So what's it about? The film is based on a series of articles in the L.A. Times by Paul Lieberman and was picked up soon after it's publication in 2008 by Warner Bros. who, in turn, hired former L.A. cop turned novelist Will Beall to adapt. The major focus of Lieberman's article were a specialized L.A.P.D. unit set up in the '40s to fight the growing influence of the East Coast Mafia, namely that from infamous gangster Mickey Cohen, a mogul who started as muscle for Al Capone in Chicago. It definitely sounds like some very pulpy, very exciting material.
With that in mind, Latino Review claims that Warner Bros. has five other candidates ready to call should Aronofsky pass (and we presume this means Affleck has passed as well?). Those names? Paul Greengrass, Francis Lawrence, Martin Campbell, Scott Cooper and Greg Berlanti.
But if those choices seem a bit obvious, the latter two do not. Scott Cooper only has one film under his belt, the small but big-hearted "Crazy Heart." Jumping to what is shaping up to be a big tentpole vehicle for WB seems like a big step for the director and a gamble for the studio. And while Berlanti has gained some heat at the studio for his script for "Green Lantern" (and he's being tasked with "The Flash" and "Green Lantern 2") his directorial jobs have been quite different in scope, centering on middle-of-the-road romcom fare like "The Broken Hearts Club" and the upcoming "Life As We Know It." We can only suppose that Cooper and Berlanti's names are there should the picture take on a more character driven approach.
As always, none of these directors could end up taking the gig, but Warner Bros. seem to be making decisions fairly quickly these days (those "Superman" directing rumors ended a lot sooner than we thought they would) so we wouldn't be surprised if something official came sooner rather than later.
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