NOBODY'S PERFECT
The Independent
|November 08, 2024
Eddie Redmayne has won rave reviews as an assassin in a TV adaptation of The Day of the Jackal’ but Geoffrey Macnab says it isn’t a patch on the 1973 movie starring Edward Fox
Eddie Redmayne as an ace assassin? To some people, the casting for the new TV adaptation of The Day of the Jackal doesn't make any sense. The whole point of the killer - the titular "Jackal" - is that he can always melt into a crowd. He's the everyman who doesn't attract a second glance, the classless, bland-looking, unthreatening Englishman without any obvious machismo. Bank tellers and railway station guards who speak with him one moment will probably already have forgotten what he looked like or said the next. He’s Mr Nobody with a concealed gun.
Fantastic Beasts actor Redmayne is a dubious choice for such a role – an immediately recognisable movie star with striking leading-man looks. Reviews have been effusive in their praise of his performance, but reservations around the casting remain. More than three decades ago, High Noon director Fred Zinnemann chose the opposite tack when adapting Frederick Forsyth’s novel The Day of the Jackal for the first time. His classic 1973 adaptation worked so well precisely because Zinnemann didn’t choose a star for the role, opting instead for the then little-known Edward Fox.
Other major names had been angling hard for the part. “Before [Fox] was cast, my father got a telephone call from America from Jack Nicholson,” Jonathan Woolf, the son of producer John Woolf, tells me. “Nicholson had read the book, knew the film was coming, and was absolutely desperate to play the part – so desperate he said, ‘I am going to get on the plane, pay for the ticket myself, come and see you, and persuade you to cast me.’” The elder Woolf met the Cuckoo’s Nest star in London, telling him: “Thank you very much, but I’m afraid that, great actor that you are, that’s the problem!”
Nicholson wasn’t the only one. ”You’re too well known,” Zinnemann warned Roger Moore (then at the start of his stint as James Bond) after he too came sniffing round the part.
यह कहानी The Independent के November 08, 2024 संस्करण से ली गई है।
हजारों चुनिंदा प्रीमियम कहानियों और 10,000 से अधिक पत्रिकाओं और समाचार पत्रों तक पहुंचने के लिए मैगज़्टर गोल्ड की सदस्यता लें।
क्या आप पहले से ही ग्राहक हैं? साइन इन करें
The Independent से और कहानियाँ
The Independent
This will consign unfair and outdated treatment to history
For too long, our mental health laws have been a relic of another era. The 1983 Mental Health Act is older than many of the clinicians now working under it.
2 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Do you ever ignore Foreign Office advice on your trips?
Q You wrote about Guatemala’s tourism minister criticising the Foreign Office travel advice for his country. Do you scrupulously follow the rules, Simon?
1 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
ON THIS DAY
1154: Henry II became King of England.
1 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Getting caught on Coldplay kisscam was 'bad, so cliche'
Ex-HR manager speaks for first time about infamous clinch
3 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Melania film will not stray behind her painted smile
A new documentary follows Donald Trump's wife in the run- up to his second inauguration. It is the latest in a spate of 'fly on the walls' that tell us very little
4 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
G7 calls for Lai's release as pressure mounts on China
The G7 nations have issued a joint statement calling on China to end the persecution of Hong Kong media mogul Jimmy Lai, stepping up the international pressure on Beijing to release him.
2 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Palestine Action prisoners are dying, warns physician
Palestine Action activists who have been on hunger strike for months while awaiting trial for alleged break-ins or criminal damage are dying, according to a doctor.
3 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Russian guards 'illegally cross border into Estonia'
Estonia has accused three Russian border guards of illegally crossing into Nato territory on a hovercraft without permission.
2 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
All cheques and no balance in latest ranty performance
He's done it: Donald Trump has found a new low.
3 mins
December 19, 2025
The Independent
Why MPs are revolting over plans to curb trial by jury
As a Christmas gift, yet another backbench rebellion must be something of a disappointment for the prime minister and his lord chancellor, David Lammy. Almost 40 Labour MPs have signed a letter to Keir Starmer telling him that Lammy’s proposal to scale back the number of trials by jury is “madness”. Signatories, led by Hull East MP Karl Turner, also warn that “there is a growing number of our colleagues who are not prepared to support these proposals”.
2 mins
December 19, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size

