Gormenghast (miniseries)

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Based on the Gormenghast series by Mervyn Peake, this four episode mini series was produced by the BBC.

[edit] Cast

Role Actor
Steerpike Jonathan Rhys Meyers
Lady Gertrude Celia Imrie
Lord Groan Ian Richardson
Lady Fuchsia Neve McIntosh
Flay Christopher Lee
Swelter Richard Griffiths
Titus (12 years) Cameron Powrie
Titus (17 years) Andrew N. Robertson
Dr. Prunesquallor John Sessions
Irma Prunesquallor Fiona Shaw
Nannie Slagg June Brown
Clarice Groan Zoë Wanamaker
Cora Groan Lynsey Baxter
Professor Bellgrove Stephen Fry
Barquentine Warren Mitchell
Doggit Lewis Rose

First broadcast shortly after Christmas in 2000, this BBC miniseries of the celebrated modernist fantasy by Mervyn Peake was designed for an early evening time-slot in much the same vein as the earlier adaptations of The Chronicles of Narnia. Although Peake, a talented and visionary artist, has left numerous drawings concerning his work, the creators preferred a new approach that injected a good deal more colour and humour into what is, on the page, a very dark and exhausted world; a place of shadows, dust, rust and nettles.

The BBC conception was based on the idea that Peake's early life in China had influenced the creation of Gormenghast; thus, the castle in the series resembles the Forbidden City of Peking as well as the Holy City of Lhasa in Tibet. This idea has basic validity, particularly as regards the 'bright carvings' of the wood-working outer dwellers, but purists might consider the entire production rather lighter than the books, which author Anthony Burgess regarded as a great classic of the Twentieth century and an allegory of the two World Wars. An atmosphere of fairy-tale, rather than Gothic expressionism, hangs over the whole production.

Some observers have noted that there is also a Science Fiction element to the mini-series. Gormenghast appears to exist as the last human settlement on an Earth which has been otherwise deserted by man. It may exist in the future. Society is stratified as in Peake's novel, and many Science Fictional dystopias imagine a world in the grip of an Oriental despotism, such as that found in Gormenghast. Strange human powers, stranger branchings are hallmark of both the story and of the best mainstream Science Fiction.

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