The Mack Daddy of all Foreign Legion Films- Frank Thompson

As you know, The Deserter is my latest novel, and it’s set in the French Foreign Legion. It’s hard to remember that there was a time the Legion was at the forefront of pop culture- books, and especially movies. The Mack Daddy of all of them was Beau Geste. In doing research, I came across someone whose fascination with film, and Beau Geste in particular, led to The Compleat Beau Geste. To thank him for his kind support of my book, and to let you know a bit more about him, I give you Frank Thompson.

Okay, Frank, who are you?

I now identify myself primarily as an author and film historian. I’m currently finishing up my 47th book, most of which have been about movies. I’ve written about directors – two books on William A. Wellman, one on Robert Wise, one on Henry King – and a couple on what were then new films, such as The Nightmare Before Christmas (1993) and The Alamo (2004). In fact, for my sins, I’ve written five books about the Alamo and have produced, written, or been otherwise connected with several documentaries on the subject. I also have a close-up in the 2004 film, although claims that this is why the film didn’t do well at the box office are just hurtful.

But, like many people, I guess, I could have ended up going in several other directions. I studied arranging and composition at Boston’s Berklee College of Music, was in a comedy/improv troupe for 4 years in Chicago, worked in non-theatrical film distribution (when there was such a thing) in Chicago and Atlanta, and performed as a singer-songwriter for a while. Moving to Los Angeles in 1992, I worked for several years on television, including ten happy years writing for American Movie Classics – again, when there was such a thing.

Yes, AMC was about movies like MTV used to be about music. Why would you write a whole book about Beau Geste and its offspring?

Beau Geste constitutes my origin story as a film historian. When I was 12 years old, I happened to see the last half of Wellman’s 1939 film version on TV. I was enthralled by it and my mother told me it was based on a book. The next day, I went to the school library and, sure enough, there was the novel by P. C. Wren. Even better, it was illustrated with movie stills – but not from the movie I had just seen. These were photos from the 1926 version starring Ronald Colman. I then read every book I could find on silent film – which, in South Carolina in 1965 was not easy – mostly hoping only to find more pictures from Beau Geste. But along the way, I became fascinated by all aspects of silent cinema, even though I had literally no access to the films themselves.

That changed when I got to Boston to attend Berklee. At that time, the city had – I was told – half a million college students. There were not only great repertory and classic film theaters everywhere, but every college had movie screenings pretty much every day of the week. I finally got to see 35mm and 16mm screenings of silent films, foreign films, and experimental cinema. A whole new world of movies opened up to me.

Following the Beau Geste trail led me to start researching Wild Bill Wellman and he was the subject of my first book, published in 1983. In 2018, my late friend John Andrew Gallagher and I published a mammoth, lavishly illustrated limited edition book about him: Nothing Sacred: The Cinema of William Wellman.

In 2020, just a couple of weeks before COVID lockdown, I went to L.A. to record audio commentary for the new Blu-ray of the 1939 version with William Wellman Jr. Then, in 2026, I recorded a commentary track for the Blu-ray of the restored 1926 film. I was flown to L.A. to attend the premiere of the restoration on the last night of the TCM Festival. TCM’s Jacqueline Stewart and James Mockoski – who, with Robert A. Harris, restored the film – introduced it. James asked me to stand up for a round of applause and said, “What Kevin Brownlow is to Napoleon, Frank is to Beau Geste.” Not even remotely true but gratifying in the extreme.

It was during lockdown, when I couldn’t leave the house, that I decided to pull together my considerable research on all things Beau Geste and write a book about all of it – not only movies but stage, television, comic books, toys, and so much more. Although I had a pretty vast archive, it still took another two years of research and writing before I completed The Compleat Beau Geste. Available, if I may be crassly commercial, at Amazon.

What do you think the fascination is with the Legion? Why do the stories still resonate?

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I don’t know if I can answer that. I do have a few friends who have a deep interest in the Legion and there seem to be pockets of enthusiasts around the world, for example, the terrific blog Mon Legionnaire which highlights fiction about the Legion, primarily the great stories from the pulp magazines. And, of course, I know of a wonderful new novel, The Deserter, which I read with genuine delight although the author’s name escapes me.

I love all versions of the story but was excited to hear about the restoration of the original silent film.

I provided no real assistance to the restoration of the 1926 Beau Geste, although Harris and Mockoski were kind and generous enough to keep me in the loop throughout the process. They would send me scenes as they completed them, and I don’t have to tell you how excited and grateful I was throughout. For decades, I have been pleading with archivists to restore this important film. For some reason, the general belief was that it was protected and in good shape. It was neither. Harris and Mockoski pulled prints from all over the place to make a complete version – or as complete as possible – and the result is beautiful. I guarantee you that no one under the age of 100 has ever seen it look like this.

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I was honored to write an essay on the film for the San Francisco Silent Film Festival’s program book. That piece was turned into a booklet which is enclosed with the new Blu-ray. Sixty years after my journey to Fort Zinderneuf began, this is a happier destination than I ever expected.

What’s next?

My latest book is on the filming of Thunder Road (1958). I have a fascination with movie locations – did I tell you that I made seven trips to the California desert where the first four Beau Gestes were filmed? – so when my wife and I moved to Asheville, North Carolina in 2015, I immediately began researching the film history of the area. In 2017, I published Asheville Movies Vol. I: The Silent Era and I have other related books planned. I decided to ignore chronology and go straight to Thunder Road because I live within a few miles of every place where it was filmed and there are still local people who remember the filming and who have given me priceless information.

So, that random viewing of the last half of Beau Geste in 1965 continues to lead me down unexplored roads and it will until, I guess, I’m propped up in my embrasure, awaiting my Viking’s Funeral.

My own addition to the Legion oeuvre is The Deserter- a Tale of the Foreign Legion. “A gritty, well-researched historical thriller that revives the classic Foreign Legion adventure with confidence and control.” Author Glow.

An AI Thriller from a Pair of Actual Writers

It should be obvious I’m a big fan of switching up genres in my writing. Turns out I’m not the only one. Deb Heim and Ross Hightower usually write excellent epic fantasy like The Spirit Song Trilogy, so it was a bit of a surprise to see their latest work is a Sci-fi, urban fantasy mashup called Descartes’ Demon (available February 7). It’s hard enough to make a switch like that when it’s just you. But when there are two of you???? I don’t even get along with myself when writing.

Okay, you two. Tell the folks who you are.

Deb: I used to call myself a guerilla gardener/almost a writer, but now I am willing to call myself a writer. At first glance, my life followed the pattern of our generation – school, (grad school), marriage, house, family, work, more work, moving, more moving, and now retirement with a pension. (I am quite distressed that our two children don’t even have the option of that pattern.) One day Ross talked about how thrilling his life was, especially his torrid love affair. It took me a beat to realize he was talking about me. And now we are on our next great adventure as writing partners.

Ross: It may seem odd that I ended up becoming a writer late in life. After all, I was a chemical engineer (briefly) and a professor of information technology for many years. Neither of those professions seems especially compatible with writing fantasy. But, in fact, I find one of the things I like most about my technical jobs is the same thing I enjoy about writing. Writing is about solving puzzles. Putting the pieces of a plot together. Deciding how characters with different personalities respond to one another. It makes my mind purr. I feel fortunate for many reasons. Having a partner in Deb who I swear I’ve known in previous lives, is the most important. But finding my passion in writing is right up there.

Lord, you two are adorable. So what’s the book about?

When cybersecurity wiz Nik breathes life into Nicola—a deepfake AI sculpted in the image of Alix, his favorite person in the world – it was just a little cyber experiment. When one of his contractors is found dead and intern Kate goes missing, the stakes turn deadly.

A black hat cracker styling himself “The Technician” hacks into his cyber-security company.  Shadowy cyberpunk icon “The Vulture” sends cryptic messages to his best programmer. A ruthless oligarch schemes with his partners to wrest control of the company he started. Supernatural figments occupying NYC like paranormal vagabonds seem to know what’s going on but are no help at all. And big thugs with Russian accents keep turning up like bad pennies.

With everyone scrambling to gain control of his creation, Nik and Alix set out to contain what he unwittingly unleashed. When one of his contractors is found dead and intern Kate goes missing, the stakes turn deadly. Of course, the only police detective who believes them has been forced to resign, but her cyber-sleuth girlfriend “The Bloodhound” is on the case. Can they find Kate before The Technician finishes her off?  Will they ever get rid of those lurking Russians? And can Nik put the cybernetic genie Nicola back in the virtual bottle or will she escape into the digital wild?

It takes a lot to switch genres. What are the roots of this story?

Ross is a retired IT professor who ran a large data center and did his early academic work exploring AI, so this felt like a great space to explore as an author. He started out trying to write a basic, snappy thriller that was easier to market, but once the characters in the book started asking questions about the nature of reality and consciousness, all bets were off. He has an artist’s soul, so he had to let the story go where it was going to go. At some point, a paranormal/supernatural element of the story popped in and then became a focal point of the plot. And to be perfectly honest we wanted to write a contemporary series as an excuse to travel around the world for research.

I’m guessing that, like me, you read in many categories and genres. Who do you enjoy?

Ross and Deb both lean toward classic epic fantasy (Rothfuss, Sullivan, Wexler, Tolkien), but since we started a “Firkins and Fantasy” book club at our local brewery, we’ve had the pleasure of reading authors we wouldn’t have found otherwise – NK Jemison, Roanhouse, Choo, Novik, El-Mohtar. Urban fantasy, re-imagined fables, historical fantasy. Having spent too many years in Florida, we are both big fans of Carl Hiaasen and Tim Dorsey. AND we are actually big Wayne Turmel fans – Deb has read all the books in the Werewolf PI series. The snappy dialogue and surprising, poignant moments between the characters were some of the elements that inspired us for our first foray into urban fantasy.

Sucking up is unnecessary, and I’m not taking responsibility for your cynical foray into urban fantasy! Where can folks learn more about the two of you?

Website https://rosshightower.com/

Contact/newsletter page https://rosshightower.com/contact/

Ross’ Goodreads page  Amazon page Bookbub page

Deb’s Amazon page Bookbub page

Our FB page https://www.facebook.com/QuizzicalSpirit/

Instagram @quizzicalllc https://www.instagram.com/quizzicalllc/

BlueSky https://bsky.app/profile/quizzicalllc.bsky.social

And speaking of genre-hopping, my return to historical fiction is available now.

The Deserter- a Tale of the Foreign Legion, is “Beau Geste if it were directed by Sam Peckinpah”, a two-fisted adventure set in the African desert. Available in paperback anywhere, and on Kindle.