‘The Narrow Road to the Deep North' Producers On Bringing Richard Flanagan's Epic Book to the Screen: 'A Really Important Australian Story'
The television adaptation of The Narrow Road to the Deep North, Richard Flanagan's epic Booker Prize-winning war novel, debuted on Amazon Prime Video on April 18. As befits the cultural importance of the book to Australians, the series stars arguably the country's buzziest male actor Jacob Elordi and is also helmed by one of its most important filmmakers Justin Kurzel. But Narrow Road's decade-long journey to the screen has been a long and arduous one.
Published in 2013, Flanagan's WWII-set book follows Dorrigo Evans, an Australian surgeon haunted by a wartime love affair and his brutal experiences as a POW forced to build the Thai-Burma Death Railway under Imperial Japanese command. The novel shifts between Dorrigo's youth, including a summer affair with his uncle's young wife, the horrors of his captivity, and his later, unfulfilled life, exploring memory, trauma, and the fragility of human dignity.
More from The Hollywood Reporter
'The Gardener' Producer José Manuel Lorenzo to Receive Conecta Fiction & Entertainment Honor
Netflix Sets Four New Series Made in Mexico, Including 'Santita' With Gael Garcia Bernal
'How to Have Sex' Director Molly Manning Walker Heads Up Cannes Un Certain Regard Jury
Flanagan was inspired to write Narrow Road by his father's experience as a prisoner of war who was forced to work the Burma Death Railway. The book received worldwide acclaim, selling more than a million copies in over 42 countries, won both the 2014 Man Booker Prize and Australian Prime Minister's Literary Award for Fiction, and cemented Flanagan's reputation as arguably Australia's greatest living author.
Given the praise and international success of Narrow Road, it was inevitable there would be keen interest in adapting the book for the screen. In 2018, it was revealed that FremantleMedia Australia had secured the rights to the book with the intention of creating a miniseries. A year later, Justin Kurzel, the Aussie auteur behind Snowtown, True History of the Kelly Gang and Nitram, and his writing partner Shaun Grant were announced to be boarding the project to create their first work for television. And then nothing. The project was stuck in limbo due to leadership changes at Fremantle and also the production shut downs caused by the COVID-19 pandemic.
After the rights lapsed, Flanagan approached Jo Porter, a former exec at Fremantle, who had established a new production company, Curio Pictures. With Kurzel and Grant still attached, the long delay was also fortuitous as it meant that Elordi, basking in the success of his turns in Euphoria, Priscilla and Saltburn, had come of age and was ideally suited to take on the role of Dorrigo Evans. As well as being Kurzel's first TV project, the series had added significance as Elordi was coming home to star in his first major Australian production.
Over a decade after the book was published, the first two episodes of the five-part miniseries of Narrow Road premiered at this year's Berlin Film Festival, to gushing praise from critics.
The Hollywood Reporter spoke to Curio's Porter and Rachel Gardner and Amazon MGM Studios' head of Australian originals Sarah Christie about the long journey to the screen for Flanagan's book and its importance to modern notions of Australian identity, brining Elordi home and working with the actor who is at an 'inflection point' in his career and the heightened interest in Kurzel's first television project.
Jo, I know originally adaptation was a Fremantle show, and you were at Fremantle previously. Did you take the show with you when you created Curio?
JO PORTER Rachel and I when we both left our respective places of employment to join up forces and start Curio Pictures, which is a Sony production entity here. We often lamented the golden handcuffs of those projects that you put your heart and soul in that you have to leave behind and for me, the one that was really, really hard to leave behind was Narrow Road, but the opportunity for the new venture was there, so you have to move on.
We started Curio up in the middle of 2021 and then towards the end of that year, I got a call literally out of the blue from Richard Flanagan saying — because COVID happened and that slowed everything down — 'hey, the rights have lapsed, [he asked] would you consider taking it on.' Personally, it was like oh my god, that is just extremely exciting. Rachel and I were still developing our slate, it was our first project, so it was before [Disney+ series] Artful Dodger.
RACHEL GARDNER Curio had just formed, and Jo rang me. I was at the end of my time at [See-Saw Films]. I'd done all my gardening leave, and I was like, '[Justin Kurzel] and [Shaun Grant] doing The Narrow Road to the Deep North. What!? Wow, like what does that look like?' Really intriguing.
So Kurzel and Grant were still attached when the rights lapsed?
PORTER Yes. After I'd left [Fremantle] they continued and there was a lot of prior relationships but also trust between [Richard Flanagan, Kurzel and Grant] in the project.
GARDNER We were really excited to take that it on. It was really important for us to make a statement for Curio with a really important Australian story. It's the type of show we want to be known for making out of Australia with the best of the best of Australian talent and working with great partners to take Australian content to a broad audience and a global one as well, not just a local one for us.
The international aspect is interesting to me, given the talent involved and the book it is adapted from, the miniseries seems to have a lot of awards potential…
PORTER You make it for an audience, to be honest. As producers, that's where our ambition sits, but we do believe that it has strong elements. I think particularly taking a filmmaker like Justin into the television sphere, this is his first sojourn. Also things like the Berlinale and the incredible honor of having the gala screening there [at the Berlin Film Festival]. Like Rachel said, I was intrigued to see what a Justin Kurzel television piece could look like.
[Going back to] Berlinale, we got an encouraging response out of that. But you never make something thinking it's going to be awards bait. What is thrilling is when all the pieces coalesce, the ambition of your commissioning partner comes together as well, and it is just alchemy, and then if it also has [awards] potential, well, isn't that sweet? Personally, I believe every single person that's worked on it deserves the most enormous award because of their contribution.
Sarah, in the timeline for the series adaptation of , where does Amazon come in? When did you guys start looking at this, and this actually this works for us as well?
SARAH CHRISTIE I think it was late 2022 when Jo, Rachel and I started talking about the different things that we could potentially do together, and Narrow Road was just one of those projects that is absolutely gold in terms of speaking in a deep way to an Australian audience and then also the the international potential. Richard's novel is absolutely exquisite and when they brought around the project it was a huge draw card for us.
Sitting down and reading Shaun's script for the first time — we read a lot of scripts like every single day — and when one sort of shines through, you know quite quickly that it's something we just had to bring onto the slate. Justin, Shaun and Curio's vision: we were really interested in seeing how these brilliant filmmakers were taking a new step in their ambition in telling a story that was going to be incredibly grounded, authentic and real. But it also has these elements of like lightness that came through, in the hope, in the love story that really enables people, particularly the character of Dorrigo, to survive the most horrific experiences.
So we were so excited about the vision that this story in terms of the tonal balance. And then having Jacob Elodi attached already at the point when we first started talking about this project, for us really just cemented the potential to reach a really broad audience. Jacob was at a really incredible inflection point in his career, having made his mark in Euphoria and Saltburn and then wanting to sort of come home [to Australia] to work with this incredible team of the best Australian filmmakers working today and take on a very challenging but incredible role.
There's also the fans of the novel, which we already know exist, which is a big drawcard again. We're speaking already to a very active and passionate audience and then having someone like Jacob come on board really for us felt like we were going to broaden out and really speak to a younger audience as well. Jacob is an incredible actor, and his performances have really resonated a lot with younger audiences. This story is actually about what young young people went through, so we were just very excited about the potential to speak to a really broad Australian audience.
PORTER [The role of Dorrigo] was such a hard role to cast. To find someone that could carry a piece like this, that could be someone that could unlock the finance for this project, authentically play the role and be a leader amongst many. [Those types of actors] don't just fall off trees, and it's almost like we had to wait until Jacob was the right age to play the part. He speaks so beautifully about his love of the novel, but also of work of Justin and it was always his dream to work with him and so it feels like serendipity. As Sarah said, he's at the inflection point of his career, he just committed to it. That would have been in 2022, and he was prepared to wait 12 months until we started filming, which is a big commitment.
GARDNER It probably wasn't the most popular opinion, really [for Elordi to take on this project]. An Australian TV series at that point in his career, it was a risk and obviously a very calculated one. We're really pleased that he's so proud of the series.
Can we talk a little about the casting in general? There's a couple of stand out people in the cast, like Simon Baker, I mean he's incredible in this. But also Thomas Weatherall, the actor who plays Frank Gardiner, a similarly incredible performance.
PORTER We had an incredible casting director, but it also speaks to the power of Justin to be the honeypot that they all adore working with. And then the material itself, there are a lot of meaty roles there to play.
GARDNER And this speaks to Richard and the absolute beauty of the book, where even though it's relatively small roles like the one that [Simon Baker] played the characterization of that character Keith — who actually is quite different than the book, funnily enough — the characterization of everyone, is just so sharply drawn and that is really attractive to actors to play.
Were there like specific production challenges you guys had? Obviously there's trying to recreate Myanmar in Australia, but also the torture scenes — which were hard to watch — how did you film those?
GARDNER Practically speaking in terms of structuring the production, we had a lot of very real constraints such as Jacob's time, Simon's time, Odessa's time, also having to structure the weight loss [the boys in the camps go through]. But because we had one director, we were able to shoot it like a film. So we could shoot our actors and locations and because of how the timelines were split, it was actually relatively easy to structure and the stars were all aligned. Ultimately people's availability sort of neatly slotted into those areas.
PORTER [Regarding where we shot the production] it did create decision [for us]. Do you travel around and find the locations potentially interstate or not, and we decided that we would base out of Sydney and find the locations around there. There was some away filming, but that was both creatively led and also because of the financing, it often makes more sense in Australia to just shoot within one state.
GARDNER We had a lot of support from New South Wales, the state went above and beyond and we really needed it with the financing.
PORTER If we couldn't make it work, we would have had to find another solution, but we felt we could find the best creative outcome by basing it [in New South Wales] and it also working within the financing model.
GARDNER [The shoot] was really tough. Those boys were really hungry and a little bit hangry, some of them were shredding over Christmas.
PORTER Justin is a very visceral truth telling director in his approach to filmmaking and I think actors really enjoy that as an experience, but it's why he's unflinching., his unflinching storytelling both in beauty and also in the horror, I think really shines through.
With historical dramas, there are always nitpickers, people who pick holes in things, especially in terms of adaptating a famous book. For me, I noticed that some of the dialogue, there seemed to be some linguistic anachronims. Was that done deliberately?
PORTER We didn't want to make a stuffy study, you want to feel these these women and men were alive and bled and [you want to] care for them. It's not meant to be a documentary, it is an examination extremists and and the worst and the best of humanity. That's the lens through which it [depicts] the war and the fire that Dorrigo has to walk through. It's important for the visceral nature of war and the hardship to be accurate, so everybody worked deeply hard to get right the truth of that lived experience. But yes, I think some liberties were probably taken in expression.
GARDNER I think it's also really important to make things for an audience. We really want to find a broad audience, and Gen Z is a really massively important audience. We had to open it up. It's so easy to make period piece and there's a veneer of untouchability that you just can't quite necessarily get through. [Justin] has made something that's quite emotionally accessible.
Sarah, for Amazon Prime Video Australia, is clearly a very big prestige show, and it has the ingredients and star power to attract an international audience. Are you looking to commission and produce more of these types of prestige dramas? Or was it just a one-off, the chance came up to grab and you had to take it?
CHRISTIE When we're looking to curate our slate of Australian originals, we're really looking to cater to a broad Australian audience and have [programming] that speaks to everyone across the board, and across our scripted strategy, film, unscripted. Narrow Road was just one of those projects that really stood out to us, for its prestige quality but also this story in of itself and the team behind it to deliver, we really felt like this could be a big moment for us in terms of our slate and drive conversation.
We were speaking about it being a historical piece and I think we were really interested in an important Australian story that hasn't been told that many times and particularly in this way, so we felt there was something there to really bring and connect with Australian customers and also people internationally.
Best of The Hollywood Reporter
22 of the Most Shocking Character Deaths in Television History
A 'Star Wars' Timeline: All the Movies and TV Shows in the Franchise
'Yellowstone' and the Sprawling Dutton Family Tree, Explained
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Super Bowl-Winning Coach Gets Name Dropped in New Lil Wayne Song
Super Bowl-Winning Coach Gets Name Dropped in New Lil Wayne Song originally appeared on Athlon Sports. Music fans likely all rushed to their devices on Friday, as Grammy Award-winning rapper Lil Wayne released what was the sixth of "Tha Carter" series. His 19-track album titled "Tha Carter VI" features from notable artists such as BigXthaPlug, MGK, Kodak Black and 2 Chainz among many others. The New Orleans rapper who many felt was snubbed from performing at this past year's Super Bowl LIX between the Philadelphia Eagles and Kansas City Chiefs in the Big Easy has always been known for being a lyrical genius. While he's a New Orleans native and a well-known Green Bay Packers fan, Wheezy shouted-out Los Angeles Rams head coach Sean McVay in one of his new songs, "Welcome to Tha Carter." Shortly after name-dropping former NBA star Metta Sandiford-Artest formerly known as Metta World Peace and Ron Artest, Wayne threw in McVay's name while alluding to one of his (Wayne's) personal favorite hobbies. "Smokin' that bomb L.A. like I'm McVay," said Wayne. Aside from being a music icon, Wayne is a huge sports junkie. He has made appearances on ESPN's "First Take," Fox's "Undisputed," and even won an episode of the iconic ESPN show "Around the Horn." As for McVay and the Rams, they came up a couple of plays short of playing in the Super Bowl this past season, and are hoping that with a new addition like All-Pro receiver Davante Adams, they can rectify their shortcomings in 2025. While McVay is likely appreciative of the bar from Wayne, he is also presumably focused on the team's upcoming minicamp in Maui. The Rams open up preseason play on August 9 against the Dallas story was originally reported by Athlon Sports on Jun 6, 2025, where it first appeared.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
‘Deliciously at odds': Zachary Quinto on embodying the brilliant yet flawed Dr. Oliver Wolf in ‘Brilliant Minds'
Although there's no shortage of medical dramas on the air, Brilliant Minds sets itself apart by taking its inspiration from Oliver Sacks, the famed neurologist whose groundbreaking work was previously dramatized in the film Awakenings. Zachary Quinto jumped at the opportunity to play a version of Sacks, who is "an endlessly fascinating and influential presence in both the world of medicine and literature." That, combined with the creative team behind the show, created "an alchemy to the whole package that felt undeniable to me." Quinto plays Dr. Oliver Wolf, a socially awkward yet exceptional neurologist who utilizes unconventional techniques to treat his patients. Although Robin Williams got the opportunity to work closely with Sacks during the production of Awakenings, Quinto was unable to do the same, since Sacks died in 2015. Yet as Quinto tells Gold Derby, "there's a really unique aspect of this experience," which is that while this is inspired by a real person, "we're also creating a character who is fictional, and exists in a different time and in a different environment than the one in which the real life Oliver Sacks lived and worked. So it was kind of the best of both worlds for me as an actor, because I certainly was able to dive into copious amounts of his writing," as well as "endless interviews with him," while still making it his own. More from GoldDerby Ryan Gosling's 'Star Wars: Starfighter': Everything to know as Mia Goth takes on the Mikey Madison role Olivia Williams was more than happy to be 'the wise old bird' on the 'Dune: Prophecy' set 'Forever' star Lovie Simone on traveling back to a 'nostalgic' time for Netflix's teenage romance show Dr. Oliver Wolf is, as Quinto describes him, "an often misunderstood but incredibly well-meaning person. I don't think he always has the capacity to articulate or communicate as smoothly as maybe he would like to. There's something really special about embodying that. I really found that endearing and appealing about the character. At his core, he is an incredibly brilliant, dedicated, empathetic, and driven doctor, and his main thrust and motivation is really caring for his patients as fully and as generously as he can. There was something about the blending of those two qualities that was deliciously at odds. Those aren't two qualities that necessarily go hand-in-hand, and I love that about him. He's clumsy sometimes. He doesn't suffer fools. He's not interested in listening to differing perspectives. He believes what he believes," which is "every patient he treats deserves respect and dignity, and to be seen." Brendan Meadows/NBC Part of Quinto's job is making sense of the medical lingo his character rattles off as if it's second nature. Unlike other medical dramas, "You're not dramatizing gunshot wounds or heart attacks. It's all neurological cases, so it really is about delving into the mind." So, the question is, "How do I make this dialogue accessible and interesting, and humanize it and invite audiences into it?" It helps that the scripts by creator Michael Grassi and his team feature the input of on-staff medical consultants. "We all have to portray characters for whom this language is everyday jargon, and it's something that we have to be able to pass off as believable, even if the audience isn't meant to know exactly what it means because we're in the process of explaining it to them. We have to come from a place where the characters know exactly what these words mean, and that is always an interesting challenge, but it's a challenge that I really relish." Added into that are the various medical ailments that Dr. Wolf and his team of interns have to deal with week-to-week. "I can't tell you how many times I thought, 'Well, this can't be real,'" says Quinto of the scripts he received. "But then we get directed to the chapter of An Anthropologist on Mars or The Man Who Mistook His Wife for a Hat," both books written by Sacks which served as inspiration for the series, "where he chronicled the real life parallel case." All of the cases and conditions dramatized in the show were taken from real life, some of which were treated by Dr. Sacks, and some of which "are adjacent to, or inspired by, those cases. I often felt really challenged in the many, many ways in which our brains and our minds can go astray, and the impacts of that which these patients experience." Among the most surprising patient arcs portrayed in the first season is that of a comatose John Doe who is given the ability to communicate thanks to a revolutionary brain computer. In the show's seventh episode, "The Man From Grozny," we learn that he came to American from Chechnya to flee oppression for being gay, and having told his story, he makes a surprising request for the remainder of his care. "To me, that storyline and the way that it resolved, which was not at all how I expected it to resolve when it was introduced to me as a multi-episode arc, was, I think, the most impactful personally for me," Quinto reveals, as well as "the most impactful in a lot of ways for the audience as the season unfolded." Quinto earned an Emmy nomination in 2013 for American Horror Story: Asylum, and since then has worked mostly in film and theater with occasional stints on television. As Brilliant Minds heads into its second season, he's found a renewed appreciation for "that kind of serialized storytelling that I've been away from for a long time, and I'm actually really grateful to be back to" for the first time since Heroes. "To now be involved in an ongoing series playing the same character who's going through a number of different circumstances and situations is something that I really welcome, and it's been really fulfilling for me creatively." SIGN UP for Gold Derby's free newsletter with latest predictions Best of GoldDerby 'Say Nothing' star Anthony Boyle on playing IRA activist Brendan Hughes: We 'get to the humanity as opposed to the mythology' The Making of 'The Eyes of the World: From D-Day to VE Day': PBS variety special 'comes from the heart' From 'Hot Rod' to 'Eastbound' to 'Gemstones,' Danny McBride breaks down his most righteous roles: 'It's been an absolute blast' Click here to read the full article.
Yahoo
3 hours ago
- Yahoo
Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds Brings A Minecraft World To Summer Game Fest
Summer Game Fest 2025 introduces a first look at Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds, revealing new crossover characters and a new map. Summer Game Fest 2025 introduces a first look at Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds, revealing new crossover characters and new map. The teaser shows off the classic Sonic characters in their classic racing vehicles. However, the big reveal is that Hatsune Miku, Ichiban Kasuga from Like a Dragon, and Joker from Persona 5 are joining the frey. Worlds collide from their respective games and worlds! Japanese video game director, producer, and designer, Takashi Iizuka, also revealed that Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds will launch with online crossplay, so friends can play together. Iizuka jabbed at Mario Kart World, not having this feature on the new Nintendo Switch 2. The biggest hype that it ends on is the new Minecraft collab map. It showed an Ender dragon flying through the racing map. For now, Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds will be coming out on all platforms, Xbox One, Xbox Series X/S, PS4, PS5, Nintendo Switch, and PC, on September 25, 2025. With over 70 Gadgets to choose from, there are countless ways to customize your approach to each race. Whether it's boosting your speed or carrying more items, each combination of Gadgets allows for a different playstyle, so players can strategize how they want to beat the competition and be the first to cross the finish line! Plus, the fan-favorite Extreme Gear hoverboards from Sonic Riders are back and better than ever, amping up the high-speed fun and vehicle choices. Players can customize their rides inside and out by mixing and matching parts, powers, and abilities. This means players can create tailor-made rides. Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds not only transports players to tracks inspired by classic Sonic stages, but also introduces the all-new Travel Rings mechanic, whisking players away across land, sea, air, time, and even space mid-race! The twist is that whoever is in the lead gets to pick which world everyone gets transported to during the second lap, so no two races are ever quite the same. Sonic Racing: CrossWorlds is racing onto consoles, releasing in both Standard and Digital Deluxe editions. Grab the Digital Deluxe edition to jump into the race three days early and expand your rosters with even more racers, including characters from the hit Netflix series Sonic Prime. Plus, the Digital Deluxe edition includes the Season Pass, which is packed with bonus characters, vehicles, and new tracks inspired by other worlds and franchises. More will be revealed in the near future. Pre-orders being today! Time to start those engines, and put the pedal to the metal.