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The Rum Diary: A Screenplay
The Rum Diary: A Screenplay
Nov 17, 2025 3:11 AM

Author:Bruce Robinson,Johnny Depp

The Rum Diary: A Screenplay

WITH AN INTRODUCTION BY JOHNNY DEPP

A screenplay based on the novel by Hunter S. Thompson

It's 1960. In a highrise hotel not far from the beaches of San Juan, a man is recovering from an animal of a hangover.

Paul Kemp is an alcoholic journalist who's barely seen better days, arriving at the only job he can get: writing horoscopes for failing rag The Daily Star. His fellow hacks are mostly crazy drunks on the verge of quitting, so Kemp fits in perfectly.

But when he meets the impossibly gorgeous Chenault and her flashy boyfriend Sanderson, Kemp finds himself in way over his head - party to shady business deals, in hair-raising car chases with enraged Puerto Ricans, experimenting with a hitherto unknown hallucinogen - and finally discovers a mad, desperate devotion to the truth.

Bruce Robinson brings Hunter S. Thompson's novel to the big screen with all the brilliance, wild humour and fierce energy associated with the acclaimed writer and director of Withnail & I and The Killing Fields.

Reviews

The Rum Diary will be a welcome comeback for Bruce Robinson

—— Scotsman

Robinson is the rogue talent of British film-making...wonderfully entertaining

—— Sunday Times

[The Rum Diary] brims with snapping, punchy bouts of dialogue, some of which recall the wonderful lines that weave through every scene in Withnail & I

—— Daily Telegraph

One of the finest, funniest screenplays that I've ever had the honour to be associated with

—— Johnny Depp

Poignant, impeccably written-especially heart-rending because it is so believable

—— Company

If you’re looking for a break from your usual chick lit then this novel from Pulitzer Prize shortlisted author Barnes has glamour, lust money, corruption and murder.

—— Heat magazine

Written with pluck and humour

—— Independent

Beautifully descriptive, with a cliff-hanger finale

—— Easy Living

Aided by a translation (from Richard Dixon) that tucks into Eco’s rich period pastiche with relish, the story weaves a fictional master of mischief into actual events… Highly enjoyable in its cunning twists

—— Boyd Tonkin , Independent

Has latterly been dubbed the thinking person's Da Vinci Code. But Eco is at home in history in a way that Dan Brown is not... Eco has a sure grasp not only of historical fact but of a period's literature. He's a dab hand at intertextuality... His intent in exposing the moment that lies at the origin of modern anti-Semitism seems to be to show how fictions can have factual consequences. Contemporary spin-doctors take note. Lies, particularly if they follow the pattern of paranoid conspiracies and create an enemy, can have dire effects... Eco is a comic master and, in his 80th year, his irreverent intelligence, if not always his plotting or scabrous taste, remains bracing

—— Lisa Appignanesi , Independent

There is a great deal of pleasure to be taken in the games Eco plays and in the serious thinking about history and stories that lies beneath them

—— Robert Gordon , Times Literary Supplement

An extremely readable narrative of betrayal, terrorism, murder… chilling

—— Daily Telegraph

His biggest, most ambitious and most engaging novel to date

—— The Times

Psychological acuity, a wonderful linguistic precision and the ability to make beautiful accordance between form and content via thoughtful narrative experiment. Gods without Men is a step further along the road towards the full realisation of Kunzru's early promise. It makes undeniable the claim that he is one of our most important novelists . . . As large and cruel and real as life

—— Independent on Sunday

Ambitiously eclectic . . . smartly sharp social detail, high-fidelity dialogue, vivid evocation of place . . . ironic wit and exuberant guyings of paranormal gobbledegook

—— The Sunday Times

Fuelled by an energetic intelligence. Along with a love of big ideas came narrative zest, verbal and comic flair, and an acute eye for contemporary mores both East and West . . . Gods with Men marks another new and bold departure . . . This really is Kunru's great American novel . . . Compulsively readable, skilfully orchestrated, Kunzru's American odyssey brings a new note into his underlying preoccupation with human identity'

—— Independent

Being able to create a vivid sense of place is one of the hallmarks of a quality literary writer, but few could have done so as brilliantly as Hari Kunzru in his latest novel Gods without Men

—— Big Issue

Intensely involving . . . Gods Without Men is one of the best novels of the year

—— Daily Telegraph
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