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Craig Murray
Writer and broadcaster


As Britain's outspoken Ambassador to the Central
Asian Republic of Uzbekistan, Craig Murray helped
expose vicious human rights abuses by the
US-funded regime of Islam Karimov. He is now
a prominent critic of Western policy in the region.


Click to find out more about Murder in Samarkand and other books that may be of interest.

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« MPs recall Straw as air traffic controllers confirm 200 CIA flights | Main | Craig Murray to address Tower Hamlets Stop the War meeting, Wednesday 1st March »

February 24, 2006

A Celluloid Headache: more on the Craig Murray movie

The cinema face of Craig Murray? Click for more on Steve Coogan

From Times Online

A celluloid headache awaits the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. The controversial memoirs of Craig Murray (former Ambassador to Uzbekistan) are to be made into a movie.

Slightly weirdly, Michael Winterbottom, the director (24 Hour Party People, The Road to Guantánamo), has optioned Murder in Samarkand, which — court battles permitting — is due to be published in June.

Very weirdly, he plans to cast Steve Coogan in the lead role. Can it be true? “Actually, yes,” says Murray. “It’s extremely good news. I’ve met with Michael, and with Steve Coogan, and with a, well, a very well-known screenwriter, whose name I’m not going to divulge.”

Murray’s book lifts the lid on torture and corruption in the former Soviet state and alleges lazy complicity on the part of Downing Street and the FCO. It doesn’t, in short, sound like typical Alan Partridge fare.

“There are elements of dark comedy in the story,” shrugs Murray, “and Steve Coogan has shown that he has quite a dramatic range.”

And who should play Jack Straw, the man whom Murray evidently considers to be his nemesis? The former ambassador lets out a dark laugh. “I think it is a role tailor-made for Alan Rickman,” he says.

See also Cinematical and TimeOut

Posted by andrew on February 24, 2006 9:47 AM in the category The Film


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