Tye Sheridan and Chloe Moretz in "Dark Places"The cast is certainly buzzy enough. Charlize Theron stars as Libby Day, adult survivor of a gruesome massacre in rural Kansas who gets pulled into an amateur reinvestigation of the crime's mysterious circumstances. (Think Mavis Gary in Young Adult, but instead of just being spoiled she's been exposed to unspeakable horror and then left to grow up feral.) The supporting parts, themselves all tortured or stunted souls, are populated by critical favorites including Christina Hendricks, Corey Stoll, Tye Sheridan, Chloe Moretz, and Nicholas Hoult. Depending on how writer-director Gilles Paquet-Brenner plays his cards, there could be a major breakout performance from any member of the cast. He's a relatively unknown quantity, but he does have experience directing Oscar-winning leading ladies (Kristin Scott Thomas in Sarah's Key and Marion Cotillard in Pretty Things).
Is Dark Places stuck doing the distribution limbo? Perhaps the production company is holding off on the hope that Gone Girl will be a smash, and they can then capitalize on the new cachet that "From the author of.." will bring. If twisted stories centered around deeply unlikeable women come fully into fashion, at least one other Flynn project stands to benefit.
It's recently been announced that Sharp Objects, the first of her three novels and the most skin-crawlingly creepy by far, will be developed as a series by Entertainment One Television with Marti Noxon on board as showrunner. At its core Sharp Objects is a small-town murder mystery, which suits the drama series format. The story follows a reporter who has to return to her hometown to cover the murder of two preteen girls after a stint in a psychiatric hospital, and has what Flynn calls a "moist, gothic" tone.
I'm going to tell you right now, it gets weird.
The three principal characters are deeply f***ed-up women. Noxon, responsible for some of the darkest arcs on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, should be right at home in this territory. If well-executed it has potential for all the gruesome twistiness of True Detective, with gender politics more in line with Top of the Lake. For the time being, though, it's just a glint in a producer's eye. All the hurdles of development and pilot season and series pickup are yet to be passed. Let's say a prayer to the development gods that these projects see the light of day.
Are you excited for Dark Places? For the Sharp Objects series, who would you like to see rip each other apart as a toxic mother-daughter pair?