[identity profile] lavenderhill.livejournal.com posting in [community profile] trennels
Hi there – I am also new to this group, but have been an avid reader of AF for over 15 years. I have all the books, and have re-read them frequently.

I have been thinking for a while that the Marlow stories would make a great early Sunday evening family television series. When you think about it, they combine the teenage school highs and lows of The OC (bullies/ school teams/ boyfriends) with the kind of drama reserved for Eastenders (step families/ runways/ child abduction..). It also has some kind of glamour, as the main protagonists are of a class that most people are not.

The more I thought about it, though, the more I realised that the stories would have to be set in the present day, in order to gain enough interest from viewers, and also the backing from a production firm. This started me thinking about how to update some of the storylines, which are often a product of the time they were written in. The telephone saga in The Attic Term, would be an interesting one, although in my mind, I would have Ann owning the ‘family’ mobile, on which calls home are made. Ginty ends up using the office phone due to the queues and lack of privacy on the payphones near the common room. Some schools are strict about mobiles and insist that the housemistress keeps them until after classes are over, and I could see Kingscote doing this, and Ann obviously obeying.

Another issue would be the make-believe in Peter’s Room, which I cannot see teenagers in 2006 doing. An interesting way round this, would be to have ‘Gondal’ as a new online computer game, which they start playing whilst hold up in Peter’s Shippen, and gradually become addicted to – apart from Nicola, who would much rather be herself out doing something! There was some research done about these kind of online ‘quest’ games, where quite ordinary people in real life, are ‘kings’ of these online worlds. This plot would not only allow the story to develop as it does in Peter’s Room, but also look at the effect of kids spending too much time on computers..

The Thuggery Affair I would love to turn into Chavs, but this is probably rather un-PC!! And the Marlows and the Traitor would have to be drug smuggling as I don’t want to touch 21st century terrorism..

Talking to my sister, another AF fan, about this, we got onto the characters. She says that Nicola is unlike any modern day teenage girl. What 12/13/14 year old is mad about the Navy and into cricket? If there was someone like that at school, they would be really picked on by the ‘trendy gang’ .But I don’t know – I think Nicola as she is in the books would work, and I would still have her dropping her new penknife out of the train (do modern trains have windows that open, though?). She is also safe from the ‘trendies’ in that she a Marlow, and is actually part of the Main Clique with Tim, Miranda and Lawrie. I would, however, have Lawrie and Tim as being quite skinny-jeaned/ Top Shop cool, whereas Miranda would be in Seven jeans and a Chloe top. Nick would be more jeans and tatty converse boots (previously Rowan’s). If any of you live in London, the Top Shop, H&M and Zara on Kensington High Street on a Saturday are full of upper middle class teenage girls in all their glory…. Just to give you an idea of what Kingscote girls would be like in 2006…

Anyways, just wanted to share these thoughts, and wondered what you all think. Would it work? Is it worth me writing a proposition and sending it to the BBC??!

Apols for long post...

Date: 2006-05-18 06:07 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ankaret.livejournal.com
Hex was set in a boarding school and did all right (though for Sky, not the BBC). Though I think having Nick et al chased by demons would perhaps be departing a little from the spirit of the books.

Date: 2006-05-18 06:27 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] witandwisdome.livejournal.com
And boarding school stories more popular due to the Harry Potter craze - though I take your point, Ankaret about the demons...

Date: 2006-05-18 08:28 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] blonde222.livejournal.com
Ah but Hogwarts is the socially acceptable face of boarding schools. Hogwarts is needs blind: noone pays any fees, that I can tell; there are kids of all regional accents and shades of the rainbow (except perhaps aboriginal "Red" Indians) and socio-economic status; and there is very definitely no academic streaming. New Labour would probably call it a Specialist Creative Arts College.

Kingscote couldn't really be more different, or less palatable to the sort of people who commission children's drama these days.

Date: 2006-05-18 10:44 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] the_antichris.livejournal.com
But so easy to fit in! Just relocate Kingscote to the Hellmouth and literalise the bit in Cricket Term about demons summoned by Tim's costume designs carrying off Val Longstreet. I'm having more trouble imagining a scenario for my other favourite image from CT, though, which is Keith wearing briefer-than-briefs for Lawrie.

Date: 2006-05-21 11:00 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] richenda.livejournal.com
Hex? Do you mean the book by Rhiannon Lassiter?

Date: 2006-05-21 11:06 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ankaret.livejournal.com
No, the Sky TV series. It's a bit like a British version of Buffy, set in a boarding school with, as far as I can tell, its own licensed nightclub on the premises. How unlike the home life of our own dear Kingscote.

Date: 2007-02-18 03:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] legionseagle.livejournal.com
Not even the ones who carry off Val Longstreet?

Date: 2007-02-18 03:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ankaret.livejournal.com
There's a whole AU in that.

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