🔴The Director of ‘The Fugitive’ Returns to What He Does Best — but Not on the Big Screen📽 P B P✔
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Now, Davis, best known for his 1993 classic “The Fugitive,” has a new story about the threat of nuclear catastrophe that’s as provocative and exciting as any of his previous work. This time, however, his manner of expression has taken a different form: “Disturbing the Bones,” a political thriller Davis wrote with Jeff Biggers, is a novel. “It started as a screenplay, but I got frustrated because I wanted to have so much backstory and texture,” Davis told . “I kept wanting to add details.”
Indeed, one of the great pleasures of “Disturbing the Bones” — a complex weaving together of personal drama and global politics that examines the repercussions when the skeleton of a missing civil rights activist is found during an archaeological dig in Southern Illinois — is the wealth of detail that accumulates from page one and never lets up. Davis has always applied an adept journalistic eye to his material. The anthropological observations about how cops and criminals really operate in “Code of Silence” and “Above the Law” are what elevate those films so far above other films of their ilk. But co-writing a novel really enabled him to give those impulses free rein.