''Capital'' is a three 1 hour parts
British television adaptation of
John Lanchester's novel ''
Capital''. It was later recut in four 45 minutes parts by Netflix. The series was written by
Peter Bowker
Peter Bowker (born 5 January 1959) is a British playwright and screenwriter. He is best known for the television serials ''Blackpool (TV series), Blackpool'' (2004), a musical drama about a shady casino owner in the Northern England, north of En ...
, directed by
Euros Lyn and produced by Matt Strevens for
Kudos Film & Television Company.
The story centres on the residents of a road in
South London as the value of each house in the street is approaching £3 million. They all begin to receive repeated postcards with the message "We want what you have".
The first episode was broadcast on
BBC One on 24 November 2015.
Plot
The central characters all have a connection to Pepys Road, a fictional street (although there are two actual Pepys Roads in South London — namely in
Raynes Park and
New Cross) in an unidentified south London suburb. The houses in the street were once ordinary family homes in an unremarkable residential district, but thanks to London’s ever-increasing property values they are now properties worth millions. Their residents include those such as wealthy banker Roger Yount (played by Toby Jones) who have recently bought their homes, as well as people who have lived in the street since before its houses became so valuable, such as elderly widow Petunia Howe (played by Gemma Jones) who moved there as a young bride. They all start to receive postcards saying "We want what you have", which some residents interpret as a threat, but which others initially ignore.
Production
Describing how he became involved with the production, writer Peter Bowker said, "I was already reading ''Capital'' when Derek Wax (Executive Producer), who I've worked with before, sent me it. It hadn't occurred to me that it could be adapted because so much of it is people's internal dialogue and thoughts, so I thought the challenge of that would be intriguing. I've admired John Lanchester's writing as an economist so to begin with I was just excited to meet him! Then the more I read the book the more I thought it was similar to
Dickens, both in terms of catching a moment of time and how the big decisions filter in to everyday life. If you start with the people at the bottom, who absorb the impact of those decisions, there's something dramatic there. So that's how it started."
Cast
Main Cast
*
Adeel Akhtar
Adeel Akhtar is a British actor. He is known for his role in '' Murdered by My Father'', for which he won the British Academy Television Award for Best Actor in 2017. He is also known for ''Utopia'', '' Ali & Ava'', '' Showtrial'', and '' She ...
– Ahmed Kamal,
corner-shop-keeper
* Danny Ashok – Shahid Kamal, Ahmed's brother
*
Alexander Arnold – Parker, Smitty's assistant
*
Shabana Azmi
Shabana Azmi (born 18 September 1950) is an Indian actress of film, television and theatre. Her career in the Hindi cinema, Hindi film industry has spanned Shabana Azmi filmography, over 160 films, mostly within independent and neorealist paral ...
– Mrs. Kamal, mother of Ahmed, Shahid and Usman
*
Zrinka Cvitešić – Matya, the Younts' family nanny from Hungary
*
Bryan Dick – DI Mill, detective investigating the ''We Want What You Have'' campaign
*
Robert Emms – Graham "Smitty" Leatherby, artist and grandson of Petunia
*
Emma Fielding – Strauss, the Kamal family's lawyer
* Mona Goodwin – Rohinka, wife of Ahmed
*
Andrew Gower – Mark, a banker and colleague of Roger's
* Kobna Holdbrook-Smith – Mashinko, churchgoer and love interest to Quentina
* Hamza Jeetooa – Usman Kamal, Ahmed's brother
*
Gemma Jones
Jennifer "Gemma" Jones (born 4 December 1942) is an English actress. Appearing on both stage and screen, her film appearances include ''Sense and Sensibility (film), Sense and Sensibility'' (1995), the Bridget Jones (film series), ''Bridget Jo ...
– Petunia Howe, an elderly widow who has lived in Pepys Road since she married as a young woman
*
Rad Kaim – Zbigniew aka Bogdan, a Polish builder
*
Matthew Marsh – Lothar, Roger's superior at PinkerLloyd
*
Wunmi Mosaku – Quentina, Zimbabwean refugee working illegally as a traffic warden
*
Lesley Sharp – Mary Leatherby, Petunia's daughter
*
Rachael Stirling – Arabella Yount, Roger's wife
*
Toby Jones – Roger Yount, banker
Recurring Cast
* Kaiya Bakrania – Fatima, Ahmed and Rohinka's daughter
* Arthur Bateman – Conrad, Roger and Arabella's eldest son
*
Noma Dumezweni – Greaves, an immigration official on Quentina's case
* Krystian Godlewski – Piotr, Bogdan's colleague and roommate
* Tom Reed – Iqbal, an old friend of Shahid's
Critical reception
Reviewing the first episode in UK newspaper ''
The Guardian
''The Guardian'' is a British daily newspaper. It was founded in Manchester in 1821 as ''The Manchester Guardian'' and changed its name in 1959, followed by a move to London. Along with its sister paper, ''The Guardian Weekly'', ''The Guardi ...
'', Sam Wollaston began by asking "How much of a city of 8.5 million can you get into one south London street? ''Capital'' (BBC1), adapted from John Lanchester's novel, manages a lot". He added that "
��Lanchester – and in turn Peter Bowker and Euros Lyn, who have adapted and directed so excellently – have managed to squeeze an incredible amount into one street, one book, and then further squeeze into three hours of television. A lot of the important stuff, as well as what is most wonderful and most terrible about the place". Wollaston found the episode's evocation of life in a London street to be "instantly recognizable" and concluded, "It's not just a brilliant allegorical portrait of London. There are stories to tell, the postcards keep coming
��We're heading for a crash, big bang, meltdown".
In ''
The Daily Telegraph
''The Daily Telegraph'', known online and elsewhere as ''The Telegraph'', is a British daily broadsheet conservative newspaper published in London by Telegraph Media Group and distributed in the United Kingdom and internationally. It was found ...
'', Ben Lawrence gave the opening episode four out of five stars. He began his review by noting that he had found the novel on which it is based "
��a disappointment. This was no Dickensian bird’s-eye view, but an overly schematic tangle of under-developed plotlines populated by underwritten characters". By contrast, he thought the television adaptation showed "an eternal London, riven by inequality and quickened by diversity". He was particularly impressed by the cast, writing "
��it’s the acting that makes this production sing. There was not a bad performance among the large ensemble cast and each brought something very different". He praised Toby Jones' "fine line in quiet desperation" as banker Roger Yount, and Rachael Stirling’s portrayal of his wife Arabella, but judged that "The standout performances came from Gemma Jones, as pensioner Petunia Howe, a working-class Londoner who had become an accidental millionaire by sitting steadily in her Edwardian terraced house and Wunmi Mosaku as Quentina Mkfesi, a Zimbabwean asylum seeker working illegally as a traffic warden and facing deportation. Both actresses ably captured the loneliness of London life".
Writing in ''
The Independent
''The Independent'' is a British online newspaper. It was established in 1986 as a national morning printed paper. Nicknamed the ''Indy'', it began as a broadsheet and changed to tabloid format in 2003. The last printed edition was publis ...
'', Daisy Wyatt decided that, "Fans of John Lanchester's best-selling novel ''Capital'' will be pleased with the BBC adaptation starring Toby Jones and Lesley Sharp. Not only does the three-part drama revisit such brilliantly painted characters, it does so with admirable faithfulness". However, she felt that "
��for viewers unfamiliar with the book, it may not have quite enough intrigue to keep them coming back for more", but concluded overall, "That said, the drama is a pleasing adaptation that brings life to lovable characters, with strong performances from the ensemble cast".
Ben Dowell, writing in ''
Radio Times'' described ''Capital'' as a "sparkling and hugely relevant new drama". He found that, "This is for the most part a very believable London (except for the summery trees bedecked with leaves during a scene purporting to be Christmas). It shows Londoners trying to work out very real problems. It’s a world where people who think they lead very separate lives are shown to be very connected – often without wanting it" before concluding that, "
��as you expect from Bowker (writer of the Bafta-winning ''
Marvellous''), there is a fierce intelligence at work here, a script which asks some very interesting and important questions but doesn’t force the answers down your throat".
Awards
In November 2016, ''Capital'' won the best TV movie/mini series award at the
44th International Emmy Awards.
References
External links
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{{InternationalEmmyAward TV Movie or Miniseries
2015 British television series debuts
2015 British television series endings
2010s British drama television series
2010s British television miniseries
BBC television dramas
Television series by Banijay
British English-language television shows
Television shows set in London