
The just completed Thrillerfest — think Comic-Con for thriller authors and their fans — featured a lecture that caught my eye. Sleepers author Lorenzo Carcaterra chose the 10 best thriller films made from books, the 10 worst, and the 10 he most wants to see get made.
Carcaterra’s Sleepers was turned into a hit film by Barry Levinson, and most of his subsequent thrillers are under option by studios and big producers. His latest, Midnight Angels – an art history thriller set in Florence — was just published by Ballantine and is just being shopped now. Carcaterra cautioned that his lists (culled with the help of other authors and editors) were subjective, guaranteed to stir rancor, and maybe a frivolous exercise. So I say, what’s wrong with a little subjectivity, rancor, and frivolity on a summer Sunday morning?
The 10 Best: The Bourne Trilogy, Silence of the Lambs, Day of the Jackal, 3 Days of the Condor, The Manchurian Candidate, The Talented Mr. Ripley, The Getaway (Steve McQueen version), The Girl With The Dragon Tattoo, The French Connection, Patriot Games and Marathon Man (the last two tie for 10th).
The 10 Worst: The Getaway (Alec Baldwin version), The Eiger Sanction, The Osterman Weekend, The Manchurian Candidate (Denzel Washington version), The Sum of All Fears, The Da Vinci Code, Hannibal Rising, The Chamber, Hostage, Heat (the William Goldman novel adapted into a Burt Reynolds pic). Carcaterra hated the Richard Chamberlain TV adaptation of The Bourne Identity so much, he gave it dishonorable mention.
The 10 That Should Be Made: The Vince Flynn-written series about government operative Mitch Rapp (CBS Films is trying to make Consent to Kill, hoping Gerard Butler or Matthew Fox will star for Antoine Fuqua); Brad Thor ‘s Scot Horvath series; Lee Child’s series on hulking drifter Jack Reacher (last I recall, Cruise/Wagner had the rights, and while Reacher might be the top selling thriller protagonist without a film series, little has happened to get a film like The Killing Floor made); James Rollins’ Sigma Force series, William Diehl’s The Hunt, Bill Granger’s The November Man, Daniel Silva’s Gabriel Alon series, any of Matthew Pearl’s novels that include The Dante Club, The Poe Shadow and The Last Dickens; Christopher Reich’s Numbered Account; and PD James’ Innocent Blood and Jack Higgins’ Luciano’s Luck (tied for 10th).
Carcaterra put numerous authors on the best and the worst lists, including author Robert Ludlum, Tom Clancy’s Jack Ryan series, the Jim Thompson novel The Getaway (Carcaterra thought McQueen’s Doc McCoy was the personification of cool while Baldwin was too pretty) Tom Harris’s Hannibal Lecter series and William Goldman. Carcaterra considers Goldman’s Marathon Man to be one of the best adaptations ever, but he’s friends with Goldman, and the author/screenwriter suggested his own work, Heat, for the bad list). What becomes clear from Carcaterra’s experience is that the best adaptations are the ones where the screenwriter/director has the guts to tear apart the book to serve the film, even if a superstar author (think Clancy in Patriot Games or Anne Rice at the start of Interview with the Vampire) kicks and screams. The other make or break variable is the impact of actors who can use their influence to screw things up, or elevate the film. On Sleepers, Carcaterra said when they got Robert De Niro and Dustin Hoffman, the scenes for their characters escalated and made the movie much better.
“The Bourne Identity film is much better than the book, and when Tony Gilroy was asked to write, he told them he didn’t care for the book,” Carcaterra said. “He finally said the only part that interested him was an assassin who didn’t know who he was, wanted to find out, but didn’t want to kill. Of course, to find out, he has to kill. It was a troubled shoot, a lot of reshoots, but that core idea and the script started what has become the best thriller book series. I put all three into the same category because they’re all so good.”
Carcaterra said it was smart to change James Grady’s 6 Days of the Condor: “Whether it was a screenwriter economizing or a producer short of cash, it was a better title and the tightened time line helped the movie.” He said the David Fincher adaptation of The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo likely won’t come close to the darkness of the Swedish film that he feels will be tough to improve. Carcaterra worked on TV shows with Sonny Grosso, one of the two cops in The French Connection. Grosso told him that William Friedkin didn’t even read the book when he first met the cops, but studied them closely. “He was interested in these two cowboys on the streets, and the details of the case got sketched over,” Carcaterra said. “The chase scene was invented, the subway shooting scene didn’t happened. And when Sonny told Friedkin that shooting that Frenchman in the back wouldn’t happen because cops don’t shoot fleeing suspects in the back, Friedkin said, this guy killed five people, and the crowd will go nuts. He was absolutely right.”
Carcaterra said The Da Vinci Code suffered from reverence to Dan Brown’s huge bestseller and the fear of turning off the book’s huge fan base. Angels & Demons was a much better film, Carcaterra said, because the screenwriting and plotting were bolder.
Authors who get script approval can often hamper a screen adaptation, unless it is someone like Elmore Leonard, who wrote so many scripts himself that he knows what works on the screen and isn’t precious about his prose. “Authors like Elmore realize it’s unseemly to complain, when you consider how much we get paid. When Sydney Pollack mentioned to John Grisham he hoped they hadn’t messed up The Firm, Grisham said ‘if you did, you’ll never hear it from me.’ Anne Rice took out full page ads about the casting of Interview with the Vampire, until maybe somebody explained her backend definition, and suddenly she was ecstatic,” Carcaterra said. “Adapting books into movies is a hard job that becomes impossible with an author standing over your shoulder who doesn’t understand the process. Authors get paid very well, and so you have to take the money and shut up.”


I think these lists are excellent. The background information is wonderful. I would have put “Marathon Man” at the top however!
As for the “misses”–he is 100% correct.
Well done!
Great article! The Getaway (steve mcqueens version) is excellent, also The Bourne triology. Thank u from Sweden! // Gekkomagazine.se
Great, interesting piece, Mike. Next time, press Lorenzo for details on the Apaches adaptation that Bruckheimer has been developing for a decade. That’s another hard-R movie that doesn’t fall under the Disney mandate. The sequel, Chasers, is nearly as good. Carcaterra is an excellent author. ‘Bout to finish Jeffery Deaver’s latest Lincoln Rhyme thriller too, so far, so good. They should make Lawrence Block’s All the Flowers Are Dying, too…
Read this early, walked the dogs, and started griping about all the omissions from the list — at least until I came back home, re-read the post, and realized/remembered it was only about Thrillers. Cuz there’s a larger conversation to be had about books in general.
The Godfather. Best adaptation? The Great Gatsby. Worst if only because it qualifies twice?
Also, some thrillers take place in a different genre. So I’d add Blade Runner and Solaris (the Tarkovsky original) to Carcaterra’s list.
LOL – did the same in posting below – put The Group as ‘faithful to the book’. But my other plugs all were in the mystery 0r suspense or thriller field and to that list i would add ‘Vertical Run’, Joseph Garber’s page-turner as a book that should be a movie.
The article seems to favor newer ones (maybe except for Condor) – but some top drawer thrillers came before the 70s – movies like Out of the Past, In Cold Blood (nonfiction book), The Third Man, Rebecca, Double Indemnity, The Glass Key and the classic, Laura.
What about the French film Tell No One? I thought that was terrific.
I totally agree about the two versions of The Manchurian Candidate. One was outstanding and one was ridiculous.
I also agree about The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo (I just saw The Girl Who Played With Fire). Fincer’s film(s) will probably not be anywhere near as good as the Swedish originals.
I always felt that Caleb Carr’s The Alienist would make a great film. I know it got picked up by a studio but has been stuck in treatment hell for the past 10 years.
THE ALIENIST is good, but the second in the Kriezler series, ANGEL OF DARKNESS, is terrific…and it boasts a unique villain, to boot.
THE ALIENIST was the first thing that came to my mind.
….any other comments on day of the jackal? wonderful film. was wondering on any other insights Carcaterra had on its adaption.
thanks for these lists.
I’m a little surprised that neither of the films made from Clive Cussler’s Dirk Pitt books (Raise the Titanic! and Sahara) made the “worst” list. The Pitt series is one that seems tailor-made to work as an action-film franchise, but the adaptations haven’t worked out well at all. Carcaterra would likely cite Cussler’s difficult relationships with his filmmakers as the root of the problem, although there are probably cases to be made on both sides of that particular equation.
In the “adaptations someone should make” department, my two picks would be The Eight by Katherine Neville and the Event Group series by David Golemon. Both would be complicated projects, but the Neville has always struck me as a Hitchcock picture begging to be made, and the Golemon series has a really interesting mix of science fiction and action elements.
I, too, was surprised to not see Cussler’s name mentioned — especially at then end when talking about authors who understand that there’s no such thing as the perfect adaptation (like Grisham) and authors who finally figure it out in the end that complaining only hurts themselves in the end (like Rice).
I suppose, like with everything related to Sahara, he simply whined to Carcaterra about his unfair treatment and got himself taken out of that too.
Couldn’t agree more regarding Neville’s The Eight. Excellent book with a story and characters that could really shine with the right director and actors. Unfortunately if and when they finally do bring it to the screen they will almost certainly muck it up. *sigh*
Berlin Game, Mexico Set, London Match – that’s a trilogy I don’t see mentioned. While I agree on most of Mr. Carcaterra choices, I believe Bernard Samson should have a chance on the Big Screen. The 12 episodes BBC made for TV adaptation was a complete let down (bad 80′s TV to the core). The great Len Deighton was so displeased he refused to let it go to VHS. Now, the good news — I’m delighted to report that as I’m writing Len’s people are talking to Quentin’s people (yeap, that QT) for the ultimate Game, Set, Match adaptation. Come on QT, get those rights and show us the utlimate layer this espionage saga.
Interesting read. Thanks for posting.
How about Rainbow Six or anything with Richard marcinko’s name on it?
I worked with John Farris, the author and screenwriter of THE FURY for years.
One of the best lessons for any book author working with Hollywood was summed up by John after a producer changed his story quite a bit from the original.
“Their job is to make a movie. I already wrote the story and it’s in the book.” He told me.
But the best advice to manage expectations for book authors in Hollywood was some I gave a client after optioning his book series to Paramount for Tom Cruise.
“Congrats,” I told him “You got a lot of money for optioning your books to the folks who bought the MISSION IMPOSSIBLE franchise, turned Mr Phelps into a Russian traitor and killed him. Cash your check, clap your hands together and walk away from the table like a Las Vegas blackjack dealer at the end of their shift.”
Great post Mike! Love Carcaterra and can’t wait to see another of his novels adapted for the big screen!
Christopher McQuarrie is doing the Jack Reacher series.
Talk about a book that should be made into a movie, I read a fiction novel 10 years ago called A Distant Crossing. It was premised on a financial and monetary meltdown. It was riveting, and seems we are living the plot right now. It wasn’t so much Armagedon, as what happens when all the “smart guys” screw up, and the rest of us are left to pick up the pieces. It’s uncanny how it mirrors what’s happening today.
William Diehl’s The Hunt is by far the best one never made.
I flinch most of the time when I read that one of my favorite authors’ book is going to be made into a movie. Most of the time, the movie is going to bomb.
James Rollins’ SIGMA Force was recently optioned by Dino De Laurentiis. According to Mr. Rollins’ site, Mr. De Laurentiis wants a new story for film (i.e. one that won’t be adapted from one of the novels).
Sleepers is a piece of crap. Carcaterra practically makes up the story and he sold it like a ‘semi-autobiographical’ novel. HA! Semi-autiobiographical my ass!!! I don’t give him a cent…
Any of the last four thrillers by Christopher Rice would make excellent movies, too!
The Butcher’s Boy and Sleeping Dogs by Thomas Perry really should be made into a movie. Done right it would be extraordinary.
Yes, yes, yes! And the Jane Whitefield books…!
Second that – those two books deserve big-screen treatment. Seeing Perry’s Jane Whitefield novels – particularly Dance for the Dead and Shadow Woman – become movies would also be quite cool.
Someone should do Shane Stevens’s The Anvil Chorus.
Intersting how the books that should be made into films are mostly all written by board members (current and former) of International Thriller Organization who created and run Thriller fest. Good for them for pushing themselves I guess but there are so mnay other books out there.
The other lists are pretty spot on. Poor Clive Cussler a perfect example of having your books destroyed
what…. No John Grisham on the list?
In the good list or in the bad lists? or both?:)
This list is missing films by the great John LeCarre.
Tinker Tailor Soldier Spy is the best thriller of all time.
The sequel Smiley’s People is also gigantic.
I understand plans are afoot to remake Tinker Tailor. Frankly, I don’t see how it can be done. Ian Richardson gave one of his best performances in T.T.S.S.
Loved Tinker Tailor. Guinness… awesome!