Cape Fear’s Success Means This Scrapped Christian Bale Project Needs To Be Revived ASAP

Cape Fear is the latest hit on Apple TV, and its success means this long-scrapped Christian Bale movie project needs to be revived. The latest adaptation of Cape Fear is yet another translation of John D. MacDonald’s The Executioners, the book that also inspired the 1962 and 1991 movies. The twisted tale of revenge has kept viewers enthralled for generations.

The new series takes liberties with the original story, but keeps the classic suspenseful core intact. Cape Fear is one of those archetypal thrillers that never seems to lose its edge, even when expanded into a TV series. Following in the footsteps of Robert Mitchum and Robert De Niro, Javier Bardem is the latest screen icon to put his spin on the dastardly Max Cady character.

The success of Apple’s show has put author John D. MacDonald back in focus, and his stunning catalog of novels is a relatively untapped resource for Hollywood. MacDonald was one of the finest pulp fiction writers of the 20th century, publishing dozens of bestsellers between the ’50s and ’80s. Though they are certainly products of their time, they are classics in their own right.

Cape Fear isn’t the only adaptation of MacDonald’s work, but it’s the sole project that has ever gained any traction. Some noteworthy attempts to adapt MacDonald’s work stalled and were lost in development hell, but that could change. Cape Fear‘s newest version might just be enough to resurrect a long-dead John D. MacDonald adaptation that originally featured Christian Bale in the lead role.

Christian Bale Was Set To Star In A John D. MacDonald Adaptation Back In 2015

Christian Bale smiling on a red carpet for The Bride
Credit: Julie Edwards/Future Image/Cover Images

Hollywood’s attempts to adapt John D. MacDonald’s The Deep Blue Good-by are numerous and noteworthy, and names like Oliver Stone and Leonardo DiCaprio were floated at one point. Though those half-hearted attempts ultimately stalled, the film nearly went before the cameras back in 2015. Christian Bale was tapped to star and James Mangold was to direct.

The first book in MacDonald’s beloved Travis McGee series follows the “salvage expert” as he tracks down a manipulative criminal who has left a trail of tortured women in his wake. The novel is ablaze with MacDonald’s cynical view of mid-century life. It’s unclear how much the 2015 movie would have changed things, but Bale was an ideal candidate to play MacDonald’s beach bum anti-hero. Sadly, the production was derailed by a freak injury.

Before filming The Big Short, Bale suffered an ACL tear which required surgery. The action-oriented McGee role would have proved too taxing for the Oscar winner, so the entire adaptation was suddenly scrapped. Despite the fact that locations were scouted, and a tentative start date was established for the summer of 2015, The Deep Blue Good-by was totally canned.

No plans were announced to pick the project back up, and it has sat in limbo for more than a decade. As proved by Cape Fear, MacDonald’s work is still viable in the 2020s. The Deep Blue Good-by could easily be resurrected, and it’s not too late for Christian Bale to play Travis McGee. The only real question is whether it should be a movie or TV show.

The Travis McGee Series Is Ripe For Adaptation

Alan Ritchson’s Jack Reacher in military uniform in Prime Video’s Reacher

Ironically, John D. MacDonald’s most famous books haven’t fared well when adapted. The Travis McGee series has been the subject of two movies, but neither was very successful. However, that’s not because they were bad, but because they were merely the victims of poor timing. Now is the time for a full-fledged adaptation of the 21-book magnum opus because there are more avenues for long-form storytelling.

Rod Taylor played McGee in Darker Than Amber in 1970 and Sam Elliott starred in the 1983 TV movie, Travis McGee.

Lee Child’s Reacher books were directly inspired by McGee, and a TV adaptation similar to the aforementioned Reacher could prove to be a monster hit. A Travis McGee TV series could adapt one book per season, stretching out the novels over multiple episodes. McGee’s adventures are varied enough that the show should never get stale or repetitive. What’s more, they wouldn’t be too expensive to film.

Cape Fear is proof positive that John D. MacDonald’s books are worthy of adaptation in the modern day, but it will take a bit of imagination and good luck. While the Christian Bale project may never see the light of day, that shouldn’t discourage other creators from bringing McGee to the big or small screen once again.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter


64gcok6nkcxvi2amtvkk3xx7cbc-1.jpg


Release Date

June 4, 2026

Network

Apple TV

Showrunner

Nick Antosca

Directors

Amanda Marsalis, Morten Tyldum, Stephen Williams, Jon S. Baird, Jonathan van Tulleken, Reed Morano, S.J. Clarkson, Trey Edward Shults

Writers

Peter Blake, Alan Page Arriaga, Tara Shivkumar, Maria Jacquemetton, Diana Pawell



Leave a Comment