Thursday, January 06, 2011

Uncover the Dark Mystery of a Sunken Town in Phantasmat (Collector's Edition), New from BFG

Games of Mystery

Games of Mystery is pleased to announce the availability of a new mystery casual game from Big Fish Games released today and available to BFG Club members. You can find out more about these games by visiting our Mystery Games: Big Fish Download Games page or by clicking on the links provided below.

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Phantasmat (Collector's Edition)
Phantasmat (Collector's Edition)

After crashing your car in the middle of nowhere, you stumble upon The Drowned Dead Hotel, a lonely forgotten structure leaning from a cliff. Beneath lies a dark and cold lake that used to be a lively town. What secrets are buried at the bottom of the muddy waters? Who are the mysterious inhabitants of the hotel? Uncover the dark mystery of a sunken town in this beautifully hand-drawn adventure game, that blends multiple game modes with an engaging and stirring storyline, and get to the bottom of a long forgotten tragedy.

This is a special Collector's Edition full of exclusive extras not available in the standard game, including a bonus adventure, wallpapers, replayable levels, and more.

Phantasmat (Collector's Edition) may be downloaded and purchased for $13.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. A demonstration version (234.61 MB) may be downloaded and played for free for one hour.

Watch a preview video below:

Get any standard game for $6.99 with a Big Fish Game Club membership. Other benefits include the $2.99 Daily Deal, Tomorrow's Game Today, and special member rewards. And if you purchase any 6 games within a single month, you earn a free game with the Big Fish Game Club Monthly Punch Card! (Collector's Editions earn 3 punches each, half-way towards your free game!)

Read Ms. Terri's reviews of the adventure and casual mystery games featured on this site, including Midnight Mysteries: The Edgar Allan Poe Conspiracy, Nancy Drew Dossier: Lights, Camera, Curses!, Enlightenus, and many more!

Big Fish Games: Bestsellers

Big Fish Games: New releases

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Games of Mystery is your source for mystery-themed video, electronic, and board games, parties for kids and adults, and murder mystery weekends and mystery getaway vacations!

Wednesday, January 05, 2011

The Maze Runner Adaptation Gets a New Screenwriter

The Maze Runner by James Dashner
More information about the book

A month or so ago we reported that Twilight director Caterine Hardwicke had signed on to direct the film adaptation of the young adult thriller The Maze Runner by James Dashner.

At the time, Dashner himself was reportedly writing the screenplay. Now the Los Angeles Times is reporting that Noah Oppenheim, who most recently wrote the English language screenplay for the remake of the Swedish thriller Snabba Cash, will adapt the book.

The Maze Runner is the first in what is expected to be a trilogy of novels featuring a teenager named Thomas, who in the opening chapter wakes up surrounded by kids who welcome him to the Glade, a large, open expanse surrounded by stone walls—a maze from which escape seems impossible.

Crime Dramas (and more) in Development at the Networks

Telemystery: Mystery and Suspense on Television

We thought we had been keeping up with all the news involving potential crime dramas being considered by the television networks for next season.

We missed a few!

Entertainment Weekly has a list of projects in early development that have at least been moved along to the script stage. We're listing those that are crime drama-ish below; we were aware of many of these (indicated by a link at the end of the brief description to one of our posts on the subject) but some are clearly new to us.

ABC:

True Lies. Based on the 1994 film, True Lies, starring Arnold Alois Schwarzenegger. (OMN post)

Baker Street Letters. Two brothers rent Sherlock Holmes’ old office space and respond to letters that still come to the dead sleuth.

CBS:

Untitled project based on the Jane Whitefield novels by Thomas Perry about a one-woman witness protection program. (post)

Untitled project starring Jason Alexander as a former TV star who works for his ex-wife’s detective agency when he’s down and out.

Desperado. A modern-day western crime drama set in Texas. (post)

Untitled project that chronicles the first female Chief of Police in Newark NJ. (post)

The Wild Wild West. Update of the series that starred Robert Conrad and Ross Martin. (post)

Treadstone. Based on Robert Ludlum’s Jason Bourne series of novels about a group of spies working for the Treadstone Corp. (post)

CW:

Hawkshaw. Sexy, mysterious 20-something doesn’t know his true identity but believes he is a detective and possible descendant of Sherlock Holmes who starts solving crimes. (post)

Fox:

Alcatraz. A drama about the mysteries and secrets of the most infamous prison of all time. (post)

Untitled project about a female college student who fights crimes in China. (post)

Every Bitter Thing by Leighton Gage (Book Review)

Mysterious Reviews: Mystery, Suspense, Thriller and Crime Novel Reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books

Every Bitter Thing by Leighton Gage. A Mario Silva Investigation. Soho Crime Hardcover, December 2010.

This creative and quite clever variation on the typical manor house mystery, where a group of apparent strangers come together only to have one of them start killing off the others, is highly entertaining, marred only slightly when the motive for the murders -- and hence the identity of the killer -- is revealed early on.

Read the full text of our review at Mysterious Reviews: Every Bitter Thing by Leighton Gage.

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Read the first chapters of Every Bitter Thing below.

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Mysterious Reviews is your source for the latest mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime novel reviews, edited by the Hidden Staircase Mystery Books.

Tuesday, January 04, 2011

George Clooney to Star in Film Adaptation of The Monster of Florence

The Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston
More information about the book

Deadline|New York is reporting that Fox 2000 has acquired the film rights to the true crime book The Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston and Italian crime reporter Mario Spezi.

George Clooney is on board to play Preston, who is probably best known to mystery readers as the co-author with Lincoln Child of the Pendergast series of thrillers.

The Monster of Florence describes the efforts of Preston and Spezi, who together set out to solve a series of unsolved murders that took place between 1974 and 1985 outside the Italian city. Christopher McQuarrie (The Usual Suspects, The Tourist) and Nathan Alexander (Valkyrie) will write the screenplay.

One Deadly Sister by Rod Hoisington is Today's Featured Free NookBook Mystery

MystereBooks: Mystery, Suspense, and Thriller eBooks

MystereBooks is pleased to feature a mystery title that is currently available as a NookBook for free from Barnes&Noble. We don't know how long it will be offered at this special price (typically only until a certain number of downloads have been completed), so download it today!

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One Deadly Sister by Rod Hoisington
More Information About One Deadly Sister by Rod Hoisington

One Deadly Sister by Rod Hoisington
A Raymond and Sandy Reid Mystery (1st in series)
EnteraBooks (NookBook)
Download Link

About One Deadly Sister (from the publisher): Ray Reid doesn't come looking for trouble, he simply wants to get past his Philadelphia divorce and start a new life, but woman-trouble comes looking for him.

Unfortunately, he arrives in the small Florida oceanside town just as someone decides to murder the local gubernatorial candidate. Reid doesn’t have a clue about women and gets seduced and framed—by a 70-year-old in a thong. He’s the perfect target for the local prosecutor who figures he has the ideal trial that’ll propel him to the US Senate.

Ray hasn’t bothered with his estranged sister up north for years but now, as a stranger in a hostile town, she’s his only hope. She holds an old grudge and resents having her life interrupted. After first telling him to go to hell, she reluctantly decides to at least check out her brother’s predicament.

This small step leads to an ever-increasing entanglement of deceit, double-cross, and danger, as she can’t leave well-enough alone and goes after the real killer.

Mysterious Reviews: Mysteries Reviewed by the Hidden Staircase Mystery BooksRead our Review of One Deadly Sister by Rod Hoisington at Mysterious Reviews.

Mr. E. Reviews The Guilty

Mr. E. reviews mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime drama television and film for Omnimystery

More drama than suspense thriller, the plot of ITV's 1992 two-part made-for-television movie The Guilty, especially during its first half, is utterly predictable, though credibly played out. The performances, however, are first rate, and Michael Kitchen, as the arrogant barrister trapped in a maelstrom of his own making, is particularly noteworthy.

Read the full text of our review at Mr. E. Reviews: The Guilty.

The Guilty is new on DVD today.

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Mr. E. Reviews is your source for mystery, suspense, thriller, and crime drama reviews of television and film.

Damages to Air on DIRECTV Starting January 5th

Telemystery: Mystery and Suspense on Television

DIRECTV customers are in for a real treat: Starting tomorrow, Wednesday January 5th, the satellite television provider will begin airing weekly episodes from the first season of Damages. Episodes from the second season begin on April 6th, from the third season on May 25th, with new episodes from the fourth season premiering exclusively on DIRECTV this summer.

The fourth season will consist of ten new episodes and will star Glenn Close and Rose Byrne as well as other principal cast members from previous seasons.

Get more information about the series on the DIRECTV: Damages website. Watch a short promo video below:

OMN Welcomes Carol K. Carr, Author of India Black

Omnimystery News: Authors on Tour

Omnimystery News is pleased to welcome Carol K. Carr as our guest today. Carol's debut mystery, also published today, is India Black (Berkley, January 2011 Trade Paperback, 978-0-425-23866-0), introduces "Madam of Espionage" India Black.

We're delighted that Carol sat down with us to answer a few questions about her new book.

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Carol K. Carr
Photo provided courtesy of
Carol K. Carr

What can you tell us about India Black?

India is the young and beautiful madam of a brothel in Victorian London. When a government minister dies in her establishment and the portfolio of War Office documents he was carrying goes missing, India finds herself blackmailed into helping the British government recover the case from the Russian agents who have stolen it. She is joined in the pursuit by a handsome British agent named French, and an odiferous street urchin called Vincent. The chase leads from the Russian embassy to one of London’s grand hotels, and finally across the English Channel to France.

From the synopsis, it seems this book could be classifed under several genres: Historical Fiction, Romance, Mystery. How would you describe your book?

It has elements of all those genres. I think of it as an old-fashioned adventure story, with some comic interludes and episodes of derring-do, and a few interesting historical facts tossed in for good measure.

How much of the story is historical fact? Was the plot inspired by actual events?

The historical events described in the book did indeed take place. The Turks did massacre Christian peasants who refused to pay their taxes to the Ottoman Empire, which led to reprisals against Muslim peasants by Christians. The Prime Minister of Great Britain, Benjamin Disraeli, did engage in a public debate with William Gladstone about the wisdom of invading the Ottoman Empire to prevent the massacres, while the Russians were anxious to invade in order to secure a warm water port on the Black Sea. It’s also true that Disraeli publicly committed the British army to fight the Russians, without realizing that the military was hopelessly undermanned. I don’t believe that information was ever stolen from a dead body in a brothel, but India is convinced it was.

If you had to pick just one sentence from the book as your favorite, which would it be?

My description of William Gladstone: “He was an impressive old bird, with a slab of a face roughly hewn into a hawk-like visage, enormous tufts of white side-whiskers, and a mouth like an Old Testament prophet who’d just gotten wind of the goings-on in Sodom and Gomorrah.” For some reason, it tickles me.

What prompted you to tell this story, to write this book?

India demanded that I tell it. I’m not kidding. She just appeared in my life one day and I knew I had to write her out of my head or she’d never leave me alone.

We're fans of series characters, that we get to know them within the context of more than one adventure. What's next for India Black?

I've signed a two-book contract with Berkley, and I’ve delivered the second in the series to my editor. I don’t have a fixed date for publication yet, but I’d anticipate that it will be sometime in 2012. On her next outing, India must protect the life of a Very Important Person at the castle at Balmoral (subtle hint as to the identity of said VIP), with assistance from Vincent and French.

Now that you've completed your first mystery (two if we count your completed manuscript for the second in the series), if you ventured off into another genre, what would it be?

I’d stick to espionage, but this time I’d set the book in South Africa during World War II. It would be much darker and grittier than the India series. I'm planning to write that novel one of these days, but right now I am concentrating on India.

If you could have written any crime novel already published, what would it be?

There are hundreds of books I wish I’d written. Maybe the Jackson Brodie series by Kate Atkinson, or any of the novels of Sarah Caudwell. Or some genre-changing work like The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.

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For more information about Carol, visit her website at CarolKCarr.com.

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India Black by Carol K. Carr
More information about the book

About India Black: When Sir Archibald Latham of the War Office dies from a heart attack while visiting her brothel, Madam India Black is unexpectedly thrust into a deadly game between Russian and British agents who are seeking the military secrets Latham carried.

Blackmailed into recovering the missing documents by the British spy known as French, India finds herself dodging Russian agents-and the attraction she starts to feel for the handsome conspirator.

Also available: India Black (Kindle edition).

Monday, January 03, 2011

New Red Band Trailer for The Mechanic Starring Jason Statham

The Mechanic (2011)

A week or so ago we posted a short clip from the upcoming remake of The Mechanic from CBS Films, starring Jason Statham as an elite assassin with a strict code and unique talen for cleanly eliminating targets.

Now, IGN has posted a new red band trailer for the film, which you can see below. Note: This trailer is rated R for violence, language and brief nudity.

More information about the film can be found on The Mechanic movie website. The Mechanic will be in theaters January 28th.

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