UK TimesUK Times
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
What's Hot
Tan France shocks fans by trading signature silver hair for a dark new look

Tan France shocks fans by trading signature silver hair for a dark new look

30 April 2026
Heartbroken Maxx Crosby left ‘sick to my stomach’ after ex-teammate’s death at 35: ‘I wish I could talk to you one more time’

Heartbroken Maxx Crosby left ‘sick to my stomach’ after ex-teammate’s death at 35: ‘I wish I could talk to you one more time’

30 April 2026

A303 westbound between A360 and A36 | Westbound | Accident

30 April 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
UK TimesUK Times
Subscribe
  • Home
  • News
  • TV & Showbiz
  • Money
  • Health
  • Science
  • Sports
  • Travel
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Trending
    • Press Release
UK TimesUK Times
Home » Lord of the Flies review – This bold, brilliant series will terrify parents as much as Adolescence – UK Times
News

Lord of the Flies review – This bold, brilliant series will terrify parents as much as Adolescence – UK Times

By uk-times.com9 February 2026No Comments5 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram Pinterest Tumblr Reddit WhatsApp Email
Lord of the Flies review – This bold, brilliant series will terrify parents as much as Adolescence – UK Times
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Get the latest entertainment news, reviews and star-studded interviews with our Independent Culture email

Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter

Get the latest entertainment news with our free Culture newsletter

IndependentCulture

Before masculinity was toxic, before colonialism was a dirty word, there was William Golding’s Lord of the Flies. A staple of classrooms and thrice adapted for film, the cautionary tale of children reverting to a primal savagery is one of the most influential narratives in all of literature. But what is it about the present moment that makes the BBC think it is ripe for a four-part primetime reimagining?

An aircraft, carrying a manifest composed largely of school-age boys, goes down on an uninhabited tropical island. Summoned by Ralph (Winston Sawyers) blowing a conch, the children form a fragile society. Ralph is elected their chief, Piggy (David McKenna) his trusted, but bullied, lieutenant. Jack (Lox Pratt), runner-up in the chieftain vote, leads the group’s hunters, alongside Simon (Ike Talbut), a sensitive boy who serves as envoy between the two camps. They are British children of the immediate postwar era, hardened by the conflict and resolved to retain a stiff upper lip. “My father is in the navy, and he says there aren’t any unknown islands left,” Ralph tells his people. “The Queen has a picture of this island.” But thoughts of home – of Blighty and Her Maj – quickly become secondary to the harsh realities of life in their new home. Hope for rescue is subsumed by an atavistic desire to survive.

Golding’s classic novel was written as a response to imperialistic boys-own adventure fantasies, which fantasised a world in which children would bring the civilising force of British “values” to unconquered lands. Adapted here by Adolescence writer Jack Thorne (if other writers are available, British telly commissioners don’t seem to have realised), the narrative is more concerned with the teetering patriarchy than the end of Empire. “You don’t know anything about my father,” volatile Jack rages at gentle Simon. “No, but I know my father,” Simon replies. “And I have suspicions that they’re just the same.” Absent the steer of adults (“grown-ups just know things,” laments Piggy), their fragile society mirrors the world they’ve left behind. Some take responsibility, some shirk it; some defer to authority, some resist it. “Toilets, water, hut-building,” Jack lists off. “This is boring.” And so, the camp becomes divided by boys becoming men in very different ways.

“The child is father of the man,” wrote William Wordsworth in 1802. Two centuries on and Thorne has reignited public conversation about how we treat children, what we expose them to, and the impact that has on their eventual adulthood. His Lord of the Flies renders the themes of Adolescence in parable form. The tormented, divided soul that exists in all people – which generates fear and creates the conditions for violence – is present, too, in children. The boys on the island, unshackled from influence and responsibility, behave like adults. They tussle for power, imagine exogenous terrors into existence, rationalise their behaviours through the prism of survival. Their fathers – the men they will grow up to be – are present in the figures of these prepubescent castaways.

Like George Orwell’s Animal Farm, William Golding’s Lord of the Flies is often approached by readers too young to fully understand it. This adaptation makes no apology for being aimed at adults. Blood-soaked pig hunts, trippy hallucinations, surges of sudden, shocking violence: Thorne’s island is a brutal place. Yet the BBC knows, too, that this narrative will resonate with Gen Z audiences (it is, after all, the basic premise of Fortnite) who eat up social satires like The Hunger Games and Squid Game, both of which owe a debt of gratitude to Golding. The issue is that the plot necessarily requires an almost entirely preteen cast, playing off one another in the depths of the jungle. Some of the acting here has the feeling of school drama, precocious children declaiming with excessive confidence. This unevenness is tempered with a rousing score, by Cristobal Tapia de Veer, and Mark Wolf’s arresting cinematography.

Winston Sawyers as Ralph, holding the conch
Winston Sawyers as Ralph, holding the conch (BBC/Eleven/Lisa Tomasetti)

But even if some exchanges feel clunky, Lord of the Flies works because its coterie of child stars is largely very well cast. McKenna, as Piggy, is particularly convincing, as is Pratt, as the unravelling Jack. And while some elements of this adaptation – the use of fisheye photography, or the uncanny CGI wild pigs – don’t quite work, it is overwhelmingly a bold, ambitious vision for the novel. Thorne and series director Marc Munden do not hold back. The four-episode series, shot largely on location in Malaysia, feels feral. Liberated from cans of Lynx Africa, you can almost smell the body odour emanating from these writhing bodies.

“Fancy thinking the Beast was something you could hunt and kill,” the imagined monster snarls, as the boys descend into chaos. For the second time in a year, after Adolescence, Thorne has written a television show that will terrify parents. In bold colours, Lord of the Flies depicts the, often inscrutable, journey to irreversible acts of violence, all perpetrated by little boys with spindly limbs, unbroken voices, and wide, seemingly innocent, eyes.

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

Related News

A303 westbound between A360 and A36 | Westbound | Accident

30 April 2026
Golders Green terror attack suspect Essa Suleiman was referred to government’s counterterror programme – UK Times

Golders Green terror attack suspect Essa Suleiman was referred to government’s counterterror programme – UK Times

30 April 2026

A453 northbound between A6 and M1 J24/A50 | Northbound | Road Works

30 April 2026

A46 northbound between A435 near Bishop's Cleeve and A4184 | Northbound | Congestion

30 April 2026
UK housing market in a slump as buyers absorb ‘extraordinary shocks’ – UK Times

UK housing market in a slump as buyers absorb ‘extraordinary shocks’ – UK Times

30 April 2026

A52 northbound distributor at A453 junction | Westbound | Congestion

30 April 2026
Top News
Tan France shocks fans by trading signature silver hair for a dark new look

Tan France shocks fans by trading signature silver hair for a dark new look

30 April 2026
Heartbroken Maxx Crosby left ‘sick to my stomach’ after ex-teammate’s death at 35: ‘I wish I could talk to you one more time’

Heartbroken Maxx Crosby left ‘sick to my stomach’ after ex-teammate’s death at 35: ‘I wish I could talk to you one more time’

30 April 2026

A303 westbound between A360 and A36 | Westbound | Accident

30 April 2026

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest UK news and updates directly to your inbox.

Recent Posts

  • Tan France shocks fans by trading signature silver hair for a dark new look
  • Heartbroken Maxx Crosby left ‘sick to my stomach’ after ex-teammate’s death at 35: ‘I wish I could talk to you one more time’
  • A303 westbound between A360 and A36 | Westbound | Accident
  • ISA vs Savings Account Comparing ISA Accounts
  • Golders Green terror attack suspect Essa Suleiman was referred to government’s counterterror programme – UK Times

Recent Comments

No comments to show.
© 2026 UK Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of use
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us

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

Go to mobile version