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S&M Scene in ‘Great Expectations’ Defended by BBC Content Chief, Writer Steven Knight Was ‘Reading Between the Lines’ of Dickens’ Novel
S&M Scene in ‘Great Expectations’ Defended by BBC Content Chief, Writer Steven Knight Was ‘Reading Between the Lines’ of Dickens’ Novel
turnover time:2024-05-19 16:20:32

S&M Scene in ‘Great Expectations’ Defended by BBC Content Chief, Writer Steven Knight Was ‘Reading Between the Lines’ of Dickens’ Novel1

Charlotte Moore, chief content officer at the BBC, has defended the decision of screenwriter Steven Knight, best known for Peaky Blinders, to spice up Charles Dickens Great Expectations in his television adaptation, now airing on the broadcaster.

Referring to an SM scene in the show, in which a naked Mr. Pumblechook (played by Matt Berry) is seen being whipped by housewife-turned-dominatrix Mrs. Gargery (played by Hayley Squires), Moore said that Knight believes absolutely everything [in the show] comes from what was alluded to by Dickens in the novel.

Moore, speaking Thursday to the Broadcasting Press Guild in London, added that you have to really understanding what [Dickens] would have felt able to write about [in the Victorian era] and read between the lines.

Another of Knights embellishments in the show is that Miss Havisham, played by Olivia Colman, is portrayed as a sadistic opium addict.

In an interview with the BBC last month, Knight said he wanted to view the story through a modern lens. You couldnt write about certain things in Dickens time: certain elements of sexuality, crime, disobedience against the crown and state. What I tried to do was imagine if Dickens was writing the story now and had the freedom to go to those darker places, what would he do? If he had been liberated to write the things that were going on that he wasnt allowed to write about.

Pressed on why the BBC had chosen to update a classic text in this way instead of commissioning new work, Moore said: Because I think its a great way to bring loved texts to new audiences, and to find new interpretations. She added that it was important to push the boundaries of storytelling, and reinvent [classic novels] for a modern age.

Asked what creative gaps existed in the scripted arena, Moore said that she and Lindsay Salt, director of BBC Drama, had greenlit a lot of thrillers, but she would like dramas in other genres like romance and comedy, and relationship dramas like Abi Morgans The Split, which had a very different tone.

She added: We are always looking for different tones and genre that we havent [done before]. Youre always looking for things that will surprise you.

Although she lauded hard-hitting cop drama Blue Lights, she also expressed a desire for lighter fare. I think everyones dealing with so much angst and strife at the moment, having something thats a bit more escapist would be good, she said.

In terms of BBC-backed films, she praised Raine Allen-Millers romantic comedy Rye Lane for its change in tone.

Moore was asked whether the BBC would continue to produce dramas about controversial subjects, especially those based on real events, such as the one to be written and directed by Peter Kosminsky about the tragic fire at Grenfell Tower in West London. A petition opposed to the drama, stating tragedy isnt entertainment, has gathered almost 58,000 names.

Moore said the broadcaster had a really strong track record in this area, and drama had a real place to tell [true] stories, particularly putting an emotional and historical context on stories that perhaps we read, but dont really put ourselves in those worlds, and [say] what would we have done?

She added: Of course you have to handle stories with real integrity, and a sense of sensitivity and responsibility.

Moore said she would not veto such projects. I dont think it would be right for me to ever censor ideas from very respected writers who have a track record of writing about such subjects, but of course, it will evolve, and I know theres huge sensitivity.

Kosminskys dramas have included The Government Inspector, about the death of Dr. David Kelly, one of the British experts on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq, and The State, about four British citizens who join ISIS in Syria.

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