What We Know About 'His Dark Materials' So Far

What We Know About 'His Dark Materials' So Far

For those who might be unfamiliar with His Dark Materials, the fantasy trilogy, written by Philip Pullman, arrived in the mid-to-late 1990s with The Northern Lights, The Subtle Knife, and The Amber Spyglass. In that same period, both George R.R. Martin and J.K. Rowling released their seminal works A Song of Ice and Fire and Harry Potter, respectively as well. While these two authors have gone on to become popular beyond anyone's wildest imaginations thanks to successful mainstream adaptations of their works, Pullman's story - featuring an alternative Earth setting, souls that exist outside of bodies as living creatures, and dark religious overtones - has had a harder time finding its way to the screen.

The first book was adapted as a feature film under the novel's Americanized title The Golden Compass, and it was a muddled flop, with the producers playing down the religious angles of the story and rendering it into an incoherent mess about a girl riding a bear. (That girl, by the way, was Dakota Blue Richards, who went on to play PC Trewlove on Endeavour.) Since then, the rights to Pullman's works sat in limbo until 2015, when the BBC announced it would attempt a Game of Thrones-level adaptation with New Line helping foot the cost.

(Photo: Courtesy of HBO)
(Photo: Courtesy of HBO)

Perhaps unsurprisingly, when it came to finding partners to produce and release the series in the states, HBO leaped to partner with the BBC on the project, but work on the series took longer than expected. The original target date for the first season was 2017, but script revisions, and what seem to be general nerves not to recreate the failures of the film, kept the series in production hell for a couple of years. It wasn't until June of 2018 that a cast finally was put together and filming got underway.

The good news is the cast alone seems to be worth the wait. The series is being headlined by James McAvoy as Lord Asriel and Ruth Wilson as Mrs. Coulter. However, as readers of the novels know, the real hero and heroine of the story are two children on the cusp of puberty, Lyra and Will, the latter of whom accidentally winds up on the alternate version of Earth from our more familiar one.

Up and coming actress Dafne Keen was announced as Lyra early on, but the BBC only recently announced that Amir Wilson is the one playing Will. (He doesn't turn up until the second novel, which most assume means the already greenlit second season.) Co-stars include Lin-Manuel Miranda as the very American adventurer Lee Scoresby and Clarke Peters as the very British Master of Jordan College.