HBO’s ‘Dark Materials,’ ‘Gemstones’ both grapple with faith
BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. — HBO’s forthcoming fantasy series “His Dark Materials” and its new televangelist comedy “The Righteous Gemstones” bring wildly different worlds to the screen, yet both grapple with the same central problem: How to take on religion without degrading and demeaning viewers’ beliefs.
“His Dark Materials” is based on the novel series from author Philip Pullman that has been embraced by atheists and condemned by believers for its villain, a powerful quasi-religious organization called the Magisterium.
But the show’s executive producer Jane Tranter told a TV critics’ meeting Wednesday that the show and the books are a critique of authoritarian organizations of all kinds, embrace spiritual themes and are “not an attack on religion.
“Philip Pullman talks about depression, the control of information and the falsification of information,” Tranter said. “There is no direct contrast with any contemporary religious organization.”