Warner Brothers To Adapt Satori; DiCaprio To Star!

Well this sounds particularly awesome, an espionage thriller set in the Korean War, centered around the CIA using a an elite assassin trained by a Japanese master. DiCaprio is a great actor but this certainly sounds more like a high concept action thriller than an attempt to win an Oscar, which his how some see his role picking. Since it's at Warner Brothers I am crossing my fingers that Christopher Nolan may well end up directing.
Comingsoon.net via Toldya have the details.
Warner Bros. has plans to develop Don Winslow's Satori into a feature film, Deadline reports. What's more, Leonardo DiCaprio is attached to star as Nicholaï Hel, a master assassin first introduced in the novel, Shibumi by Trevanian. The plot of Satori is officially described as follows:
It is the fall of 1951, and the Korean War is raging. Twenty-six-year-old Nicholai Hel has spent the last three years in solitary confinement at the hands of the Americans. Hel is a master of hoda korosu, or “naked kill,” is fluent in seven languages, and has honed extraordinary “proximity sense” - an extra-awareness of the presence of danger. He has the skills to be the world’s most fearsome assassin and now the CIA needs him.
The Americans offer Hel freedom, money, and a neutral passport in exchange for one small service: to go to Beijing and kill the Soviet Union’s commissioner to China. It’s almost certainly a suicide mission, but Hel accepts. Now he must survive chaos, violence, suspicion, and betrayal while trying to achieve his ultimate goal of satori - the possibility of true understanding and harmony with the world.
Trevanian, a pen name for the late Rodney Whitaker, created the character of Hel for his 1979 novel, which has become heralded as one of the classics of the literary spy genre. Released in 2011 (six years after Whitaker's death), Satori is designed to serve as a prequel to Shibumi, a book whose title refers a Japanese word that reflects the aesthetics of simple beauty.
DiCaprio has plans to tackle project sometime after the now-in-production literary adaptation The Great Gatsby and Quentin Tarantino's soon-to-shoot Django Unchained.
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