Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Netflix bets big on a sci-fi series from the duo behind ‘Game of Thrones’

‘3 Body Problem,’ based on a Chinese trilogy about an alien invasion threat, taps the filmmakers’ talent for the epic tale

- By Wendy Lee Times staff writer Mark Olsen contribute­d to this report from Austin, Texas.

Netflix is about to find out whether it can get its own “Game of Thrones” without having “Game of Thrones.”

When Netflix executive Peter Friedlande­r finished reading the popular Chinese science fiction trilogy “Remembranc­e of Earth’s Past” in 2016, he was sure it would be a great TV show. The books, in which Earth is faced with an alien invasion, told an epic, high-stakes story with intricate worldbuild­ing, time-jumping and powerful themes.

Three years later he found a team of filmmakers who could turn it into a streaming TV phenomenon, if anyone could — David Benioff and D.B. Weiss, the pair who’d adapted George R.R. Martin’s sprawling fantasy saga “A Song of Ice and Fire” into a game-changing hit at HBO. He introduced them to Alexander Woo, cocreator of “The Terror: Infamy,” who joined as a coshowrunn­er.

It was clearly a risk. The resulting show, which they called “3 Body Problem,” would be expensive to produce, involve significan­t visual effects and be shot across England, Spain and the United States. But Friedlande­r saw an opportunit­y to entice Netflix’s global audience to a sci-fi story that included different genres, including drama, mystery and history, with elements of fantasy.

“There’s an opportunit­y for this show to be wildly popular, and I think it’s because it’s so bold,” Friedlande­r said. “It’s so innovative. It’s so entertaini­ng. And it’s been written and created to bring people onto the ride.”

The eight-episode series, which premiered its full first season Thursday, is part of Netflix’s strategy of betting big on programmin­g that it hopes will resonate with its 260 million global members and prospectiv­e subscriber­s.

“3 Body Problem” reportedly cost $20 million an episode to produce, for a total budget of $160 million, a big number even for a Netflix sci-fi spectacle, and similar to the per-episode cost of HBO’s “Thrones” prequel series, “House of the Dragon.”

“It’s a big swing. A huge, cinematic bet,” said Bela Bajaria, Netflix’s chief content officer, at a January media event.

Unlike studios such as Walt Disney Co. and Universal Pictures, Netflix does not have a large back catalog of intellectu­al property it can rely on to keep churning out familiar hits. Instead, the streamer has invested in original stories such as “Squid Game” and “Stranger Things,” and gambles on producers who are willing to adapt stories from books and history.

Friedlande­r mentioned Cixin Liu’s sci-fi books to Benioff and Weiss in 2019. They devoured the trilogy on the plane ride back from a “Game of Thrones” event in Japan, and realized this was their next project. It had the scale they were interested in, but was also different enough from “Game of Thrones,” dealing with complex scientific concepts.

“As ‘Thrones’ was coming to a close, David and I knew that we weren’t dead yet,” Weiss said. “Thirteen years in high fantasy was fantastic, but 13 years of mud and horses and armor and more horses stomping through the mud and trying to make sure they didn’t stomp on you — like, we’ve had enough of almost getting stomped on by horses. So we wanted to do something different — science fiction, something we both grew up with.”

Neither Netflix nor the showrunner­s would discuss the show’s budget, but Benioff has said the series has “four movies’ worth” of visual effects. Its stars include Benedict Wong from Marvel’s “Doctor Strange,” and familiar faces from “Game of Thrones” such as Liam Cunningham, Jonathan Pryce and John Bradley.

“It looks like a very ambitious show,” said Susanne Daniels, former global head of original content at YouTube. “Once in a while all these streamers should swing for the fences and make a little noise to try to stand out as a must-have for the subscriber­s.”

The high-profile series comes after popular Netflix shows including “The Crown” ended last year and as “Stranger Things” and “Cobra Kai” are on their last seasons, leaving the company hungry for additional expansive marquee hits.

Other competing streaming services are also spending big on large franchises, even as Wall Street demands financial discipline and increased profits. Amazon spent more than $700 million on the first season of “The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power,” including TV rights, according to people familiar with the matter who declined to be named.

Whether “3 Body Problem” gets a second season will depend on whether Netflix viewers tune in. Most reviews of the show have been generally positive.

“I’m nervous, because for us, I think we gauge success by being able to tell the whole story, and that means not having just one season; it means getting to the end,” Benioff said. “I really desperatel­y want a second season.”

While Benioff and Weiss are known for the success of “Game of Thrones,” not all of the projects they’ve been linked to have panned out as they looked for their followup.

The duo had been tapped to develop a “Star Wars” trilogy for Disney and Lucasfilm that fell through. Also shelved was an HBO show that would have explored a looming third American Civil War, in an alternate reality where the South had successful­ly seceded from the union and slavery still exists (the idea sparked outrage online). The two served as executive producers on a smaller series, Netflix’s “The Chair,” whose showrunner was Amanda Peet, Benioff ’s wife. It did not get a second season.

Friedlande­r had been talking up the “Remembranc­e of Earth’s Past” books even before Netflix bought the rights.. He called it a “lightning in a bottle moment” when he and “two of the greatest storytelle­rs of all time” responded to Liu’s books. Benioff and Weiss signed an overall deal with Netflix in August 2019.

“Knowing how extraordin­ary they are at adapting material, I thought, they have to be the best people to do this,” Friedlande­r said.

He later introduced the pair to co-showrunner Woo, who was a writer and executive producer on the HBO vampire drama “True Blood,” and Netflix secured the rights to the English-language adaptation of Liu’s books in 2020. (A Chineselan­guage adaptation was previously produced by the Shenzhen-based technology and entertainm­ent company Tencent.)

But the project attracted unwanted attention due to global politics. In 2020, five U.S. senators asked Netflix to reconsider doing business with Liu, who in an interview with the New Yorker had appeared to support China’s actions in putting Uyghur people in indoctrina­tion camps in Xinjiang.

“While Congress seriously considers the systemic crimes carried out against the Uyghurs, we have significan­t concerns with Netflix’s decision to do business with an individual who is parroting dangerous [Chinese Communist Party] propaganda,” the five Republican­s wrote to Netflix.

Netf lix, which is not available in China, said in response that Liu’s comments “are not reflective of the views of Netflix or of the show’s creators, nor are they part of the plot or themes of the show.” The showrunner­s said they had met with Liu just once, on Zoom.

Production finished in February 2023. But months later, the showrunner­s felt something was missing. They wanted to shoot a bar scene for the first episode that they thought was essential for the developmen­t of two characters.

Then, the writers’ strike happened before they could write it. That was followed by an actors’ strike, forcing more delays. But Netf lix was willing to wait.

“It was a little bit of a tricky thing, because it’s like we want you to hold the show that you’ve already spent X number of dollars on, whatever that number might be — a lot of money — for an indefinite period,” Benioff said. “It was a bit of a leap of faith on their part, but they’ve been beside us every step of the way.”

Whether audiences will flock to the show remains to be seen. The series could run the risk of turning off book readers who want a carbon copy of the story as Liu wrote it. Netflix’s Englishlan­guage adaptation takes place in England, not in China. Its version also features a global cast, changing the race of some of the characters.

“This is a global story,” Woo said. “This is a story of how humanity as a species confronts an existentia­l threat from another planet, and if you’re going to represent humanity as a whole, then you know now the cast should look like humanity as a whole.”

Over the last few months, Netflix has promoted the series through splashy marketing events and initiative­s. At the show’s premiere at the South by Southwest festival in Austin, Texas, large holograms were projected into the night sky, with images including a giant floating eye.

In a packed theater at SXSW, 30-year-old animator Daiqi Cui and her husband, photograph­er Eric Apolly, enjoyed watching the first episode. Both live in Brooklyn and are fans of “Game of Thrones.” At the premiere, they received plastic replicas of virtual reality helmets like those seen in the show; they took them home with plans to wear them.

“They really captured the scenery, exactly how the book would describe it,” said 33-year-old Apolly, who has read Liu’s novels. “The environmen­t was spot on.”

The beginning of the show addresses a dark period in China that some studios might avoid out of fear of blowback there. In the violent opening scene, set during the Cultural Revolution, a physics professor is tortured.

The scene plays out like a documentar­y. Director Derek Tsang, who worked on the first two episodes, had researched oral histories of the period, when academics were beaten and some sent to reeducatio­n camps.

“We always go with what’s best for the story,” Benioff said. “There’s full knowledge that this is going to turn some people off, and no story is for all people. But that’s what this story is.”

‘High fantasy was fantastic, but ... we’ve had enough of almost getting stomped on by horses. So we wanted to do something different.’

— D.B. WEISS, on adapting a science fiction trilogy with David Benioff after their success with “Game of Thrones”

 ?? Netflix ?? ACTOR Jess Hong in “3 Body Problem.” The series reportedly cost $20 million per episode to produce — a big number even for a Netflix spectacle, and similar to the per-episode cost of HBO’s “Thrones” prequel series.
Netflix ACTOR Jess Hong in “3 Body Problem.” The series reportedly cost $20 million per episode to produce — a big number even for a Netflix spectacle, and similar to the per-episode cost of HBO’s “Thrones” prequel series.

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