Close Menu
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Movies
  • TV Shows & Series
  • Hollywood
  • Celebrities
  • Netflix
  • Awards & Events

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

What's Hot

Julianne Moore Honored With Kering Women In Motion Award During Cannes Film Festival – Just Jared – Celebrity News and Gossip

May 18, 2026

26 Years Ago Today: “Beverly Hills, 90210” Ended, Marking The End of an Era

May 18, 2026

Top Gun at 40: How Tom Cruise, Anthony Edwards, Val Kilmer were cast

May 18, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Subscribe
Thegossipnews
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram YouTube
  • Home
  • Entertainment
  • Movies
  • TV Shows & Series
  • Hollywood
  • Celebrities
  • Netflix
  • Awards & Events
Thegossipnews
Home»Awards & Events»Netflix’s Lord of the Flies explained; Jack Thorne, cast FYC event
Awards & Events

Netflix’s Lord of the Flies explained; Jack Thorne, cast FYC event

Williams MBy Williams MMay 18, 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp Email
Share
Facebook Twitter Pinterest Reddit WhatsApp Email


Jack Thorne had wanted to adapt Lord of the Flies for more than 30 years.

“I was 11 when I read this book, and I loved it from the moment I read it,” the Emmy-winning co-creator of Adolescence said about William Golding’s 1954 novel during an FYC event in Los Angeles on Sunday.

Thorne was joined by series director and executive producer Marc Munden, casting director Martin Ware, series composer Cristobal Tapia de Veer, and cast members David McKenna (Piggy), Winston Sawyers (Ralph), Lox Pratt (Jack), and Ike Talbut (Simon); de Veer and Pratt appeared virtually.

The four-episode TV adaptation of the dystopian classic, which follows a group of schoolboys stranded on an uninhabited island as they descend into violent chaos, began streaming on Netflix on May 4.

Dexter Sol Ansell, David McKenna, Winston Sawyers

One character in particular stood out for Thorne when he first encountered Golding’s text.

“I was the lonely kid at the back of classes that didn’t really understand anyone else, that wasn’t very good at making eye contact, and I felt like Simon was me,” Thorne said of the introspective character.

A scene from 'Lord of the Flies'
‘Lord of the Flies’J Redza/Eleven/Sony Pictures Television

The boys who play the four central roles — each of whom anchors their own point-of-view episode in Thorne’s adaptation — were relative newcomers to television. Ware said that he and casting colleague Nina Gold sifted through “7,000 to 8,000 tapes and boys” and visited “a couple hundred” schools during an exhaustive search that also extended across social media.

Sawyers, who portrays the levelheaded leader Ralph, noted he had only “done a couple episodes” of a previous show but had mostly acted in school plays. Talbut (Simon) and Pratt (the violent antagonist Jack) had similarly limited experience, coming primarily from school plays and amateur theater.

To uncover the boys’ natural personalities during auditions, Ware explained that he and Gold asked candidates what they would bring with them to a desert island, or whom they would want to be stuck there with.

“I said the West End cast of Les Mis,” quipped McKenna, who plays the sharp but bullied Piggy.

“I said that I would want a load of books because you can use them for entertainment, but then also like firewood and toilet paper and stuff,” Talbut said.

The series’ unique “relay race” structure, which centers on one character at a time, diverges from the novel’s chronological format. It was this fresh approach that ultimately persuaded Golding’s estate — and the author’s daughter, Judy, in particular — to green-light the TV adaptation.

Thorne explained that he wanted to “structure it using the vocabulary of television to really bring out the juice of the book.”

Delving deeper into Jack’s villainous perspective also added a psychological layer missing from the 1990 feature film adaptation.

“Giving Jack his own episode, I think, allowed us to expose the truth of Jack, the tenderness of Jack,” Thorne said. “And if you can understand Jack, then you can understand the tragedy of the island.”

Beyond the fictional location, Thorne emphasized that it is “important in our world currently” to be examining characters like Jack.

“In our country yesterday, there was a huge march through the center of London that was people that are very angry about immigration, very angry about what they see as their country being taken away from them,” he explained. “They have some dangerous ideas, these people, and I’m a bit scared of them, but I also want to understand them.”

For Pratt, tapping into such a brutal character proved “a little bit tricky.”

“I think as we got further into it, we started to realize that we could sort of laugh at the end of takes and sort of realize that it wasn’t what it seemed to be,” Pratt said, adding that he drew inspiration from Cillian Murphy’s Tommy Shelby in Peaky Blinders and Malcolm McDowell in If…. “And I think watching it, it kind of hits you harder than when you’re actually doing it in the moment.”

McKenna, meanwhile, felt a more direct, relatable connection to his on-screen counterpart.

“I mean, I’m the bossy one. [Piggy’s] a lot more organized than I am. And he’s a bit more pessimistic than I am,” he explained. “But I feel like, in a lot of ways, we’re pretty similar.”

Working with a young cast meant BAFTA-winning director Munden had to navigate strict labor laws while filming on location in Malaysia. Because night shoots with children were restricted, he had to get creative to simulate the dark jungle environment.

“The hallucinatory reds and pinks really is a practical thing, which is we could never film with the boys at night,” Munden revealed. “The script was set at night, so we had to find another way to connote night in some sort of way, and that was by taking out the infrared filter from the camera, which turns all the foliage to red, pink, and maroon. And we just took it from there in terms of making it more and more vivid as we went on.”

Emmy-winning composer de Veer mirrored the boys’ regression through the score, starting with classical European orchestral music that gradually distorts to reflect their savage transformation.

“The classical music starts disappearing, and we go further into chaos and, let’s say, abstract sounds and more violent aesthetics,” he said.

“I think the music still needed to represent that these are kids and it’s very vulnerable,” he added, “but it’s still kids and they’re still somehow, I don’t want to use the word victims, but it’s somehow they’re being controlled by things in a different way than if they were [adults].”

For Thorne, the project ultimately came down to maximizing the medium’s unique strengths.

“This book is beautiful and your first question always is how can I be faithful to this book?” he concluded. “But as you’re expanding out, as you’re finding different corners and nooks and spaces to live, you do see possibilities of things.”

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit Email
Previous ArticleCelebrity Babies of 2026: Josh Duhamel and More Stars
Next Article FOX One and Tubi Add Popular True Crime Podcast as Video Lineup Expands
Williams M
  • Website

Related Posts

Top Gun at 40: How Tom Cruise, Anthony Edwards, Val Kilmer were cast

May 18, 2026

2026 Academy of Country Music Awards winners: See the full list

May 17, 2026

Cannes best moments, Scarlett Johansson misses Paper Tiger premiere

May 17, 2026

Dangerous Woman at 10: How the album made Ariana Grande a star

May 17, 2026

Saturday Night Live Season 51 finale, Will Ferrell’s best moments

May 17, 2026

Mobile Suit Gundam Hathaway: The Sorcery of Nymph Circe explained

May 16, 2026
Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Demo
Our Picks

Watching Wonder Woman 1984 with an HBO Max Free Trial?

January 13, 2021

Wonder Woman Vs. Supergirl: Who Would Win

January 13, 2021

PS Offering 10 More Games for Free, Including Horizon Zero

January 13, 2021

Can You Guess What Object Video Game Designers Find Hardest to Make?

January 13, 2021
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Pinterest
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Vimeo
Don't Miss
Celebrities

Julianne Moore Honored With Kering Women In Motion Award During Cannes Film Festival – Just Jared – Celebrity News and Gossip

By Williams MMay 18, 2026

Credit: Getty Julianne Moore steps out for the 2026 Kering Women In Motion Awards held…

26 Years Ago Today: “Beverly Hills, 90210” Ended, Marking The End of an Era

May 18, 2026

Top Gun at 40: How Tom Cruise, Anthony Edwards, Val Kilmer were cast

May 18, 2026

Rihanna & A$AP Rocky’s Son RZA’s 4th Birthday: Party Details, Photos

May 18, 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest creative news from SmartMag about art & design.

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
  • Contact Us
  • About Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
© 2026 All right reserved

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Powered by
►
Necessary cookies enable essential site features like secure log-ins and consent preference adjustments. They do not store personal data.
None
►
Functional cookies support features like content sharing on social media, collecting feedback, and enabling third-party tools.
None
►
Analytical cookies track visitor interactions, providing insights on metrics like visitor count, bounce rate, and traffic sources.
None
►
Advertisement cookies deliver personalized ads based on your previous visits and analyze the effectiveness of ad campaigns.
None
►
Unclassified cookies are cookies that we are in the process of classifying, together with the providers of individual cookies.
None
Powered by