Stephen Frears to helm series adaptation of William Dalrymple's 'The Anarchy'

IANS April 23, 2025 248 views

British filmmaker Stephen Frears is set to adapt William Dalrymple's powerful historical book 'The Anarchy' into an international series. The project explores the East India Company's ruthless colonial expansion, drawing fascinating parallels between 18th-century corporate power and modern global dynamics. Produced by Roy Kapur Films and US-based wiip, the series promises a compelling narrative that spans UK and Asian locations. This adaptation represents an exciting moment in bringing complex Indian historical narratives to global audiences.

"A ruthless businessman and his corporation seizing power..." - Stephen Frears
Stephen Frears to helm series adaptation of William Dalrymple's 'The Anarchy'
Mumbai, April 23: British filmmaker Stephen Frears, is set to helm the screen adaptation of William Dalrymple's critically acclaimed book 'The Anarchy: The Relentless Rise of the East India Company'. The adaptation is being done for the long-format content, and is being mounted as an international co-production between US and India.

Key Points

1

Stephen Frears directing high-profile international series about East India Company

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Adaptation based on William Dalrymple's critically acclaimed historical book

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US-India co-production exploring corporate colonialism

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Roy Kapur Films and wiip collaborate on ambitious project

Set in the 18th century, 'The Anarchy' is a gripping exploration of the British East India Company's commercial ambitions in India, which ultimately led to the takeover of an entire subcontinent. It strongly mirrors the current world where corporate giants possess the power to shape the destinies of entire nations.

Talking about the project, Stephen Frears said, "This is the most contemporary of themes: A ruthless businessman and his corporation seizing power, a group of oligarchs taking over a chunk of the world, asset-stripping, looting, manipulating the stock market, destroying whole economies for their profit. The East India Company is stealing India in the 18th Century".

The series is being produced jointly by the US-based studio wiip and leading Indian production house Roy Kapur Films.

The rights acquisition of William Dalrymple's bestselling book was believed to have been amongst the most sought after book to TV rights deals in India, with Roy Kapur Films ultimately emerging with the rights. Adapted for the screen by Walon Green, Amit Bhalla, and Lucas Jansen, the writers behind Hello Tomorrow! (Apple TV+), 'The Anarchy' will be shot across the UK and Asia.

Siddharth Roy Kapur said, "Stephen's range as a filmmaker is simply unmatched. He has directed some of the most beloved films of the last four decades, including some of my personal favourites, and to have him come on board to helm this project is an absolute dream come true".

He further mentioned, "Collaborating with our production partners at wiip has been an incredibly enriching experience. This is a story that demands scale, depth, and ambition, and I am proud that we have brought an extraordinary team together to bring it to life for a global audience".

The upcoming series adaptation now marks a bold step in expanding Indian history into the global entertainment arena, with an epic narrative that's both timely and timeless.

Reader Comments

P
Priya M.
So excited for this! Dalrymple's book was brilliant and Frears is such an inspired choice. Hope they do justice to the complex history without oversimplifying things. 🤞
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Rahul K.
Finally some quality historical content coming from India! The East India Company story is so relevant today with all the corporate power grabs we see.
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Anjali S.
I have mixed feelings. While the team looks stellar, I hope they don't whitewash colonial history or make it too 'palatable' for Western audiences. The brutality needs to be shown.
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David L.
Frears directing historical drama? That's unexpected but exciting! His work on The Queen shows he understands power dynamics well. Curious to see his take on corporate colonialism.
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Sanjay P.
Roy Kapur Films keeps raising the bar! After Scam 1992, I trust them to handle complex subjects with nuance. Hope they cast some fresh faces alongside established stars.
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Meera J.
The parallels to modern corporations are chilling. This could be such an important series if done right! Just please no romanticizing of colonial figures 🙏

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