profile

    Mickey Spillane

    1918-03-09 (106 years old) in Brooklyn, New York, USA

    Mickey Spillane is an American author of hardcore detective stories. Wrote more than 20 novels with a circulation of more than 140 million copies. He began his writing career as a writer for comics. Spillane published his first novel, Judgment Is Me, in 1946. The hero of this and twelve other books is private detective Mike Hammer, one of the most popular characters in popular culture. Spillane's novels have been adapted many times in film and television. Spillane himself played the role of a detective in the movie (Ring of Fear / Ring of Fear, 1954). Films based on his novels became classics, including Kiss Me Deadly (1955) and The Girl Hunters (1963), with his own participation. In The Girl Hunters, Spillane played his character Mike Hammer. This is one of the rarest cases in history when the author plays the role of the hero he created. He also appeared as a writer in the television series about Colombo (episode "Publish or Perish"). Spillane's huge success is usually credited to the successful mixture of his gruff language, the rigidity of the characters, and the abundance of erotic scenes. His books, as fellow detective writer Raymond Chandler has said, can be described as "a mixture of violence and outright pornography." However, they have become a classic of the genre.

    Movies

    poster
    The Long Haul of A.I. Bezzerides
    30 %|Jan 1, 2005
    Documentary
    poster
    Mike Hammer's Mickey Spillane
    60 %|Jan 1, 1998
    Documentary
    poster
    Mommy's Day
    29 %|Jan 31, 1997
    Mystery, Horror
    poster
    Mommy
    40 %|Nov 28, 1995
    Horror
    actor
    Hammar
    0 %|Feb 20, 1992
    Drama
    poster
    The Girl Hunters
    57 %|Jun 1, 1963
    Crime, Mystery
    poster
    Ring of Fear
    50 %|Jul 23, 1954
    Drama, Mystery

    Series

    poster
    Dinah!
    60 %|Oct 21, 1974
    poster
    Columbo
    81 %|Sep 15, 1971
    Crime, Drama, Mystery
    poster
    The Dick Cavett Show
    66 %|Jun 6, 1968
    Talk