TV and Film:Good Omens
Good Omens | |
ASIN | [1] |
IMDB | 1869454 |
First Broadcast | 31st May 2019 |
Broadcast Channel | Amazon Prime, BBC Two |
Director(s) | Douglas Mackinnon |
Producer(s) | Neil Gaiman, Caroline Skinner, Chris Sussman, Rob Wilkins, Rod Brown |
Writer(s) | {{{writer}}} |
Starring | Michael Sheen, David Tennant, Sam Taylor Buck |
Duration | 360 minutes |
Episodes | 6 |
Series | Good Omens |
Annotations | Annotations for TV and Film:Good Omens |
Notes | |
Preceded by | Troll Bridge |
Followed by | ' |
All data relates to the UK home release. |
Good Omens is a tv series adaptation of the novel Good Omens by Terry Pratchett and Neil Gaiman, created from a joint venture between Amazon.com, the BBC, Narrativia and The Blank Corporation. There were some other previous attempts to adapt Good Omens including a film that was to be directed by Terry Gilliam and a screenplay written by Neil Gaiman; however the series finally came about as a request from Terry to Neil soon before his passing, as it was a project that the two had wanted to see for a long time. The series also includes extra material added to the story from ideas that the authors had that did not make it into the book as well as ideas that could have been in a possible sequel.
Blurb
The End of the World is coming, which means a fussy Angel and a loose-living Demon who've become overly fond of life on Earth are forced to form an unlikely alliance to stop Armageddon. But they have lost the Antichrist, an 11-year-old boy unaware he's meant to bring upon the end of days, forcing them to embark on an adventure to find him and save the world before it's too late.
Cast
- Aziraphale: Michael Sheen
- Crowley: David Tennant
- Anathema Device: Adria Arjona
- Adam Young: Sam Taylor Buck
- Brian: Ian Galkoff
- Wensleydale: Alfie Taylor
- Pepper: Amma Ris
- Dog: Ollie
- Sister Mary Loquacious: Nina Sosanya
- Ligur: Ariyon Bakare
- Hastur: Ned Dennehy
- Newton Pulsifer: Jack Whitehall
- Shadwell: Michael McKean
- Madame Tracy: Miranda Richardson
- Agnes Nutter: Josie Lawrence
- Death: Brian Cox (Voice), Jamie Hill (Body)
- War: Mireille Enos
- Pollution: Lourdes Faberes
- Famine: Yusuf Gatewood
- Archangel Gabriel: Jon Hamm
- Archangel Uriel: Gloria Obianyo
- Archangel Michael: Doon Mackichan
- Sandalphon: Paul Chahidi
- Metatron: Derek Jacobi
- Beelzebub: Anna Maxwell Martin
- Dagon: Elizabeth Berrington
- Thaddeus J. Dowling-U.S. Ambassador: Nick Offerman
- Harriet Dowling: Jill Winternitz
- Warlock Dowling: Samson Marraccino
- Deirdre Young: Sian Brooke
- Arthur Young: Daniel Mays
- The International Express Man: Simon Merrells
- R. P. Tyler/Tadfield Neighbourhood Watch: Bill Paterson
- Anathema's Mother: Gabriella Cirillo
- William Shakespeare: Reece Shearsmith
- Mr. Harmony: Mark Gatiss
- Mr Glozier: Steve Pemberton
- Rose Montgomery: Niamh Walsh
- God: Frances McDormand
- Satan: Benedict Cumberbatch
Supplementary Books
Two additional companion books were produced alongside the series:
- The Nice and Accurate Good Omens TV Companion
- The Quite Nice and Fairly Accurate Good Omens Script Book
Also The Definitive Good Omens contains some artwork inspired by the series.
The Chattering Order of St. Beryl
As a part of an advertising campaign for the series, The Chattering Order of St. Beryl launched a website and several social media accounts in order to count down to the Apocalypse.
- The Chattering Order Website
- Twitter,Instagram,Facebook, Youtube
- Brand New Baby Smell-Music Video
- The Chattering Order of St. Beryl: Unholy Night-Album
- The Chattering Order Former Website-Archived Link
Differences Between The Book And Series
Spoiler Warning
Some of the differences between the series and its source material include:
- The episodes have narration provided by God.
- Greasy Johnson and the Johnsonites are not mentioned.
- The Four Other Riders Of The Apocalypse have been omitted.*
- Anathema Device is American and from a wealthy family (thanks to her ancestors prophecies).
- Aziraphale and Crowley appear to the Dowling's as a nanny and gardener but not as tutors in later years.
- Warlock Dowling's birthday scene was shortened without the jelly/gun incident.
- The Them do not use a dunking stool when pretending to be inquisitors, a tyre swing is used instead and Wensleydale replaces Pepper's sister.
- The third episode contains a segment that gives greater detail to Aziraphale and Crowley's past, showing them meeting at various points of history and in different areas of the world.
- The rain of fish is absent.
- Additional characters that were not present in the book such as the angels and historical figures have been added.
- Crowley's Holy Water was given to him by Aziraphale.
- Hastur personally meets Warlock Dowling on the Megiddo Plains where he discovers that he is not the Antichrist.
- Some of Agnes Nutters prophecies have been updated to fit with the time period and some additional prophecies have been added.
- In the final episode there is an additional sequence which shows how Aziraphale and Crowley deal with their respective sides after averting the Apocalypse.
- Inside Aziraphale's restored bookshop he finds several new Just William books, a nod to the inspiration for The Them.
*However a 'Regrettably Deleted Sequence' concerning these characters is present in the script book.