The Eddie Redmayne Fronted TV Spy series “Jackal’s Day,” which became a rating smash for both Sky and Peacock last year, has a new lead writer for the second series.
Ronan Bennett, who created the show produced by carnival films, has resigned from his writing duties due to a contemporary interpretation of Frederick Forsyth’s novel and a hit film adaptation of the 1973 film about the Globetrot Assassin and Intelligence Agent, and has continued to enforce, but has resigned from his writing duties due to other commitments.
For a Bennett alternative, Carnival turned to David Hallower. David Hallower created the drama “Lockerby: A Search for Truth,” starring Colin Firth, documenting decades of quest to find the culprit of the 1988 Pam am Flight 103 bombing. “Lockerbie” was also aired on both Sky and Peacock.
Speaking to Variety recently, Carnival CEO Gareth Nima acknowledged that the first season of “Jackal’s Day” featured a completely different plot from the original, but that there was “the same dynamic between the hunter and the hunt,” and included numerous references to the film. Regarding Season 2, production is expected to begin in the coming months, and he said that there are still “many elements of the novel (forsyth) that weren’t used in Season 1.”
“Hopefully it will be another very luxurious, smoothly directed, well-acted, high-octane twist and thriller,” he said.
Alongside “Jackal Day,” Bennett, who first named himself on television as the creator of “Top Boy,” was behind the Paramount+ series “Mobrand,” starring Tom Hardy and Pierce Brosnan, which was renewed for the second season this June. In August it was announced that Bennett had returned to UK Network Channel 4 for the first time since “Top Boy” and “Top Boy.” This is a six-part drama series inspired by Jean Pierre Melville’s 1969 film and Joseph Kessel’s book, inspired by Joseph Kessel’s book about French resistance during World War II.
Starring Redmayne as a hitman of the same name, Rashana Lynch was an MI6 agent, and “The Day of the Jackal” became the largest original series ever, with 3 million viewers ahead of “Dragon of the Dragon” and “Chernobyl” in the first week of November 2024. In the US, according to NBCuniversal in February this year, it has become Peacock’s most-watched new original drama series, according to 75-day viewers.