Keanu Reeves In Talks To Join Martin Scorsese’s Period Serial Killer Series ‘The Devil In The White City’

A decade ago, a feature film adaptation of the Erik Larson book The Devil In The White City was being developed as a directing vehicle at Paramount Pictures for Martin Scorsese with Leonardo DiCaprio set to star in the American serial tale set years before the turn of the century in 1893.

The project was more recently converted into a streaming series at Hulu and there is now word from Deadline that Keanu Reeves (John Wick, The Matrix) is being courted for a role, this would be the actor’s first jump to television excluding the made-for-TV film Babes In Toyland co-starring Drew Barrymore.

It’s unclear if Reeves would be playing the role of architect Daniel H. Burnham or the doctor/serial killer Henry H. Holmes.

Here’s how Deadline describes the project:

The Devil in the White City tells the true story of two men, an architect and a serial killer, whose fates were forever linked by The Chicago World’s Fair of 1893. It follows Daniel H. Burnham, a brilliant and fastidious architect racing to make his mark on the world and Henry H. Holmes, a handsome and cunning doctor who fashioned his own pharmaceutical “Murder Castle” on fair grounds – a palace built to seduce, torture and mutilate young women. The story takes the viewer on a tour of murder, romance and mystery in the gilded age.

Todd Field will direct the first two episodes.

If Keanu Reeves signs on it’s unknown how this would affect the shoot for John Wick 5, the final chapter in the Lionsgate action series. The final installment that could go into production before or after Chad Stahelski’s Highlander reboot, which has British actor Henry Cavill attached for a role, stars shooting.

Lionsgate recently announced that John Wick 4 has been delayed to March 24, 2023.

SOURCE: DEADLINE

EXCLUSIVE: Oscar-Winning Screenwriter of ‘The Imitation Game’ Graham Moore To Make Directorial Debut With ‘The Outfit’ For FilmNation

The Ronin has exclusively learned that screenwriter Graham Moore is expected to make his directorial debut for a new project at FilmNation Entertainment titled The Outfit. Moore won an Oscar for Best Adapted Screenplay thanks to his work on the WWII tech-drama The Imitation Game.

Plot details concerning The Outfit are currently unknown but is aiming to shoot sometime in 2021 as Moore is assembling his production team.

THE IMITATION GAME – In 1939, newly created British intelligence agency MI6 recruits Cambridge mathematics alumnus Alan Turing (Benedict Cumberbatch) to crack Nazi codes, including Enigma — which cryptanalysts had thought unbreakable. Turing’s team, including Joan Clarke (Keira Knightley), analyze Enigma messages while he builds a machine to decipher them. Turing and team finally succeed and become heroes, but in 1952, the quiet genius encounters disgrace when authorities reveal he is gay and send him to prison.

Moore had been previously set to direct a sci-fi thriller titled Naked Is The Best Disguise for Studio8 according to a 2018 article from The Hollywood Reporter. The project based on Graham’s spec-script would have been his directorial debut, but the sci-fi movie seemingly never materialized.

Disguise, which takes place over the course of one night, is set in a near future in which new technology allows one person’s memories to be extracted and inserted into someone else. It centers on an illegal memory dealer who is accused of murdering a man who she does not believe she even knows.

Almost a decade ago, Graham Moore was tapped to adapt the Leonardo DiCaprio and Martin Scorsese serial killer project The Devil In The White City based on the novel by Erik Larson before it pivoted from a feature film to a television series for Paramount Television/Hulu.

FilmNation is behind films such as Promising Young Woman, Logan Lucky, The Nest, The Greyhound, The 355, The Big Sick, Suspiria remake, and the Emmy-winning HBO series I Know This Much Is True starring Mark Ruffalo as twin brothers.