays.

The film will be based on the upcoming Bill Zehme book Carson The Magnificent: An Intimate Portrait. Zehme, who has written features on late-night combatants Jay Leno and David Letterman, was the only journalist Carson spoke to after his retirement, including an Esquire cover story about how Carson marked the 10th anniversary of abdicating the late-night throne. Zehme was a consultant and appeared in King Of Late Night, the Emmy-nominated PBS documentary on Carson's career.

McLaughlin is working away on the script now. Considering that Carson was in so many American homes on a daily basis through his show, he was a rather private man off the screen. The machinations of the late-night talk show game became full of intrigue and controversy when Carson left, and considering how much the current crop of late-night hosts idolize him, Carson certainly has an enduring legacy. Is it too early to begin speculating about who might play Carson and Ed McMahon?

WME is repping the Carson Estate and Thayer, CAA reps McLaughlin, and Hotchkiss and Associates is representing Zehme on behalf of Sterling Lord Literistic

The Genius Files by Dan Gutman

VARIETY: WB options 'The Genius Files'

Studio acquires feature rights to best-selling children's book series

By RACHEL ABRAMS

Warner Bros. has optioned New York Times best-selling children's book series "The Genius Files" by author Dan Gutman.

Harper Collins has already published two tomes in the six-book sequence. The third novel is skedded to hit stores in January.

Story centers on two pre-adolescent brothers (Coke and Pepsi McDonald) who get into a series of adventures in the name of national security. The brilliant duo keep their activities a secret from their parents, however, as the whole family travels across America in an RV.

Hollywood has adapted Gutman's children's tomes before. TNT turned novel "Honus and Me" into the 2004 TV movie "The Winning Season" starring Matthew Modine. Book was described as a cross between "Field of Dreams" and "Big" and centered around a boy who finds a baseball card which transports him back to the 1909 world series.

Observers have described the "Genius Files" books as in the vein of "Spy Kids" and "Agent Cody banks." Niija Kuykendall will oversee for WB.

Hotchkiss and Associates completed the deal on behalf of Eden Street LLC

Horns by Joe Hill

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Daniel Radcliffe to Star in Fantasy-Thriller 'Horns'

"Horns," directed by Alexandre Aja, is based on the best-selling cult novel by Joe Hill, who will be at Comic-Con this weekend.

Continuing his genre spree, Daniel Radcliffe is set to star in Alexandre Aja's supernatural fantasy-thriller Horns for Red Granite Pictures and Mandalay Pictures.

Earlier this year, the Harry Potter star's The Woman in Blackturned into a sleeper hit at the box office, grossing north of $127 million worldwide.

Horns is based on Joe Hill's best-selling novel. Aja will direct from an adapted screenplay by Keith Bunin.

Radcliffe will play Ig Perrish, the lead suspect in the violent rape and killing of his girlfriend. Hung over from a night of hard drinking, Ig awakens one morning to find horns starting to grow from his head. Their power drives people to confess sins and give in to selfish impulses -- an effective tool in his quest to discover the circumstances of his girlfriend's death and for exacting revenge.

Hill's rock 'n' roll-infused dark fantasy explores why bad things happen to good people and what the loss of true love can do to a man. The book was on The New York Times best-seller list for six weeks and has become an international best-seller as well.

"After reading Joe Hill's cult book, I couldn't resist temptation to dive into the devilish underworld and reinvent a universal myth," Aja said. "Horns is a wild ride of sin and crime, with a love story in its heart."

Riza Aziz and Joey McFarland's Red Granite will finance Horns and co-produce with Mandalay. Producers are Aziz, McFarland, Mandalay Pictures president Cathy Schulman and Adam Stone. Hill will executive produce with Red Granite's Joe Gatta.

Additional casting is underway, with principal photography set to begin this fall. Red Granite Pictures' international sales arm will handle foreign sales for the film.

Red Granite is the production and financing company behind Martin Scorsese's next film The Wolf of Wall Street starring Leonardo DiCaprio.

Here If You Need Me by Kate Braestrup

VARIETY: CBS in 'Need' of memoir

Carol Mendelsohn Prods. to develop pic

By RACHEL ABRAMS

CBS TV Studios has optioned Kate Braestrup's memoir "Here If You Need Me" for Carol Mendelsohn Prods. to develop.

Book revolves around how Braestrup coped with the sudden loss of her husband, an aspiring minister who died in a car accident. In the aftermath, Braestrup decided she would follow in his footsteps and became a chaplain for the Maine Warden Service, which conducts search and rescue misions in the state. In that role, the author began comforting families also coping with loss. She is also author of "Beginner's Grace," a non-religious guide to prayer.

Little, Brown and Co. published "Here" in 2007. Deal was made by Brick House Literary Agents and Hotchkiss & Associates.

Mendelsohn is exec producer of the Eye's "CSI" mothership. Her banner is based at CBS TV Studios.

Cedar Cove by Debbie Macomber

HOLLYWOOD REPORTER: Hallmark Channel Launching First Scripted Series (Exclusive)

Andie MacDowell will film "Cedar Cove," a two-hour TV movie that will serve as a backdoor pilot for the drama, after finishing the first season of ABC Family's "Jane by Design."

Hallmark Channel is throwing its hat in the scripted series arena. The Crown Media-owned cable network has set Cedar Cove, a two-hour telefilm based on the book by Debbie Macomber that will serve as a backdoor pilot for the series.

Andie MacDowell will star as a small-town family court judge in the pic, which will premiere in late 2012, with the series launching early next year, The Hollywood Reporter has learned exclusively.

The pic marks the fourth of Macomber's romance novels to get the Hallmark treatment following Mrs. Miracle, Call Me Mrs. Miracle and Trading Christmas; they went on to become the network's most-watched movies of the year in 2009, 2010 and 2011, respectively.

"Andie is widely recognized around the world as a gifted actor and a top box-office draw, and there is genuine, mutual excitement today between the network and our star about the new series," Hallmark exec vp programming Michelle Vicary said.

Bruce Graham, who adapted Trading Christmas, will pen the telepic, which hails from Orchard Road Productions. Dan Wigutow, who exec produced all three of Macomber's Hallmark specials, will return to executive produce alongside Caroline Moore, Harvey Kahn, Michael Scott and Allen Lewis. Scott will direct the telepic. A showrunner has not been determined.

Production on the telepic starts in early June. MacDowell will film it after ABC Family'sJane by Design, which is wrapping production on the second half of its first season.

MacDowell is repped by Paradigm, the Schiff Co. and Greenberg Glusker.

Worth pointing out, the Hallmark series comes months after Lifetime adapted its ratings hit telepic The Client List into a drama starring Jennifer Love Hewitt, which has already been renewed for a second season.

The Last Ship by William Brinkley

VARIETY: TNT orders pilot for 'The Last Ship'

Action-adventure comes from exec producer Michael Bay

By STUART LEVINE

TNT has gone forward and ordered the pilot of Michael Bay's action-adventure drama "The Last Ship."

Project, about a global catastrophe where those aboard a naval destroyer are the only survivors, is based on the William Brinkley novel.

Script comes from "Without a Trace" vet Hank Steinberg and Steven Kane, who exec produce with Bay and Platinum Dunes partners Brad Fuller and Andrew Form.

Cabler is having a solid summer. Net just gave a third-season renewal for "Falling Skies" and freshman skein "Dallas" drew 6.9 million for its June 13 debut episode. "Rizzoli & Isles" captured 7.1 million viewers when it debuted June 5 in its new Tuesday timeslot.

Last week Eric McCormack-starrer "Perception" opened to 5.6 million and "The Closer" began its final season with 6.1 million.

However, several of their shows are drawing large numbers in the 25-54 demo, with less in the more ad-desirable 18-49 demo.

Television rights to William Brinkley's THE LAST SHIP, the action/adventure story of the crew of a naval destroyer that is forced to confront the reality of a new existence when a pandemic decimates most of the earth's population, to TNT, with Michael Bay's Platinum Dunes producing, by Hotchkiss and Associates on behalf of Sterling Lord at Sterling Lord Literistic.

Flavia de Luce mystery series by Alan Bradley

TV rights to Alan Bradley's NYT bestselling Flavia de Luce mysteries (The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie, The Weed that Strings the Hangman's Bag, A Red Herring without Mustard, I'm Half-Sick of Shadows), optioned to American Beauty and Revolution Road director Sam Mendes' Neal Street Productions, by Jody Hotchkiss, on behalf of Denise Bukowski at The Bukowski Agency.

VARIETY: Brits savor 'Flavia'

Sam Mendes on TV case for youth sleuth

By DIANA LODDERHOSE

Sam Mendes' shingle Neal Street Prods. has optioned rights to Alan Bradley's New York Times bestselling mystery series "Flavia de Luce" to develop as a television series.

Story, set in a rural village in post-WWII Blighty, follows the adventures of a precocious 11-year-old sleuth named Flavia.

The young girl, a science enthusiast with a particular passion for poison, lives on a family estate with two sinister older sisters and an eccentric widowed father and uses her encyclopedic knowledge to solve murders.

Bradley's series has been sold to publishers in 35 countries and been translated into 31 languages. It has snagged a slew of publishing awards including the Crime Writers' Assn. Debut Dagger Award and the Dilys Award.

TV series will be exec produced by Neal Street's Pippa Harris and Mendes and co-produced by Julie Blumenthal and Wonderful Films' William Horberg.

Neal Street has already had success this year with TV series "Call the Midwife," toplining Jessica Raine, Miranda Hart and Vanessa Redgrave. Series, set in 1950s East End London, became the highest-rated drama series for the BBC since 2001.

"After the success of 'Call the Midwife' we were keen to find another high-quality book series to adapt and luckily discovered Alan Bradley's 'Flavia de Luce' books," said Mendes. "I have always been a fan of the classic British mystery detective genre and 'Flavia de Luce' is a fresh and captivating take on it."

Harris added that the adventures were "rich with multi-layered mysteries, memorable supporting characters and a cinematic period backdrop."

Deal was made on behalf of the Bulkowski Agency by Hotchkiss and Associates.

Neal Street, which was formed in 2003 with Mendes, Harris and Caro Newlin, has produced pics such as "Revolutionary Road" and "Starter for Ten," TV productions such as "Stuart: A Life Backwards" and theater hits such as "Shrek: The Musical" and upcoming production of "Charlie and the Chocolate Factory."