My original Saint novel, CAPTURE THE SAINT,
is the only Saint novel in which the copyright rests with someone other than Leslie Charteris. That honor belongs to me. For that reason, television and movie producers often contact me about acquiring the rights to this singular adventure -- and then send a contract proposal that, in the fine print, give them all sorts of rights to which they are not entitled. This has happened more than three times in the past four years. The TV rights to the Saint character are currently in the hands of my buddy Bill Macdonald; Robert Evans has sequel rights to his Val Kilmer film, and RKO has remake rights to their old films. Capture the Saint, of course, is a wonderful book, written by a true genius and approved by the Estate of Leslie Charteris. The literary concept and execution of the novel (although the execution was not fatal) is that it replicates, chapter by chapter, the progression of styles used by Charteris between the 1930's and the 1950's. Actually, it begins in the style of the 1950's, then works backwards to the 30's and forward again --not in time, but in writing style. Of course, it's not a copy of Charteris' style exactly, but rather a combination of affectionate homage and occasional outright satire of Charteris' intentionally overwritten prose. He once said that this is what his readers paid for, much as Cadillac owners pay for the big fins and all that chrome. Striped of his verbosity and prolixity, he said, he was left with his skinny "fundaments" exposed. Before I wrote THE SAINT: A NOVEL (the movie tie-in) the publisher read CAPTURE THE SAINT, and said "today's readers are not sophisticated enough to get the humor. In the new novel for us, can you be less literary?" I replied, "You mean, dumb it down?" "Yeah, that's what we mean." Well, I don't think today's readers are dumb or not sophisticated enough to get my humor. However, I did alter the writing style for the novelization - more streamlined, etc. I wanted to keep Charteris' in-joke approach, but I needed a different way of pulling it off. Hence, I crammed the book with all manner of references to old Saint stories, characters, actors, titles, and even worked in the Bishop and the Actress in the first chapter.
If you want a copy of CAPTURE THE SAINT, be prepared to pay well over $100.00. They are collectors items as the first edition was limited to 600 signed and numbered copies, and the second edition (from Volvo) was only 200 copies distributed at the international test drive of their new vehicles in, I believe, 1998 or 1999.
CAPTURE THE SAINT will be reprinted soon via The Authors Guild "Back in Print" program. And yes, movie and TV producers still call me about the rights. As Mr. Macdonald has the TV rights to the Saint character, it only makes sense to allow his company the opportunity to make a television adaptation. We will discuss this further in the near future...stay tuned and watch for the sign of the Saint...he will be back!

I'm glad to see Capture The Saint will be coming out in an affordable copy. Please keep us updated.
Posted by: Randy Johnson | March 28, 2007 at 04:09 PM
I am anxious to see the new Saint. Hope it's better than the Val Kilmer affair.
Posted by: david Zarkin | April 03, 2007 at 06:18 AM
Matt Damon would make a good "Saint" imo
Posted by: Mike Barer | April 03, 2007 at 05:22 PM
So you had to test drive a Swedish car to get the book? What book do you get for test driving a Dodge?
Posted by: david Zarkin | April 07, 2007 at 05:02 AM
SWEET a $100 EBAY HERE I COME!!!
Posted by: Evil Dr. WebbwerX | April 16, 2007 at 11:20 PM
Rob Lowe as The Saint it could happen.
Posted by: Mike Barer | April 26, 2007 at 04:13 PM
Rob Lowe??? No, I don't think so. Eddie Murphy wanted to play the Saint back in the 1990's -- and someone wanted to make the Saint female...Simone Templar (no kidding) a few years back..
I have a hunch who's going to play the Saint in the new version, but I'm in top secret mode :-)
Posted by: burl barer | April 26, 2007 at 11:01 PM
How does RKO have remake rights to their old films if they no longer exist?
Posted by: Delmo Walters Jr. | May 28, 2007 at 11:31 PM
RKO exists. In fact, they tried to get TV rights to CAPTURE THE SAINT but had all sorts of other things in the contract that were completely unacceptable. So, I passed.
BB
Posted by: burl barer | June 13, 2007 at 02:46 AM