‘Devolution’, A Bigfoot Book By ‘World War Z’ Author Max Brooks, Has Been Picked Up By Legendary
Legendary Entertainment has acquired the screen rights toDevolution, a new book byWorld War ZauthorMax Brooks. The book, which just hit shelves today, is subtitled “A Firsthand Account of the Rainier Sasquatch Massacre,” and is Brooks' exploration of the legend of Bigfoot.
Oddly, this isn’t the first time Legendary has been associated with this project. Get the details below.
The Hollywood Reporterbrings word that Legendary has picked up the rights to Brooks' new book, though it’s unclear if a film or TV adaptation is being planned. The outlet also reminds us that the company has actually worked with Brooks on this story in the past. In 2012, LegendaryhiredBrooks,Lostdirector Jack Bender, and writer David Leslie Johnson (Wrath of the Titans,The Walking Dead) to develop the concept, but Brooks ultimately decided he wanted to write it as book first. With that step now completed, Legendary is still interested in the idea – though neither Bender nor Johnson are on board anymore.
Here’s how THR describes the story ofDevolution:
The story is set in a model eco-community town in the shadow of Mt. Rainier that, in the aftermath of a volcanic eruption, is rampaged by ferocious beasts known as the Sasquatch. The tale is told via the lens of town resident Kate Holland. It is described as “part survival narrative, part bloody horror tale, part scientific journey into the boundaries between truth and fiction.”
LikeWorld War Zbefore it, this book is partially told from the perspective of a fictional version of Brooks himself; in that book, the premise is that he travelled the world interviewing survivors of the zombie apocalypse, and inDevolution, he’s conducting a scientific investigation into the Bigfoot tales and reproducing the fictional Kate Holland’s journal entries alongside his work. Brooks, who is the son of comedian Mel Brooks, wrote forSaturday Night Livefor a couple of years in the early 2000s and also has a “story by” credit on the 2016 movieThe Great Wall.
World War Zwas adapted into a 2013 movie starring Brad Pitt, which had a troubled production and ultimately ended up making more than $540 million worldwide. Fans of the book were disappointed that the movie slimmed down the scope of the story to a more traditional narrative, but sinceDevolutionseems to be a more focused story, perhaps that same issue won’t be a problem in this adaptation.