The BBC’s Adaptation of Lord of the Flies Looks Positively Feral

The BBC’s making a little bit of history this winter with its forthcoming The Lord of the Flies series: The four-part drama is the first of its kind. Although a pair of feature film adaptations of William Golding’s iconic 1954 novel exist, the story has never been told on the small screen before now. And if the first trailer’s anything to go by, this take is shaping up to be remarkably (and probably disturbingly) accurate. 

Even if you haven’t actually read The Lord of the Flies, it’s better than even odds you already know the story. The book’s cultural impact is undeniable, influencing everything from the works of Stephen King (who named his town of Castle Rock after a fort in Golding’s novel) to popular modern-day television series like Yellowjackets, which is, in many ways, a gender-swapped take on the original story. (Heck, you can probably argue that Survivor and all the shows it spawned owe a debt of gratitude to this book.)

A cynical, cautionary tale of young boys and the capacity for violence they carry within them, The Lord of the Flies follows a group of shipwrecked British kids, who find themselves stranded on an island — with no adults — in the middle of the Pacific Ocean after an airplane crash. As they struggle to survive, factions form within the group, and their attempts at civilizational order rapidly dissolve, leading to violence, chaos, and, yes, even death. 

The new BBC adaptation hails from writer Jack Thorne, the man behind last year’s surprise smash drama Adolescence, which also dealt with similarly complicated themes of toxic masculinity, herd behavior, tribalism, and violence. (Albeit it in a much more modern and contemporary situation.) In truth, it’s hard to imagine anyone making TV today who’s likely better equipped to tell this particular story at this precise moment in time than Thorne is, but that also means the show itself likely won’t be an easy watch. 

You May Also Like

George R. R. Martin Misses the Bigger Picture with House of the Dragon Complaints

This intense focus on Maelor being included is a little baffling though.…

The One Thing Fantastic Four (2005) Did That Marvel Needs to Emulate

And yet, Evans’ snarky smirk and Chiklis’ simmering irritation sells the lame…

Francis Ford Coppola’s Most Legendary On-Set Stories

Coppola’s reedit of Nebo Zovyot became 1962’s Battle Beyond the Sun, which…

Eyes Wide Shut’s Ending with Nicole Kidman Is Darker Than You Remember

Unlike Homer’s Odysseus and Penelope, however, Alice has considered cheating on her…