Tag: Netflix

  • ‘Midnight Club’: Netflix cancels Mike Flanagan’s mystery thriller after Season 1

    By ANI

    WASHINGTON: Yes, you read it right! Mike Flanagan’s mystery thriller ‘Midnight Club’ is not proceeding ahead with another season, as Season 2 of the series has been cancelled by Netflix.

    According to Variety, a US-based news outlet, the show has been cancelled after executive producers Mike Flanagan and Trevor Macy’s departure from Netflix for a new arrangement with Amazon Studios.

    For “Midnight Club,” his first YA series, “The Haunting of Hill House” and “Midnight Mass” creator Flanagan turned to a younger audience. He adapted Christopher Pike’s writing for the programme about terminally ill youths living at Brightcliffe Hospice, a location with many mysterious mysteries behind it.

    The first of the 10 episodes in “The Midnight Club,” which premiered on October 7, set a new record for the most jump scares in a TV episode.

    In addition to Zach Gilford and Heather Langenkamp, the drama stars Iman Benson, Igby Rigney, Ruth Codd, Annarah Cymone, Chris Sumpter, Adia, Aya Furukawa, Sauriyan Sapkota, Matt Biedel, Samantha Sloyan, and Adia.

    According to Variety, “The Midnight Club” marked not just Flanagan and Macy’s first step into young-adult entertainment but also their first project which was intended to be a multi-season endeavour. It was created by Flanagan and “The Haunting of Bly Manor” author Leah Fong.

    However, Flanagan had already mentally prepared for the idea it might not be renewed and told the press ahead of its premiere he would share his Season 2 plans if “Midnight Club” was scrapped.

    WASHINGTON: Yes, you read it right! Mike Flanagan’s mystery thriller ‘Midnight Club’ is not proceeding ahead with another season, as Season 2 of the series has been cancelled by Netflix.

    According to Variety, a US-based news outlet, the show has been cancelled after executive producers Mike Flanagan and Trevor Macy’s departure from Netflix for a new arrangement with Amazon Studios.

    For “Midnight Club,” his first YA series, “The Haunting of Hill House” and “Midnight Mass” creator Flanagan turned to a younger audience. He adapted Christopher Pike’s writing for the programme about terminally ill youths living at Brightcliffe Hospice, a location with many mysterious mysteries behind it.

    The first of the 10 episodes in “The Midnight Club,” which premiered on October 7, set a new record for the most jump scares in a TV episode.

    In addition to Zach Gilford and Heather Langenkamp, the drama stars Iman Benson, Igby Rigney, Ruth Codd, Annarah Cymone, Chris Sumpter, Adia, Aya Furukawa, Sauriyan Sapkota, Matt Biedel, Samantha Sloyan, and Adia.

    According to Variety, “The Midnight Club” marked not just Flanagan and Macy’s first step into young-adult entertainment but also their first project which was intended to be a multi-season endeavour. It was created by Flanagan and “The Haunting of Bly Manor” author Leah Fong.

    However, Flanagan had already mentally prepared for the idea it might not be renewed and told the press ahead of its premiere he would share his Season 2 plans if “Midnight Club” was scrapped.

  • Ben Affleck hits out at Netflix, calls it an assembly line

    Express News Service

    Actor/director Ben Affleck has come out criticising the streaming giant Netflix for being an assembly line. The actor has recently started a production studio called Artists Equity with his long-time creative collaborator Matt Damon and Gerry Cardinale, the investing partner who represents Redbird Capital. According to Affleck and Damon, their studio will put artists at the front of its model and will give the power back to the creators.

    In a recent interview with The New York Times, Ben Affleck said, “‘How are we going to make 50 great movies?! How is that possible? There’s no committee big enough. There aren’t enough — you just can’t do it. It’s a thing that requires attention and dedication and work and resists the assembly line process,” he then referred to Netflix’s founder and co-CEO by saying, “Scott Stuber is a really talented, smart guy who I really like but it’s an impossible job.”

    The move to start the production company comes after Affleck and Damon recently obtained $100 million in funding from the investment firm Red Bird Capital Partners, the funding will be supplemented by Affleck and Damon’s own capital.

    Actor/director Ben Affleck has come out criticising the streaming giant Netflix for being an assembly line. The actor has recently started a production studio called Artists Equity with his long-time creative collaborator Matt Damon and Gerry Cardinale, the investing partner who represents Redbird Capital. According to Affleck and Damon, their studio will put artists at the front of its model and will give the power back to the creators.

    In a recent interview with The New York Times, Ben Affleck said, “‘How are we going to make 50 great movies?! How is that possible? There’s no committee big enough. There aren’t enough — you just can’t do it. It’s a thing that requires attention and dedication and work and resists the assembly line process,” he then referred to Netflix’s founder and co-CEO by saying, “Scott Stuber is a really talented, smart guy who I really like but it’s an impossible job.”

    The move to start the production company comes after Affleck and Damon recently obtained $100 million in funding from the investment firm Red Bird Capital Partners, the funding will be supplemented by Affleck and Damon’s own capital.

  • ‘Forgotten’ Afghan stories highlighted in two new films from Netflix, Nat Geo

    By AFP

    LOS ANGELES: The world’s focus has shifted to the war in Ukraine, but two major new documentaries aim to throw the spotlight back on Afghanistan, and the people left behind by the United States’ rapid withdrawal last year.

    National Geographic’s “Retrograde” follows an Afghan general who tried in vain to hold back the Taliban advance in 2021, while Netflix’s “In Her Hands” tells the story of the country’s youngest woman mayor, who had to flee as the Islamists took over.

    “We’ve forgotten about this story — when was the last time we discussed the war in Afghanistan, or read an article about it?” said “Retrograde” director Matthew Heineman.

    “Obviously there’s still some coverage of it, but… not that many people are talking about this country that we left behind.”

    Zarifa Ghafari, the former mayor spotlighted by “In Her Hands,” told AFP that back under the Taliban, Afghanistan is “the only country around the world nowadays where a woman can sell their body, their children, anything else, but are not able to go to school.”

    But at international political meetings, “Afghanistan is out of those discussions.”

    Both movies begin in the months before the US withdrawal, as their subjects tried to build a safer and more egalitarian future for their country.

    The two films end with their central characters forced to watch from abroad as the Taliban rapidly erases all their work.

    “Retrograde” began as a documentary with rare inside access to US special forces.

    ALSO READ | Public executions, amputation to return as Afghan leader orders full enforcement of Islamic law

    In one early scene, US troops are shown having to destroy — or retrograde — their equipment and wastefully fire off excess ammunition that was sorely needed by their Afghan allies.

    After the Americans left their base in Helmand, Afghan general Sami Sadat agreed to let Heineman’s cameras stay and follow him, as he took charge of the ultimately doomed effort to stave off Taliban advances.

    In one scene, Sadat — stubbornly determined to rally his men to fight on as the situation crumbles around them — chides his aide for bringing to his war office persistent reports of nearby Afghan troops downing their weapons.

    “Every neon sign was saying ‘stop, give up, this is over,’ and he had this blind faith that maybe, just maybe, if he held on to Lashkar Gah or Helmand, that they could beat back the Taliban,” recalled Heineman.

    Sadat eventually had to flee, and the filmmakers shifted their lens again, to desperate scenes at Kabul airport as Afghans fought for spaces on the last American planes out.

    ALSO READ | Banned from education, ‘idle’ Afghan girls are married off

    “It was one of the most difficult things I’ve ever witnessed in my career,” added Heineman, who was nominated for an Oscar for 2015’s “Cartel Land.”

    “Discussions around wars in public policy and foreign policy, they’re often talked about and discussed without the human element,” said the director.

    “One of the things I’ve tried to do throughout my career is take these large, amorphous subjects and put a human face to them.”

    ‘Murder’

    Former mayor Ghafari had survived assassination attempts and seen her father gunned down by the Taliban before she too left Afghanistan as the Islamists moved in.

    “Talking about that moment, I’m still not able to stop crying… it was something that I really never wanted to do,” said Ghafari, who drew the Taliban’s ire by campaigning for girls’ education after being appointed mayor of Maidan Shahr aged 24.

    “I had some personal responsibilities, especially after the murder of my dad… to help secure my family.”

    The directors of “In Her Hands,” which counts Hillary Clinton among its executive producers, returned to Afghanistan and filmed Ghafari’s former driver Massoum, now unemployed and living under the Taliban.

    In unsettling scenes, he is seen bonding with the same fighters who once attacked the car in which he was driving Ghafari.

    “The story of Massoum represents the story of all Afghanistan’s crisis… why people are feeling betrayed,” said Ghafari.

    ‘Share their pain’

    Though the conflicts in Afghanistan and Ukraine are vastly different in nature, both films offer a cautionary tale about what can happen once the West’s focus shifts.

    ALSO READ | Afghanistan: Taliban arrests women activists, journalists in Kabul

    “Obviously, that’s happened throughout history, and will continue to happen long into the future. And so what can we learn from this experience?” said Heineman.

    Ghafari said: “Whatever happens in Ukraine and happened in Ukraine, it’s the same thing that we have been going through for like 60 years.

    “The same thing, again and again. So we share their pain.”

    LOS ANGELES: The world’s focus has shifted to the war in Ukraine, but two major new documentaries aim to throw the spotlight back on Afghanistan, and the people left behind by the United States’ rapid withdrawal last year.

    National Geographic’s “Retrograde” follows an Afghan general who tried in vain to hold back the Taliban advance in 2021, while Netflix’s “In Her Hands” tells the story of the country’s youngest woman mayor, who had to flee as the Islamists took over.

    “We’ve forgotten about this story — when was the last time we discussed the war in Afghanistan, or read an article about it?” said “Retrograde” director Matthew Heineman.

    “Obviously there’s still some coverage of it, but… not that many people are talking about this country that we left behind.”

    Zarifa Ghafari, the former mayor spotlighted by “In Her Hands,” told AFP that back under the Taliban, Afghanistan is “the only country around the world nowadays where a woman can sell their body, their children, anything else, but are not able to go to school.”

    But at international political meetings, “Afghanistan is out of those discussions.”

    Both movies begin in the months before the US withdrawal, as their subjects tried to build a safer and more egalitarian future for their country.

    The two films end with their central characters forced to watch from abroad as the Taliban rapidly erases all their work.

    “Retrograde” began as a documentary with rare inside access to US special forces.

    ALSO READ | Public executions, amputation to return as Afghan leader orders full enforcement of Islamic law

    In one early scene, US troops are shown having to destroy — or retrograde — their equipment and wastefully fire off excess ammunition that was sorely needed by their Afghan allies.

    After the Americans left their base in Helmand, Afghan general Sami Sadat agreed to let Heineman’s cameras stay and follow him, as he took charge of the ultimately doomed effort to stave off Taliban advances.

    In one scene, Sadat — stubbornly determined to rally his men to fight on as the situation crumbles around them — chides his aide for bringing to his war office persistent reports of nearby Afghan troops downing their weapons.

    “Every neon sign was saying ‘stop, give up, this is over,’ and he had this blind faith that maybe, just maybe, if he held on to Lashkar Gah or Helmand, that they could beat back the Taliban,” recalled Heineman.

    Sadat eventually had to flee, and the filmmakers shifted their lens again, to desperate scenes at Kabul airport as Afghans fought for spaces on the last American planes out.

    ALSO READ | Banned from education, ‘idle’ Afghan girls are married off

    “It was one of the most difficult things I’ve ever witnessed in my career,” added Heineman, who was nominated for an Oscar for 2015’s “Cartel Land.”

    “Discussions around wars in public policy and foreign policy, they’re often talked about and discussed without the human element,” said the director.

    “One of the things I’ve tried to do throughout my career is take these large, amorphous subjects and put a human face to them.”

    ‘Murder’

    Former mayor Ghafari had survived assassination attempts and seen her father gunned down by the Taliban before she too left Afghanistan as the Islamists moved in.

    “Talking about that moment, I’m still not able to stop crying… it was something that I really never wanted to do,” said Ghafari, who drew the Taliban’s ire by campaigning for girls’ education after being appointed mayor of Maidan Shahr aged 24.

    “I had some personal responsibilities, especially after the murder of my dad… to help secure my family.”

    The directors of “In Her Hands,” which counts Hillary Clinton among its executive producers, returned to Afghanistan and filmed Ghafari’s former driver Massoum, now unemployed and living under the Taliban.

    In unsettling scenes, he is seen bonding with the same fighters who once attacked the car in which he was driving Ghafari.

    “The story of Massoum represents the story of all Afghanistan’s crisis… why people are feeling betrayed,” said Ghafari.

    ‘Share their pain’

    Though the conflicts in Afghanistan and Ukraine are vastly different in nature, both films offer a cautionary tale about what can happen once the West’s focus shifts.

    ALSO READ | Afghanistan: Taliban arrests women activists, journalists in Kabul

    “Obviously, that’s happened throughout history, and will continue to happen long into the future. And so what can we learn from this experience?” said Heineman.

    Ghafari said: “Whatever happens in Ukraine and happened in Ukraine, it’s the same thing that we have been going through for like 60 years.

    “The same thing, again and again. So we share their pain.”

  • Netflix’s ‘You’ Season 4 gets a new premiere date

    By Express News Service

    The fourth season of Netflix’s thriller series ‘You’ is reportedly premiering a day earlier than previously expected. It was earlier announced that season 4 was getting split into two parts, the first part will now release on 9 February while the second part on 9 March.

    The series was created by Greg Berlanti and Sera Gamble based on the books written by Caroline Kepnes. You follows a serial killer named Joe Goldberg with an obsessive personality who works as a bookstore manager. The rest of the cast includes Tati Gabrielle, Charlotte Ritchie, Tilly Keeper & Amy-Leigh Hickman. 

    The fourth season of Netflix’s thriller series ‘You’ is reportedly premiering a day earlier than previously expected. It was earlier announced that season 4 was getting split into two parts, the first part will now release on 9 February while the second part on 9 March.

    The series was created by Greg Berlanti and Sera Gamble based on the books written by Caroline Kepnes. You follows a serial killer named Joe Goldberg with an obsessive personality who works as a bookstore manager. The rest of the cast includes Tati Gabrielle, Charlotte Ritchie, Tilly Keeper & Amy-Leigh Hickman. 

  • Netflix’s upcoming series ‘Kaleidoscope’ could be watched in any order

    By Express News Service

    Netflix’s upcoming heist drama series Kaleidoscope could be watched in any order. Previously titled Jigsaw, and built-in non-linear fashion, audiences can select the order in which they watch the series and the story would still make sense.

    Netflix recently released a Youtube promotional video where actors of the series explained how this nonlinear streaming experience was achieved and how the audience could control the narrative in their own way.

    The series is created by screenwriter Eric Garcia who is best known for writing the sci-fi film Repo Man and The Autopsy of Jane Doe. The first two episodes of the series are directed by José Padilha, who directed the Robocop remake in 2014.

    With Breaking Bad fame Giancarlo Esposito leading the cast, the series has Tati Gabrielle, John Hans Tester, Jordan Mendoza, Soojeong Son, Niousha Noor, and Rosaline Elbay in supporting roles.

    Netflix had previously experimented with a similar style with the Black Mirror special episode Bandersnatch where the audience could choose different paths the story could go, similar to the choose-your-own-adventure books.

    The series is currently scheduled to stream on 1 January.

    Netflix’s upcoming heist drama series Kaleidoscope could be watched in any order. Previously titled Jigsaw, and built-in non-linear fashion, audiences can select the order in which they watch the series and the story would still make sense.

    Netflix recently released a Youtube promotional video where actors of the series explained how this nonlinear streaming experience was achieved and how the audience could control the narrative in their own way.

    The series is created by screenwriter Eric Garcia who is best known for writing the sci-fi film Repo Man and The Autopsy of Jane Doe. The first two episodes of the series are directed by José Padilha, who directed the Robocop remake in 2014.

    With Breaking Bad fame Giancarlo Esposito leading the cast, the series has Tati Gabrielle, John Hans Tester, Jordan Mendoza, Soojeong Son, Niousha Noor, and Rosaline Elbay in supporting roles.

    Netflix had previously experimented with a similar style with the Black Mirror special episode Bandersnatch where the audience could choose different paths the story could go, similar to the choose-your-own-adventure books.

    The series is currently scheduled to stream on 1 January.

  • Dave Bautista pitches himself to play the lead in Gears of War  

    By Express News Service

    Dave Bautista has put his name forward for involvement in Netflix’s recently announced Gears of War movie, which is currently in development. And he has expressed his interest to play the main character, Marcus Fenix.

    Taking to Instagram, the actor uploaded an old promo clip of himself wearing the signature armour of the game’s lead character, Fenix, and shared the video to Twitter as well for maximum exposure. He captioned the video: “I can’t make this any easier.” Bautista has a long relationship with Gears of War, previously lending his likeness to Microsoft to allow players the chance to unlock a character based on him for the sequel’s multiplayer modes, while players can use the character as part of the current instalment, Gears of War 5.

    Bautista’s relationship with the franchise goes even beyond lending his likeness and being a fan. The actor had previously revealed that he turned down a role in the blockbuster Fast and Furious franchise during a meeting, to pitch a Gears movie to Universal instead.

    But, sadly, the studio didn’t go for it then, but it looks like it is finally happening. Bautista has a strong working relationship with Netflix. He will next be seen in Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery for the streamer, having previously filmed Army of the Dead for them. Furthermore, he was reported to be in talks to star in Unleashed, a cop-and-dog story.

    The Gears of War adaptation is part of a spate of other video game adaptations Netflix is currently working on. They have a movie based on Bioshock, an Assassin’s Creed series planned, and an adaptation is currently in development for the stunning Horizon Zero Dawn series.  

    Dave Bautista has put his name forward for involvement in Netflix’s recently announced Gears of War movie, which is currently in development. And he has expressed his interest to play the main character, Marcus Fenix.

    Taking to Instagram, the actor uploaded an old promo clip of himself wearing the signature armour of the game’s lead character, Fenix, and shared the video to Twitter as well for maximum exposure. He captioned the video: “I can’t make this any easier.” Bautista has a long relationship with Gears of War, previously lending his likeness to Microsoft to allow players the chance to unlock a character based on him for the sequel’s multiplayer modes, while players can use the character as part of the current instalment, Gears of War 5.

    Bautista’s relationship with the franchise goes even beyond lending his likeness and being a fan. The actor had previously revealed that he turned down a role in the blockbuster Fast and Furious franchise during a meeting, to pitch a Gears movie to Universal instead.

    But, sadly, the studio didn’t go for it then, but it looks like it is finally happening. Bautista has a strong working relationship with Netflix. He will next be seen in Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery for the streamer, having previously filmed Army of the Dead for them. Furthermore, he was reported to be in talks to star in Unleashed, a cop-and-dog story.

    The Gears of War adaptation is part of a spate of other video game adaptations Netflix is currently working on. They have a movie based on Bioshock, an Assassin’s Creed series planned, and an adaptation is currently in development for the stunning Horizon Zero Dawn series. 
     

  • Chris Rock tapped to be first comedian to perform live on Netflix

    By IANS

    LOS ANGELES: Comedian Chris Rock is set to become the first funnyman to perform live on streaming giant Netflix.Robbie Praw, the vice-president of stand-up and comedy formats at Netflix, announced that the 57-year-old star will make history when he performs in a yet-to-be-titled comedy special in 2023, reports aceshowbiz.com.”Chris Rock is one of the most iconic and important comedic voices of our generation. We’re thrilled the entire world will be able to experience a live Chris Rock comedy event and be a part of Netflix history,” Robbie said.”This will be an unforgettable moment and we’re so honoured that Chris is carrying this torch.”Rock previously joined forces with Netflix in 2018, when his stand-up special, ‘Chris Rock: Tamborine’, aired on the streaming platform.Earlier this year, meanwhile, Rock was involved in an infamous on-stage clash with Will Smith at the Oscars. The 54-year-old actor smacked Chris after he made a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith, Will’s wife, and the Hollywood star subsequently described his behaviour at the Oscars as “shocking, painful, and inexcusable.”

    LOS ANGELES: Comedian Chris Rock is set to become the first funnyman to perform live on streaming giant Netflix.
    Robbie Praw, the vice-president of stand-up and comedy formats at Netflix, announced that the 57-year-old star will make history when he performs in a yet-to-be-titled comedy special in 2023, reports aceshowbiz.com.
    “Chris Rock is one of the most iconic and important comedic voices of our generation. We’re thrilled the entire world will be able to experience a live Chris Rock comedy event and be a part of Netflix history,” Robbie said.
    “This will be an unforgettable moment and we’re so honoured that Chris is carrying this torch.”
    Rock previously joined forces with Netflix in 2018, when his stand-up special, ‘Chris Rock: Tamborine’, aired on the streaming platform.
    Earlier this year, meanwhile, Rock was involved in an infamous on-stage clash with Will Smith at the Oscars. The 54-year-old actor smacked Chris after he made a joke about Jada Pinkett Smith, Will’s wife, and the Hollywood star subsequently described his behaviour at the Oscars as “shocking, painful, and inexcusable.”

  • Comedian Chris Rock to go live on Netflix in a first for the streamer

    By PTI

    LOS ANGELES: Popular comedian Chris Rock will be the first artist to perform live on Netflix for the company’s maiden live, global streaming event.

    In a press release issued on Friday, Netflix said the comedy special will stream in early 2023.

    “Chris Rock is one of the most iconic and important comedic voices of our generation. We’re thrilled the entire world will be able to experience a live Chris Rock comedy event and be a part of Netflix history. This will be an unforgettable moment and we’re so honoured that Chris is carrying this torch,” said Robbie Praw, Netflix Vice President of Stand-up and Comedy Formats.

    Rock previously collaborated with Netflix on the comedy special “Tamborine” in 2018. He also appeared at the streamer’s “Netflix Is a Joke” comedy festival earlier in 2022.

    The comedian is currently on his Ego Death world tour, with shows planned through in California, Texas, and Washington.

    Earlier this year, Rock was welcomed amid applause and two standing ovations at the comedy club where he made his first public appearance since Will Smith slapped him during the 2022 Oscars ceremony.

    LOS ANGELES: Popular comedian Chris Rock will be the first artist to perform live on Netflix for the company’s maiden live, global streaming event.

    In a press release issued on Friday, Netflix said the comedy special will stream in early 2023.

    “Chris Rock is one of the most iconic and important comedic voices of our generation. We’re thrilled the entire world will be able to experience a live Chris Rock comedy event and be a part of Netflix history. This will be an unforgettable moment and we’re so honoured that Chris is carrying this torch,” said Robbie Praw, Netflix Vice President of Stand-up and Comedy Formats.

    Rock previously collaborated with Netflix on the comedy special “Tamborine” in 2018. He also appeared at the streamer’s “Netflix Is a Joke” comedy festival earlier in 2022.

    The comedian is currently on his Ego Death world tour, with shows planned through in California, Texas, and Washington.

    Earlier this year, Rock was welcomed amid applause and two standing ovations at the comedy club where he made his first public appearance since Will Smith slapped him during the 2022 Oscars ceremony.

  • Netflix releases trailer for Guillermo Del Toro’s Pinocchio

    By Express News Service

    The first official trailer for Guillermo Del Toro’s upcoming stop-motion animated film Pinocchio has been released online.

    While Disney had just released a live-action adaptation of Pinocchio starring Tom Hanks as Geppetto, Del Toro’s version is a reimagining of the 1883 Italian novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi.

    The film is directed by  Guillermo Del Toro along with Emmy Award-winning animator Mark Gustafson. Del Toro has written the screenplay for the film along with Matthew Robbins, and Patrick McHale. 

    Having been in development since 2008, the film is jointly produced by Netflix Animation, The Jim Henson Company, and ShadowMachine.

    The first official trailer for Guillermo Del Toro’s upcoming stop-motion animated film Pinocchio has been released online.

    While Disney had just released a live-action adaptation of Pinocchio starring Tom Hanks as Geppetto, Del Toro’s version is a reimagining of the 1883 Italian novel The Adventures of Pinocchio by Carlo Collodi.

    The film is directed by  Guillermo Del Toro along with Emmy Award-winning animator Mark Gustafson. Del Toro has written the screenplay for the film along with Matthew Robbins, and Patrick McHale. 

    Having been in development since 2008, the film is jointly produced by Netflix Animation, The Jim Henson Company, and ShadowMachine.

  • New season of ‘The Crown’ set to air after backlash

    By AFP

    LONDON: The latest season of “The Crown” hits the small screen next week, with streaming giant Netflix adding a disclaimer after a furore over untrue storylines.

    Series Five, which airs on Wednesday just over two months after the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the accession of her son King Charles III, sees the action move to the 1990s.

    Princess Diana’s bombshell television interview, emotional turmoil and divorce from Charles are all documented, along with his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles and tensions with his mother.

    It was not clear, however, how the series deals with the death of Diana in a car crash in Paris in 1997 or if a disclaimer would be added before each episode.

    Following outrage from prominent figures including Oscar-winning actor Judi Dench and Britain’s former prime minister John Major last month, Netflix added a description of the show as “inspired by real events” to its programme page.

    Dench blasted Netflix for “crude sensationalism” after reports of scenes showing Charles manoeuvring to force his mother’s abdication.

    “No-one is a greater believer in artistic freedom than I, but this cannot go unchallenged,” wrote Dench, who won an Academy Award for playing Queen Elizabeth I in “Shakespeare in Love” and was nominated for her portrayal of Queen Victoria in “Mrs Brown”.

    The strength of the criticism has forced Netflix to defend both itself and screenwriter Peter Morgan.

    It said the series was not meant to be taken as fact but as an imagining of “what could have happened behind closed doors”.

    Its stars too have rallied to its defence, with Diana actress Elizabeth Debicki calling for people to move on “now the disclaimer is up there”.

    ‘Good drama’

    “There’s a huge amoUnt of room for interpretation,” the Australian actress said. “That’s good drama to me.”

    Jonathan Pryce, who plays the queen’s husband Prince Philip, even went as far as to criticise his fellow actors.

    Pryce said he was “hugely disappointed by my fellow artistes” after acting powerhouses Eileen Atkins and Harriet Walter, both of whom have appeared in “The Crown”, expressed reservations.

    “The vast majority of people know it’s a drama. They’ve been watching it for four seasons,” Pryce said.

    But with most of the royals depicted still alive and an apparent upping of the creative licence, even a disclaimer may be too little for critics who accuse Morgan of an undeclared anti-monarchist agenda.

    Television reviewer Christopher Stevens, who saw an eight-and-a-half-hour preview, wrote this week that “the sheer virulence” of the latest storylines was becoming “shockingly clear”.

    The show, he said, was now unrecognisable compared to the first series in 2016.

    “The Crown” was now “a nakedly republican polemic, using embarrassment as its chief weapon against the monarchy”, he wrote in the Daily Mail.

    ‘Treasured’

    Writer and royal biographer William Shawcross said the plotlines were deliberately hurtful attempts to damage the institution of the monarchy — “something that millions of ordinary people treasure”.

    “I think a lot of people do (believe them), why would they not? They see this beautifully produced thing… Most people in the world don’t have any other yardstick. It’s terribly dishonest,” he told AFP.

    He said Netflix had taken advantage of the unique position in which the royal family found themselves.

    “Almost any other living family is in a position to complain or stop or sue. The royal family don’t have the right or the ability to do that,” he said.

    Philip Murphy, of the University of London’s Institute of Historical Research, however, said the royal family’s plight was “partly” their own fault.

    The palace had made “strenuous efforts to prevent historians from gaining access to records on the queen’s 70-year reign”, he said in a letter to The Times.

    “If scholars are unable to write an accurate history of the monarchy, the field will be left to dramatists and to those with vested interests in leaking information,” he wrote.

    LONDON: The latest season of “The Crown” hits the small screen next week, with streaming giant Netflix adding a disclaimer after a furore over untrue storylines.

    Series Five, which airs on Wednesday just over two months after the death of Queen Elizabeth II and the accession of her son King Charles III, sees the action move to the 1990s.

    Princess Diana’s bombshell television interview, emotional turmoil and divorce from Charles are all documented, along with his affair with Camilla Parker Bowles and tensions with his mother.

    It was not clear, however, how the series deals with the death of Diana in a car crash in Paris in 1997 or if a disclaimer would be added before each episode.

    Following outrage from prominent figures including Oscar-winning actor Judi Dench and Britain’s former prime minister John Major last month, Netflix added a description of the show as “inspired by real events” to its programme page.

    Dench blasted Netflix for “crude sensationalism” after reports of scenes showing Charles manoeuvring to force his mother’s abdication.

    “No-one is a greater believer in artistic freedom than I, but this cannot go unchallenged,” wrote Dench, who won an Academy Award for playing Queen Elizabeth I in “Shakespeare in Love” and was nominated for her portrayal of Queen Victoria in “Mrs Brown”.

    The strength of the criticism has forced Netflix to defend both itself and screenwriter Peter Morgan.

    It said the series was not meant to be taken as fact but as an imagining of “what could have happened behind closed doors”.

    Its stars too have rallied to its defence, with Diana actress Elizabeth Debicki calling for people to move on “now the disclaimer is up there”.

    ‘Good drama’

    “There’s a huge amoUnt of room for interpretation,” the Australian actress said. “That’s good drama to me.”

    Jonathan Pryce, who plays the queen’s husband Prince Philip, even went as far as to criticise his fellow actors.

    Pryce said he was “hugely disappointed by my fellow artistes” after acting powerhouses Eileen Atkins and Harriet Walter, both of whom have appeared in “The Crown”, expressed reservations.

    “The vast majority of people know it’s a drama. They’ve been watching it for four seasons,” Pryce said.

    But with most of the royals depicted still alive and an apparent upping of the creative licence, even a disclaimer may be too little for critics who accuse Morgan of an undeclared anti-monarchist agenda.

    Television reviewer Christopher Stevens, who saw an eight-and-a-half-hour preview, wrote this week that “the sheer virulence” of the latest storylines was becoming “shockingly clear”.

    The show, he said, was now unrecognisable compared to the first series in 2016.

    “The Crown” was now “a nakedly republican polemic, using embarrassment as its chief weapon against the monarchy”, he wrote in the Daily Mail.

    ‘Treasured’

    Writer and royal biographer William Shawcross said the plotlines were deliberately hurtful attempts to damage the institution of the monarchy — “something that millions of ordinary people treasure”.

    “I think a lot of people do (believe them), why would they not? They see this beautifully produced thing… Most people in the world don’t have any other yardstick. It’s terribly dishonest,” he told AFP.

    He said Netflix had taken advantage of the unique position in which the royal family found themselves.

    “Almost any other living family is in a position to complain or stop or sue. The royal family don’t have the right or the ability to do that,” he said.

    Philip Murphy, of the University of London’s Institute of Historical Research, however, said the royal family’s plight was “partly” their own fault.

    The palace had made “strenuous efforts to prevent historians from gaining access to records on the queen’s 70-year reign”, he said in a letter to The Times.

    “If scholars are unable to write an accurate history of the monarchy, the field will be left to dramatists and to those with vested interests in leaking information,” he wrote.