Known as “The Dickens of Detroit,” Elmore Leonard, who died 10 years ago at age 87, was a prolific author of short stories and novels. Mostly working in the genres of westerns and crime, more than 30 of his stories were adapted to the screen over the course of a writing career spanning 60 years. You can learn more about them in the 2023 book Paperback Celluloid: Elmore Leonard on Film by Andy Rohmer.

Some were bonafide smash hits, like Quentin Tarantino’s Jackie Brown, the John Travolta-starring Get Shorty, or the Library of Congress-approved 3:10 to Yuma, while others were duds. Rohmer watched them all — though he limited his efforts to film or TV films, excluding TV series.

He says the project started around five years ago. “I’m normally not a big reader of either noir or capers,” he tells Metro Times. “But I bumped into Swag, and I liked it so much that I read everything that was written about it. And I still think it’s his greatest masterpiece. I like it so much because of the way he portrays the second half of the 20th century, which was more or less when I was growing up.”

Rohmer says he embarked on this journey to see if there was a throughline across all of the stories. “I wanted to confirm my suspicion that although they were based on the same author, the films themselves are very, very different, and most of them have very little to do with the original material,” he says, adding, “[but] the real reason was fun.”

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It was a challenge to track down every film. While many were easily available on streaming services or DVD, Split Images, from 1992, proved difficult to track down.

“I found a VHS tape on eBay, in Australia,” he recalls. “I had it flown to the U.S. and burned into a DVD, but then you have to pay an extra 50 bucks or so because of potential copyright infringement. I don’t really know how that works. … but I managed to see them all.”

Rohmer arranged his book in chronological order of when the books were written, which he admits can be confusing. But he says he gained an appreciation for Leonard as a writer.

“One thing I did notice is one of Elmore Leonard’s fortes is his knack for dialogue,” he says. “You have really great dialogue and one-liners, which makes life easy for screenwriters because they [just] have to copy [and] paste. The dialogue is already there. … but the thing is, actors, direction, and delivery, like 70-to-80% of the time messes it completely up. On the page, you laugh when they say it. There are exceptions, but one of the biggest flaws is [the films] don’t capture the humor.”

He adds, “Nobody talks the way that Elmore Leonard writes.”

Rohmer says that the nature of filmmaking leaves the directors’ fingerprints all over the adaptations — something that irked Loenard throughout his life.

“Leonard was A, a commercial writer who wanted to sell his books to Hollywood,” he says. “He didn’t fancy himself a highbrow artist or anything like that. And B, he was very miffed whenever the adaptation did not [match] his vision. … So he was almost invariably disappointed with the productions.”

Rohmer adds, “The almost inevitable result if you try to be faithful to the letter or the spirit of somebody which is not you, it’s gonna be a bit flat. It’s hard to make something like that work with authenticity, whatever that means.”

In all, Rohmer surmises that of the film adaptations of Leonard’s books, “There’s like three or four great ones, maybe a dozen good ones, and there’s a couple of them that only if you’re writing about them, you would see them — like really fourth-rate, underproduced, really crappy.”

Rohmer says some of his favorites are the 2004 version of The Big Bounce, “which takes some liberties with the book, unlike the first version, but it’s really unpretentious,” he says. The 1989 adaptation of Cat Chaser “is pretty good as well,” he says.

“The total stinker is The Law at Randado,” a Western adapted as the 1990 movie Border Shootout.

Rohmer says it took him about a year to complete his project — but he might not be done. Hollywood interest in Leonard’s stories continues after his death.

“At the time I finished the book there were like three [to] five films in either pre-production or production, but some have been in production for 15 years,” he says, adding, “I may make a second edition.”

How many of these movies and TV shows based on Leonard’s stories have you seen? Take a look below.

3:10 to Yuma (1957) Directed by Delmer Daves. Written by Halsted Welles. Produced by David Heilweil. Based on a 1953 short story by Leonard about an impoverished rancher who takes on a risky job escorting a notorious outlaw to justice, the film was selected in 2012 for preservation in the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Credit: Courtesy photo
The Tall T (1957) Directed by Budd Boetticher. Written by Burt Kennedy. Produced by Harry Joe Brown. Based on Leonard’s 1955 short story The Captives, the film stars Randolph Scott, Richard Boone, and Maureen O’Sullivan, and tells the story of a former ranch foreman who is kidnapped along with an heiress, held for ransom by three outlaws. In 2000, it was selected for the United States National Film Registry by the Library of Congress as being “culturally, historically, or aesthetically significant.” Credit: Screenshot
Hombre (1967) Directed by Martin Ritt. Written by Irving Ravetch and Harriet Frank Jr. Produced by Martin Ritt and Irving Ravetch. Based on the fifth and final novel of Leonard’s early Western phase, published in 1961, the film stars Paul Newman as John Russell, a white man raised by Indigenous American who experiences racism because of his background. It received generally favorable reviews, thanks to portraying Indigenous Americans in a more positive light than typically seen in Westerns. Credit: Screenshot
The Big Bounce (1969) Directed by Alex March. Written by Robert Dozier. Produced by William Dozier. As Westerns faded from popularity, after an eight-year hiatus Leonard pivoted to a new style of crime stories. The Big Bounce, Leonard’s sixth novel, tells the story of Jack Ryan, a drifter and delinquent who has an affair with his boss’s girlfriend and must choose between a life of crime or an honest living. While the novel was set in Michigan’s Thumb, the film was set in and shot in California. It received generally bad reviews. Credit: Screenshot
The Moonshine War (1970) Directed by Richard Quine. Written by Elmore Leonard. Produced by Martin Ransohoff. Based on Leonard’s seventh novel, published in 1969, the story is set in Prohibition-era Kentucky and stars Patrick McGoohan, Richard Widmark, Alan Alda, and Will Geer. The film received generally negative reviews, and Leonard also reportedly did not like it. Credit: Screenshot
Valdez is Coming (1971) Directed by Edwin Sherin. Written by Roland Kibbee and David Rayfiel. Produced by Ira Steiner. Based on Leonard’s eighth novel, published in 1970, which marked a return to Westerns, the film stars Burt Lancaster, Susan Clark, Richard Jordan, and Jon Cypher. It tells the story of local constable Bob Valdez, who is tricked into killing an innocent Black man by the powerful rancher Frank Tanner and vows to get revenge. The film received generally negative reviews. Credit: Screenshot
Joe Kidd (1972) Directed by John Sturges. Written by Elmore Leonard. Produced by Sidney Beckerman and Robert Daley. This film was actually not based on a previously published story by Leonard and was instead the first he wrote as a screenplay. It stars Clint Eastwood as an ex-bounty hunter hired by a wealthy landowner to track down Mexican revolutionary leader Luis Chama. While it earned mixed reviews from critics, it was one of the highest-grossing Westerns that year, pulling in $6.3 million. Credit: Screenshot
Mr. Majestyk (1974) Directed by Richard Fleischer. Written by Elmore Leonard. Produced by Walter Mirisch. Another Leonard screenplay that was not based on a previously published story, although a character with the name “Mr. Majestyk” first appeared in The Big Bounce. Starring Charles Bronson as a melon farmer and Vietnam War veteran who comes into conflict with gangsters, the film received generally positive reviews. Credit: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
High Noon Part II: The Return of Will Kane (1980) Directed by Jerry Jameson. Written by Elmore Leonard. Produced by Edward J Montagne. This made for TV Western is a sequel to the classic 1952 film High Noon, based on a screenplay by Leonard that was not previously published as a story. (Leonard reportedly considered the original to be one of his favorite films, and the plot of 3:10 to Yuma seems clearly inspired by it.) It stars Lee Majors, David Carradine, and Pernell Roberts and first aired on CBS on November 15, 1980, in a two-hour time-slot. Credit: Screenshot
The Ambassador (1984) Directed by J. Lee Thompson. Written by Max Jack. Produced by Yoram Goblus and Menahem Golan. Only very loosely based on Leonard’s 1974 crime novel 52 Pick-Up, his first set in Detroit, the setting in this adaptation was changed to Tel Aviv and stars Robert Mitchum as the U.S. Ambassador to Israel, whose wife is caught on film having an affair with a member of the Palestinian Liberation Organization. It received generally negative reviews. Credit: Screenshot
Stick (1985) Directed by Burt Reynolds. Written by Elmore Leonard and Joseph Stinson. Produced by Jennings Lang and Robert Daley. Based on Leonard’s 1983 novel, his 21st, the film stars Burt Reynolds as Ernest “Stick” Stickley, a former car thief who gets caught up in a drug deal gone wrong in Florida and first appeared in Loeanard’s 1976 novel Swag. “I wanted to make that movie as soon as I read the book,” Reynolds once said. “I respected Leonard’s work. I felt I knew that Florida way of life, having been raised in the state. And I was that guy!” The film received generally negative reviews from critics, with Loenard saying he believed it deviated too much from his story. It was a box-office flop, grossing just $8.5 million against a $22 million budget. Credit: Screenshot
Fifty-Two Pickup (1986) Written by John Steppling. Produced by Yoram Goblus and Menahem Golan. This second adaptation of 52 Pick-Up changes the Detroit setting to Los Angeles but is otherwise a more faithful adaptation of the novel, about a businessman who is caught having an affair and is blackmailed. It stars Roy Scheider, Ann-Margret, and the Canadian singer and model Vanity. Like its previous adaptation, this version also received negative reviews, although the novel is considered an important milestone in Leonard’s style. Credit: Screenshot
The Rosary Murders (1987) Directed by Fred Walton. Written by Elmore Leonard and Fred Walton. Produced by Robert G Laurel. While Leonard helped write the screenplay, the source material is a 1978 novel written by former Detroit Catholic priest and journalist William X Kienzle, making this the only instance of Leonard adapting someone else’s work to the screen. Starring Donald Sutherland, the story is also set in Detroit, involving a series of murders in a Roman Catholic parish with the killer leaving a black rosary in each victim’s hand. (Fun fact: A young, pre-fame Jack White makes an uncredited appearance as an altar boy.) Credit: Screenshot
Desperado (1987) Directed by Virgl W Vogel. Written by Elmore Leonard. Produced by Walter Mirisch and Charles E. Sellier Jr. The last script Leonard wrote that was not based on one of his novels, this TV movie was intended to be a pilot for a series. Its plot centers around Duell McCall, a cowboy played by Alex McArthur. While the television series never materialized, four sequels were made, though Leonard had nothing to do with them. Credit: Screenshot
Glitz (1988) Directed by Sandor Stern. Written by Stephen Zito. Produced by Steve McGlothen. Originally a screenplay Leonard was commissioned to write as a sequel to 1967’s In the Heat of the Night, Leonard decided instead to write it as a book. The 1985 novel became a commercial and critical hit, with a plot involving a detective who is stalked by a serial rapist he put behind bars. This low-budget made for TV adaptation stars Jimmy Smits, John Diehl, and Markie Post and was largely ignored. Credit: Screenshot
Cat Chaser (1989) Directed by Abel Ferrara. Written by Elmore Leonard and James Borelli. Produced by Peter S. Davis and William Panzer. Based on the 20th novel written by Leonard, published in 1982, this is another story that takes place in Florida and concerns a mafia mistress. The film stars Peter Weller and Kelly McGillis and received mixed reviews. Credit: Screenshot
Border Shootout (1990) Directed and written by Chris McIntyre. Produced by Chris McIntyre and Grant Johnson. A Western loosely inspired by Lenoard’s second novel, 1955’s The Law at Randado, which retains the characters of Kirby Frye and Phil Sundeen and the city of Randado as a location, it is generally regarded as a bad movie. Credit: Screenshot
Split Images (1992) Directed by Sheldon Larry. Written by Pete Hammill and Vera Appleyard. Produced by Richard Borchiver and Ken Gord. Based on the 19th novel written by Elmore Leonard, published in 1981, the story is set in Detroit and concerns a trigger-happy multimillionaire who guns down a Haitian refugee who broke into his Palm Beach mansion. The TV movie stars Gregory Harrison, Robert Collins, and Rebecca Jenkins. Credit: Screenshot
Get Shorty (1995) Directed by Barry Sonnenfeld. Written by Scott Frank. Produced by Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, and Stacey Sher. Quite possibly the best film based on Leonard’s work, Get Shorty was praised for its star-studded cast (featuring John Travolta, Gene Hackman, Rene Russo, Delroy Lindo, James Gandolfini, Dennis Farina, and Danny DeVito) and its searing postmodern satire of show business. It was based on Loenard’s 1990 novel, his 28th, about Ernest “Chili” Palmer, a real-life Miami loan shark played by Travolta who earned a Golden Globe (Best Actor in a Comedy or Musical) for his performance. Credit: Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Studios Inc.
Last Stand at Saber River (1997) Written by Ronald M. Cohen. Produced by Michael Brandman and Tom Selleck. The fourth novel written by Leonard, published in 1959, the film stars Tom Selleck, Suzy Amis, Haley Joel Osment, Keith Carradine, David Carradine, Tracey Needham, David Dukes, and Harry Carey Jr., and tells the story about a Civil War Confederate veteran fighting a new battle on the frontier against Union sympathizers to protect his homestead and family. The made for TV movie received the Western Heritage Awards Bronze Wrangler for a Television Feature Film. Credit: Screenshot
Touch (1997) Directed and written by Paul Shrader. Produced by Fida Attieh and Lila Cazès. Based on Leonard’s 25th novel, published in 1987, the film was directed by Grand Rapids-born Paul Shrader and stars Bridget Fonda, Christopher Walken, and Skeet Ulrich, who plays Juvenal, a young man who is seemingly able to cure the sick by touching them. The soundtrack was composed and recorded by former Nirvana drummer Dave Grohl. It received mixed reviews. Credit: Screenshot
Pronto (1997) Directed by Jim McBride. Written by Michael Butler. Produced by Richard Berg and Allan Marcil. A TV movie adaptation of Leonard’s 1993 novel, his 31st, stars Peter Falk, Glenne Headly, and James LeGros. The plot involves a Miami mobster who tries to silence a retired bookie who is working with the FBI to convict him. It has a mildly positive audience score on Rotten Tomatoes. Credit: Screenshot
Jackie Brown (1997) Directed and written by Quentin Tarantino, and produced by Lawrence Bender. Based on Leonard’s 1992 novel Rum Punch, the film sees “blaxploitation” cinema star Pam Grier cast as the titular Jackie Brown, a flight attendant caught smuggling money. Samuel L. Jackson, Robert Forster, Bridget Fonda, Michael Keaton, and Robert De Niro also appear. With Tarantino directing, the film grossed $74 million and helped revive Grier’s career. Credit: Miramax
Gold Coast (1997) Directed by Peter Weller. Written by Harley Peyton. Produced by Richard Maynard, Jana Sue Memel, and Peter Weller. This TV movie was based on the 18th novel written by Leonard, published in 1980, and also his first set in Florida, although many characters are from Detroit. Starring David Caruso and Marg Helgenberger, the plot involves a widow whose late mobster husband forbade her to ever love again. Credit: Screenshot
Out of Sight (1998) Directed by Steven Soderbergh. Written by Scott Frank. Produced by Danny De Vito, Michael Shamberg and Stacey Sher. Based on Leonard’s 1996 novel, his 33rd, the film marks the first of several collaborations between director Soderbergh and George Clooney, who stars as the world’s greatest bank robber, with Jennifer Lopez playing his love interest. The film earned wide acclaim and grossed $77.7 million against a $48 million budget. Its title is inspired by the lyrics of Stevie Wonder’s 1965 single “Uptight (Everything’s Alright),” and the film led to a short-lived 2003 spin-off TV show called Karen Sisco. Credit: Screenshot
Karen Sisco (2003) Developed by Jason Smilovic. This crime drama television series was a spin-off of Loenard’s novel and film Out of Sight,starring Carla Gugino in the title role as a U.S. Deputy Marshal who tracks down fugitives amid Miami’s seedy underbelly. The series debuted on ABC but was canceled after just one series, although in 2013 TV Guide declared it one of 60 shows that were “Canceled Too Soon.” Credit: ABC
The Big Bounce (2004) Directed by George Armitage. Written by Sebastian Gutierrez. Produced by George Armitage, Steve Bing, and Jorge Saralegui. The second attempt at adapting The Big Bounce to film recasts the location to Hawaii and tweaks its style to that of a comedy heist, starring Owen Wilson, Charlie Sheen, Sara Foster, and Morgan Freeman. Like its predecessor, it also received poor reviews and was a box office flop, grossing only $6,808,550 against a $50 million budget. Credit: Screenshot
Be Cool (2005) Directed by F. Gary Gray. Written by Peter Steinfield. Produced by Danny DeVito, Michael Shamberg, and Stacey Sher. Based on Leonard’s 35th novel, published in 1999, Be Cool is a sequel to the hit novel and film Get Shorty and was made at the behest of an MGM executive with an eye of making another movie. John Travolra reprises his role as Chili Palmer, who moves from the film industry into the music biz, joining an ensemble cast that includes DeVito, Uma Thurman, and Vince Vaughn. While the film was a commercial success, grossing $95 million against a budget of $53-75 million, it received negative reviews, with director Gray saying he felt the film’s PG-13 rating did a disservice to the R-rated plot. Credit: MGM/UA Entertainment
3:10 to Yuma (2007) Directed by James Mangold. Written by Michael Brandt, Derek Haas, Halsted Welles, and Elmore Leonard. Produced by Cathy Conrad. 3:10 to Yuma was again made into a film in 2007, which Mangold described as a new take on “that wonderful Halsted Welles script.” Starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale, critics gave it generally positive reviews, and it grossed $71 million. Credit: Richard Foreman/Lionsgate
Killshot (2008) Directed by John Madden. Written by Hossein Amini. Produced by Lawrence Bender and Richard N. Gladstein. Based on Leonard’s 27th novel published in 1989, this movie stars Diane Lane, Thomas Jane, Mickey Rourke, and Joseph Gordon-Levitt. The story follows a couple who, despite being in a Witness Protection Program, are being chased and confronted by the criminal they outed. It received negative reviews. Credit: Screenshot
Justified (2010) Developed by Graham Yost. This neo-Western crime drama TV series is based on Leonard’s stories about the character Raylan Givens, particularly “Fire in the Hole.” It stars Timothy Olyphant as Raylan, a tough deputy U.S. Marshal enforcing his own brand of justice set in the Appalachian mountains area of eastern Kentucky. The show aired on the FX network and received wide acclaim, with a limited sequel series called Justified: City Primeval planned to be released in June 2023. Credit: FX
Freaky Deaky (2012) Directed, written, and produced by Charles Matthau. Based on Leonard’s 26th novel, published in 1988, the film stars Billy Burke, Christian Slater, Crispin Glover, and Michael Jai White, with a plot involving a bomb squad detective investigating two ex-hippies in 1974 Detroit. The movie received $2.8 million in tax incentives under Michigan’s former film program, but was released straight to video. Credit: Screenshot
Life of Crime (2013) Written and directed by Daniel Schechter. Produced by Ashok Amritraj. Based on Leonard’s 15th novel, The Switch, published in 1978, this black comedy film is set in Detroit and stars Jennifer Aniston as a socialite named Mickey who is kidnapped by a pair of bumbling ex-cons (one of which is played by Yasiin Bey, the artist formerly known as Mos Def), their plans foiled because Mickey’s husband wants to divorce her anyway. It received generally positive reviews. Credit: Roadside Attractions
Get Shorty (2017) Developed by Davey Holmes. A TV series based on Leonard’s hit 1990 novel and acclaimed 1995 film was created by MGM+. Described as more of an “homage” than an adaptation, the series stars Chris O’Dowd, Ray Romano, Sean Bridgers, Carolyn Dodd, Lidia Porto, Goya Robles, Megan Stevenson, Lucy Walters, and Sarah Stiles. It aired for three seasons, ending in 2019. Credit: Epic
More than 30 stories by Elmore Leonard were adapted to the screen over the course of a writing career spanning 60 years. Credit: Courtesy photos

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Leyland “Lee” DeVito is the editor in chief of Detroit Metro Times since 2016. His writing has also been published in CREEM, VICE, In These Times, and New City.