In an industry where many stories never leave the writer’s desk, Bad Apple by Shahbaz Banjara has taken an unusual path. What began as a screenplay intended for the big screen is now a fully realized crime novel that is drawing attention for its dark, layered storytelling.
Before it became a book, Bad Apple was written as a feature film script. Shahbaz Banjara developed it as a structured crime drama set in the early 2000s, built around ambition, betrayal and fate. The screenplay was pitched to several film studios, from major production houses to smaller independent banners. Meetings happened. Pitches were delivered. The concept was presented as a grounded, cinematic crime thriller.
But the responses never came.
Instead of shelving the project, Shahbaz made a decisive move. Rather than waiting for approval from the film industry, he chose to take full creative control. He converted the screenplay into a novel, expanding scenes, deepening character psychology and strengthening the internal conflicts that cinema often leaves implied.
The Story That Refused to Die
Bad Apple follows Shayan, an ambitious MBA dropout who enters the cocaine trade under crime boss Whistler Brown. What begins as survival turns into quiet betrayal. Alongside him stands Felon, a ruthless gangster with a history of extreme violence, and Will Caster, a professional hitman shaped by personal tragedy.
As power shifts and loyalties collapse, the narrative moves toward a brutal hotel showdown. But the final irony is what defines the story. In a world of killers and kingpins, the ultimate winner is not the strongest or the most feared. It is the invisible man who walks past the chaos and finds what everyone else was too busy fighting over.
The original pitch described the project as a grounded crime drama about three men whose worlds collide, only for fate to decide the final outcome. That vision remains intact in the novel version.
Why the Shift to a Novel Matters
Turning a screenplay into a novel is not a simple formatting change. It requires rebuilding scenes from the inside out. In film, tension is often carried by visuals and performance. In prose, it must be constructed through thought, atmosphere and internal conflict.
Shahbaz used this shift to add depth to characters like Will Caster, whose emotional trauma and existential fear are explored more intimately in the book. Shayan’s ambition becomes more psychological. Felon’s cruelty becomes more layered.
The result is a crime novel that reads with cinematic pacing but carries literary introspection.
Shahbaz Banjara: A Writer Who Chose Persistence Over Permission
Shahbaz Banjara made a deliberate choice not to let industry silence define the fate of his story. Instead of waiting for validation, he reworked the project into a standalone novel.
That decision reflects a larger shift in creative independence. When traditional doors do not open, creators now build their own.
With Bad Apple, Shahbaz demonstrates that rejection does not end a story. Sometimes, it reshapes it into something stronger.
