Bryan Edgar Wallace (1904–1971) was a British writer. The son of the writer Edgar Wallace, Bryan was also a writer of crime and mystery novels which were very similar in style to those of his father. He was named after the American politician William Jennings Bryan whom his father encountered during a trip to North America.[1]
Some of his better known novels are Death Packs a Suitcase, The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle, Murder is Not Enough, The Device, The Man Who Would Not Swim, Murder in Touraine, The White Carpet, The Phantom of Soho and The World is at Stake, among others. During the 1930s, he worked as a screenwriter in the British film industry, mostly co-writing film scripts with other writers (approximately from 1930 to 1939).
From 1961 until 1971, several of his works were made into films during the 1960s boom in German film adaptations of his father's novels. Sometimes Bryan's films are mistaken for Edgar Wallace adaptations, since they are so similar in plot and style.[2] In 1963, he appeared in a 50-minute German documentary about his father called The Edgar Wallace Story.
The Strangler of Blackmoor Castle (Der Würger von Schloss Blackmoor) (1963) made in Germany; based on the Bryan Edgar Wallace novel Strangler of Blackmoor Castle.
Scotland Yard vs Dr. Mabuse (Scotland Yard jagt Dr. Mabuse) (1963) made in Germany; based on Bryan Edgar Wallace's 1962 sci-fi novel The Device
The Phantom of Soho (Das Phantom von Soho) (1964) made in Germany; based on the Bryan Edgar Wallace novel The Phantom of Soho
The Monster of London City (Das Ungeheuer von London City) (1964) made in Germany; Wallace just revised this screenplay (not based on one of his novels)
The Seventh Victim (Das siebente Opfer) (1964) made in Germany; released in U.S. as The Racetrack Murders; based on the Bryan Edgar Wallace novel Murder is Not Enough
The Death Avenger of Soho [de] (Der Todesrächer von Soho / El muerto hace las maletas) (1971) a Spanish/German film directed by Jesus Franco, based on Bryan Edgar Wallace's novel Death Packs a Suitcase
The Dead Are Alive (Das Geheimnis des gelben Grabes / Secret of the Yellow Graves) (1972) an Italian/German co-production directed by Armando Crispino; (Italian: L'etrusco uccide ancora / The Etruscan Kills Again) based on a short story by Bryan Edgar Wallace. This film was released posthumously in 1972.
Bryan Edgar Wallace also reputedly contributed with other writers to the screenplay for Dario Argento's The Cat o' Nine Tails (1971) but was uncredited.