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David pinner ritual
David pinner ritual








david pinner ritual
  1. David pinner ritual driver#
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david pinner ritual

As a result of the film's popularity, Ritual became a much sought-after collector's item, and was being sold for £400 to £500 on eBay. "I then sold the film rights of the book to Christopher Lee in 1971 – the basic idea and the structure of it was used for The Wicker Man." Pinner has said that he likes the film, but feels that it lacks the humour of the novel. Pinner discussed the book in a 2011 interview.

david pinner ritual

Edward Woodward stars as the policeman, renamed Sergeant Neil Howie. In 1973, Ritual was used as the basis for The Wicker Man, a British horror film directed by Robin Hardy and written for the screen by Anthony Shaffer. But, be warned, like The Wicker Man, it is quite likely to test your dreams of leaving the city for a shady nook by a babbling brook." Adaptations Films Reception īob Stanley of The Guardian wrote that " Ritual's opulent dialogue, with the sickly richness of its countryside, and Pinner's decaying village, can stand alone from the book's illustrious successor.

David pinner ritual driver#

While driving to his agent's office with the only completed copy of Ritual in existence, Pinner accidentally left the manuscript on the roof of the car it would most likely have fallen off and been lost forever if another driver had not alerted Pinner to his mistake. He would write sections of the novel on the tube train on his way into the West End, and even on his dressing room floor. Pinner wrote it in seven weeks, while he was still acting in The Mousetrap. Ĭlowes suggested that Pinner instead expand Ritual into a novel, promising that he would get it published.

David pinner ritual full#

However, Winner deemed the treatment to be "too full of imagery", and Pinner's agent, Jonathan Clowes, felt that Winner might sit on the project for a long time. Film director Michael Winner liked Pinner's Ritual treatment, and considered making it his next film, with English actor John Hurt in mind for the lead role. He decided to write a film treatment that dealt with the occult (like Fanghorn) but which was also a detective story (like The Mousetrap). In 1966, when Pinner was 26, he had just written the vampire comedy Fanghorn, and was playing the lead role of Sergeant Trotter in Agatha Christie's The Mousetrap in the West End of London. During his short stay, Hanlin deals with psychological trickery, sexual seduction, ancient religious practices and nightmarish sacrificial rituals. An English police officer named David Hanlin - a puritanical Christian - is asked to investigate what appears to be the ritualistic murder of a local child in an enclosed rural Cornish village.










David pinner ritual