Jonathan_Strange_&_Mr_Norrell_(TV_series)

<i>Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell</i> (TV series)

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell (TV series)

British historical fantasy adaptation


Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is a seven-part British historical fantasy TV miniseries adapted by Peter Harness from Susanna Clarke's best-selling 2004 novel of the same name. It premiered on BBC One on 17 May 2015 and ended on 28 June 2015. It was nominated for four BAFTA awards and recognised by the British Film Institute as one of the top ten most important television programmes of 2015.[1][2]

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Plot

Set in England during the Napoleonic Wars at the beginning of the 19th century, the series presents an alternative history where magic is widely acknowledged, but rarely practised. Living in the rural north, Mr Norrell (Eddie Marsan) of Hurtfew Abbey is able to make the statues of York Minster talk and move. His manservant John Childermass (Enzo Cilenti) persuades him to travel to London to help in the war against France.

While there, Mr Norrell encounters a leading member of the government and makes magic respectable in the realm when he conjures a fairy, called the Gentleman (Marc Warren), to bring the minister's fiancée (Alice Englert) back to life. Meanwhile, Jonathan Strange (Bertie Carvel) meets Vinculus (Paul Kaye), a street magician, while attempting to find a respectable profession, as demanded by his love Arabella (Charlotte Riley). Strange is told by Vinculus that he is destined to be a great magician and so he begins to study magic.[3][4]

Cast

Episodes

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Production

Development

Carvel (left) and Marsan (right) as the title characters Strange and Norrell, respectively.

On 30 November 2012, the BBC announced that an adaptation of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell had been commissioned for BBC One.[12] The production was officially greenlit as a seven-hour miniseries in April 2013, with a projected 2014 premiere date.[13][14] BBC America noted that it would broadcast the miniseries during its "Supernatural Saturday" science fiction and fantasy programming block.[13][14]

Adapted by Harness and directed by Toby Haynes,[13] the series was produced by Nick Hirschkorn, with executive producers Nick Marston, Tally Garner, Dixie Linder, Justin Thomson-Glover, Patrick Irwin and Matthew Read.[3][14][15] Co-production credits are shared by Cuba Pictures and BBC America, Feel Films, Far Moor, Screen Yorkshire and Space.[3][14]

Co-Production Countries were Canada (20.42%) United Kingdom (79.58%) and shot in Canada, the UK, and Croatia.[16]

Casting

The BBC announced the casting of Carvel and Marsan in the title roles in October 2013, as well as Warren as The Gentleman, Riley as Arabella, West and Englert as Sir Walter and Lady Pole, Cilenti as Childermass and Kaye as Vinculus.[15] A read-through of the script took place on 23 October 2013.[17] Filming began on 28 October 2013 in Yorkshire, Canada and Croatia.[3] Author Clarke visited the set in November 2013.[18]

Broadcast

The series premiered in the UK on 17 May 2015.[19] It later debuted in the US on BBC America on 13 June 2015,[20] in Canada on The Movie Network and Movie Central on 3 July 2015,[21] and in Australia on BBC First on 6 August 2015.[22]

Reception

Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell was positively received by critics. It holds an overall 91% "fresh" rating on Rotten Tomatoes[23] and a critics' rating of 71/100 on Metacritic.[24] It was selected for preservation in the BFI National Archive as one of the ten best TV programmes of 2015, as well as being nominated for four BAFTA Awards and seven RTS Yorkshire awards.[2][25]

Evan Ferguson of The Observer wrote that you could describe it as "Harry Potter for adults" but that it was "far snakier and more thrilling" and likened it more to Peter Shaffer's Amadeus: "It's in the Sunday-night slot lately reserved for Poldark. And it's 10 times better."[26] Nick Horton was even more enthusiastic in his Den of Geek review:

"What are some of the best British dramas of recent years? Here's just a few. Wolf Hall, Utopia, Peaky Blinders, Broadchurch, Happy Valley, Luther, Doctor Who and In The Flesh. It's been said to death but remains the case: we truly are in a golden age of original British drama. But now you might just have to make room for a new favourite. I don't think it's hyperbolic to say that Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is the finest new drama that's been on our screens this decade. In fact, if the first two episodes are anything to go by, it could go down as one of the best this century."[27]

While Louisa Mellor added that Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell "has that rare power to engulf" making it:

"...ideal for swallowing in a single gulp. Watched back-to-back, its chapters coalesce into one marvellous, unbroken tale. It's a bedtime story with tremendous scope; one that will transport you from Yorkshire to London to a Belgian battlefield to Venice, the other realm of Faerie and beyond."[28]

David Wiegand of the San Francisco Chronicle wrote that viewers would be "dazzled" by the series, calling the special effects "exquisitely executed" and noting that "Every performance is a winner, from Marsan's mousey Norrell, to Carvel's brash Jonathan, to Englert's increasingly mad and self-destructive Lady Pole."[29] Emmet Asher-Perrin praised the overall series at Tor.com but noted, "the ending of this series was altogether abrupt and unsatisfying for my tastes".[30] Mike Hale of The New York Times called it "a largely unremarkable mini-series", adding:

That’s not to put down this BBC production ... but to warn those who enjoyed the best-selling book to temper their expectations. ...Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell is great to look at. It moves along at a gallop, and it’s not boring, even if it’s not exactly engaging either. Most important, it has appealing performances by Bertie Carvel as Strange and particularly by Eddie Marsan as the crabbed and proud Norrell. In this one regard, the mini-series can be considered an improvement on the book, where the characterizations of the two magicians were a bit abstract and airless.[31]

George R. R. Martin wrote in his Livejournal about popular novels and their adaptations:

"I saw the BBC production of Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell before I finally got around to reading Susanna Clarke's novel. In both cases, I loved the book and I loved the adaptation. It does not need to be one or the other. You might prefer one over the other, but you can still enjoy the hell out of both."[32]


References

  1. "Nominations Announced for the British Academy Television Craft Awards in 2016". BAFTA. 22 March 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  2. "The best British TV of 2015". BFI. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  3. "Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 8 September 2011.
  4. Farber, Alex (18 May 2015). "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell spooks 4.5m". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  5. Farber, Alex (26 May 2015). "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell loses 2m". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  6. Farber, Alex (1 June 2015). "Britain's Got Talent hits 13.4m peak". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  7. Campelli, Matthew (8 June 2015). "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell loses out to BBC2". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  8. White, David (15 June 2015). "Humans becomes Channel 4's biggest-ever drama". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  9. Campelli, Matthew (22 June 2015). "Black Work eases past Humans". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  10. Kanter, Jake (29 June 2015). "No fireworks for Clarkson's Top Gear finale". Broadcast Now. Retrieved 14 July 2015.
  11. Itzkoff, Dave (8 April 2013). "BBC to Adapt Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell as Mini-Series". The New York Times. Retrieved 9 April 2013.
  12. Tartaglione, Nancy (25 October 2013). "Eddie Marsan To Topline Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell For BBC One/BBC America". Deadline Hollywood. Retrieved 16 November 2013.
  13. "Official coproductions". Telefilm Canada. Archived from the original on 20 September 2016. Retrieved 24 July 2016.
  14. "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell". Empire. feelfilms.co.uk. April 2015. pp. 104–5. Archived from the original on 27 May 2015. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  15. Purcell, Charles (30 July 2015). "New this week (Aug 3): Rogue, Jonathan Strange, Bitten, 7 Days in Hell and live sport". The Green Room. Archived from the original on 30 July 2015. Retrieved 30 July 2015.
  16. "Nominations Announced For RTS Yorkshire Awards 2016". Royal Television Society. 25 May 2016. Retrieved 19 October 2016.
  17. "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell Blu-ray review". Den of Geek. 7 July 2015. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
  18. Wiegand, David (11 June 2015). "BBC America's Strange magic will dazzle you". San Francisco Chronicle. Retrieved 22 July 2015.
  19. Asher-Perrin, Emmet (29 June 2015). "Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell: Chapter Seven". Tor.com. Retrieved 5 July 2015.
  20. Hale, Mike (10 June 2015). "Review: Jonathan Strange & Mr Norrell, a Battlefield Where Magic Is the Weapon of Choice". The New York Times. Retrieved 10 June 2015.
  21. grrm. "Last Year (Winds of Winter)". Not A Blog. Archived from the original on 2 January 2016. Retrieved 22 March 2016.

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