Immagine dell'autore.

Mike Binder

Autore di Reign Over Me [2007 Film]

14 opere 289 membri 17 recensioni

Sull'Autore

Comprende il nome: Mike Binder

Fonte dell'immagine: allocine.fr

Opere di Mike Binder

Reign Over Me [2007 Film] (2007) — Regista — 71 copie
Keep Calm: A Thriller (2016) 55 copie
Indian Summer [film] (1993) 19 copie
Man About Town [2006 film] (2008) — Regista — 10 copie
Blankman (2002) 9 copie
Fourplay [2001 film] (2005) — Regista; Actor — 6 copie
The Search for John Gissing — Director — 5 copie
The Sex Monster (2002) 3 copie
The Comedy Store (2021) 2 copie
Crossing The Bridge (1992) — Regista — 1 copia

Etichette

Informazioni generali

Data di nascita
1958-06-02
Nazionalità
USA
Luogo di nascita
Detroit, Michigan, USA

Utenti

Recensioni

Friendship
 
Segnalato
BooksInMirror | Feb 19, 2024 |
Here is my review, from the Staff Recommendations pages of the BookGuide readers advisory site of the Lincoln City Libraries in Lincoln, NE: https://lincolnlibraries.org/bookguide/staff-recommendations/staff-recommendatio...
 
Segnalato
cannellfan | Mar 12, 2022 |
I've been duped again. Remind me to stop paying attention to blurbs written by writers I normally respect (in this case, Lee Child) praising new authors.

Keep Calm is Mike Binder's first book. Although his prose is competent enough, the plot (a failed assassination attempt of Britain's PM is blamed on an American doofus) is laughable and unrealistic, the dialogue is stilted, the romantic entanglement of a couple characters really doesn't contribute to the story line, it's too long, and the conclusion is silly.

I know Mr. Binder has an extensive (and very successful) background in film and Keep Calm may make a good outline for a screenplay, but it fails too many 'smell tests' for me. Here's hoping for improvement if he stays in the thriller writing business.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
gmmartz | 13 altre recensioni | Jun 24, 2016 |
Keep Calm is Mike Binder’s debut novel, but it is important to keep in mind that this is not the first thing that Binder has written. In addition to being a film director and producer, Binder is also a scriptwriter, and that experience has greatly influenced the plotting and structure of Keep Calm. This is, in fact, a political thriller that would very easily transfer to the big screen.

Adam Tate used to be a cop, a good one. Then, in a moment of naïve stupidity, he made a decision that would ultimately send him to prison. When, upon his release, a lucrative job offer comes his way, Tate knows that he has to accept it even if he can’t figure out why the company wants him. Now he finds himself in London to attend an important business meeting at 10 Downing Street – and, as a bonus, his grandchildren are going to meet their maternal grandfather for the first time. Tate, because he barely understands his new job and has nothing to add to the conversation, guesses that he has been brought to London for reasons other than business ones. But it is not until a bomb explosion critically injures the prime minister shortly after the meeting that Tate understands exactly why he is there. In an instant, he and his British-born wife, along with their two children, are running for their lives.

Mike Binder has created quite a cast of characters here, including Georgia Turnbull, the young chancellor of the exchequer (and heir apparent to the injured prime minster) and Davina Steel, the lead investigator in the assassination attempt. These women have done well for themselves in a world their gender would have excluded them from only a few years earlier, and now they have something else in common: capturing Adam Tate will advance their careers to even higher peaks.

But all is not what it seems. If Adam Tate is not the rogue terrorist he is being presented as, who is behind the plot to blow up the prime minister in his 10 Downing Street home? Tate knows part of the truth, and he suspects even more of it. But can he keep himself and his family alive long enough for Davina Steel to figure it all out for herself?

Keep Calm is not the perfect thriller, but its weaknesses, let’s face it, are common to the genre: stereotypically evil bad guys served by robotic goons who do the killing – and enjoy it immensely; numerous last-second escapes; heroes who are repeatedly the only survivors in violent encounters with the bad guys, etc. But that is the nature of the beast. Thrillers, almost by definition, especially conspiracy thrillers, require that the reader be willing to suspend his normal sense of disbelief. Do that and you will love this one - and, you might just find it playing at a theater near you one day in the future.
… (altro)
 
Segnalato
SamSattler | 13 altre recensioni | Mar 14, 2016 |

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Statistiche

Opere
14
Utenti
289
Popolarità
#80,898
Voto
½ 3.3
Recensioni
17
ISBN
24
Lingue
1

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