2 Comments

  1. Questions:
    Did you read any of the “His Dark Materials” novels before watching this series?
    Did you ever watch the movie adaptation of the first book in this series (“The Golden Compass”)?

    I ask these things because I feel some of your criticisms could be applied to the source material… the novels can be very meandering at times, with flat characters drifting in and out frequently… and towards the end, the plot development slows-down as the author becomes more focused on making philosophical points.

    The movie adaptation was widely criticised for simplifying the storyline of Phillip Pullman’s novel, toning down the author’s anti-religious/philosophical rants and generally rushing through things at a brisk pace…. much of the way this series was made seems like a reaction to how the movie was received.

    So much of the PR for this show seems to be focused on how this time they will include ABSOLUTELY everything and won’t compromise in conveying the authors message
    (To the extent that they’ve decided to incorporate events from prequel-novels that Pullman wrote AFTER the main trilogy)

    Your review makes it sound like they went to the opposite extreme this time – creating an adaptation that is TOO reverential – to the point that it doesn’t make sufficient allowances for the limitations of the TV medium and is completely blind to the flaws of the source material. Which has the effect of leaving many actors struggling with material that renders their characters as either emotionally short-changed or aimless.

    1. I didn’t get the chance to do either, but knew the movie wasn’t well received. Also, I was aware that there was some hope from HBO that, while this could never fill the gap Game of Thrones left, it would present the opportunity to maintain some sense of being a network with big-budget fantasy productions.

      As for the characters being emotionally short-changed or aimless, I’d submit that, in being more of a reactionary series, as you note, likely trying to be all “The Golden Compass” was not, it never found its own voice. It did try to present some form of emotion in the form of Mrs. Coulter’s frustrations with a world that required her to be twice as good to get anywhere or Lyra dealing with a sense of abandonment. However, the lack of tension and the pacing of the show made it where it seemed rushed. Almost as if it needed to be done for an anniversary of the book’s release or the company which holds the rights to visual adaptations would have lost said rights.

      Also, I’d submit the show doesn’t really go anti-religion all that much. Yes, the villains are a theological organization, but their faith feels so meek that even the cardinal seems like someone who is by no means a religious zealot but more so a career politician.

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