BLOW THE BUDGET

His Dark Materials is BBC’s most expensive series EVER as filming on second series kicks off before the first is on TV

THE BBC’S version of Phillip Pullman’s His Dark Materials is set to be its most expensive drama ever, as filming for the second series kicks off before the first has even aired.

Dafne Keen, 14, will star as heroine Lyra Belacqua, an orphan who must embark on an epic adventure that will ultimately change the course of history and religion.

Dafne Keen stars in the BBC’s adaptation of Philip Pullman’s Dark Materials

Bosses at the BBC took the unusual step to carry on filming in case Dafne looked too old for the sequel.

Piers Wenger, head of drama at the BBC said that the decision to commit to at least two series was something they felt certain about.

“It’s a leap of faith but a leap of faith that we all felt very sure about,” he said.

“The first and second seasons are continuous and we have a young actor at the heart of the story who we needed to look the same age as they did in the first series, so that really meant we had to make the commitment to do the first two books.”

Much of the budget is thought to have been spent on CGI creations of the animals

Pullman’s books travel through fantastical lands and eventually through other worlds

Ruth Wilson, who starred in Luther as Alice, is Marisa Coulter

The blockbuster budget is being shared between the BBC and HBO, and is understood to be costing less that the £5.6million per episode budget of Netflix’s The Crown.

Much of the cost will come from the production involved in creating the CGI ‘daemons’ – animal companions that represent each character’s soul.

Set in an alternate universe, another large portion of the budget is thought to have gone on recreating Pullman’s fantastical worlds.

Luther’s Ruth Wilson will also star as Marisa Coulter, James McAvoy as Lord Asriel, alongside his ex-wife Anne-Marie Duff as Ma Costa.

The stellar cast includes James McAvoy as Lord Asriel

Award-winning American actor Clarke Peters is The Master of Lyra’s Oxford home

It’s believed the series will show the more sinister aspects to the books without trying to gloss over some of the complex ideas

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Past adaptations of the award-winning trilogy haven’t always been well received.

The 2007 film version of the first book – The Golden Compass – starring Nicole Kidman was a box office flop, as many fans felt it watered down many aspects of Pullman’s more sinister plot twists.

Although aimed at children and young adults, the books tackle sensitive and complex theories around organised religion.

The first instalment of the eagerly-awaited series starts in autumn this year, although an official date is yet to be released.


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