Narniaâs been done. First as a set of BBC movies and later as an incomplete set of Hollywood blockbusters amid the Harry Potter-fueled YA fiction adaptation goldrush. So if itâs going to come back, it might as well be a completely different spin on the C.S. Lewis books about kids, witches, and talking lions.
We already knew that Greta Gerwigâthe director behind last yearâs mega hit Barbieâwas working on Narnia adaptations for Netflix, but thanks to an interview with the projectâs producer, Amy Pascal, we now have a bit more color on what exactly those will consist of. The first of the movies will begin filming in 2025 and is âa very new take on Narnia,â she told Deadline this week âItâs all about rock and roll.â
Come again?
For anyone unacquainted with the seven-book series, Lewisâ Narnia is a fantastical world children can occasionally access where time moves differently and the mundanities and horrors of normal life are replaced by magic, monsters, and a lion as Jesus allegory called Aslan. There is no rock and roll in Narnia, at least as we currently know it, or even much music.
So does this mean Gerwigâs take on the famous series will be a musical? Or will it be more subtle than that, like Sofia Coppolaâs pop music-laced Marie Antoinette from 2006. We did get more than that in last yearâs Barbie, which despite some full-blown numbers like âIâm Just Kenâ sung by Ryan Gosling, stopped short of being a traditional musical.
âI donât know,â Gerwig told Gamesradar last year on the subject of the upcoming Narnia movies. âI havenât even really started wrapping my arms around it. But Iâm properly scared of it, which feels like a good place to start. I think when Iâm scared, itâs always a good sign. Maybe when I stop being scared, itâll be like, âOkay. Maybe I shouldnât do that one.â No, Iâm terrified of it. Itâs extraordinary. And so weâll see, I donât know.â
If 2024’s Wicked is any indication, a rock and roll musical adaptation of one of the Narnia books is probably just what the century-old books need to get people reading them again.