sabotabby: raccoon anarchy symbol (champagne anarchist)
[personal profile] sabotabby
I could not resist doing this again.

1. Comment to this post with "I surrender!" and I'll assign you the basis of some tv show idea. (Science fiction show, medical drama, criminal procedure, etc...)
2. Create a cast of characters, including the actors who'd play them
3. Add in any actor photos, character bios and show synopsis that you want.
4. Post to your own journal.


[livejournal.com profile] smhwpf gave me period drama and initially specified pre-1815, but my burning period drama idea takes place in 1907, which is nearly 100 years ago so ought to qualify in terms of lavish costumes and set design.

Apologies in advance for the profusion of British white dudes playing Russian white dudes. This is a Beeb production. It's 90% dialogue and largely an excuse to get really talented actors to shout at each other. Russian and French dialogue is in English with the actors' actual accents; dialogue in German and Polish is subtitled.

The show is called Common Cause (Общее дело).

It's 1907. The first attempt at revolution in Russia two years ago was a miserable bloody failure; the movement's surviving leaders are scattered in exile throughout Europe or rotting in Tsarist prisons. Lenin's just declared that it'll be twenty years before they have another shot at overthrowing the Tsar. Some elements are trying to reunite the Bolsheviks and Mensheviks, as well as the Social Revolutionaries and anarchist groups in a common struggle; other forces work behind the scenes to undermine any cohesion or unity.

The one group that does take the revolutionaries seriously is the Okhrana. In an attempt to prevent a repeat of 1905, the Tsarist secret police has dispatched agents and infiltrators to destroy the various revolutionary movements from within; in fact, as in Chesterton's The Man Who Was Thursday, the Parisian emigré community has more informants than actual activists, and they've been entirely successful in hobbling the movement.

Until now.


The Cast:

cillian murphy
Cillian Murphy as Vladimir Burtsev

(If I were doing a Russian production, Burtsev would be played by Vyacheslav Tikhonov, but he's dead, and anyway, Beeb production.)

Burtsev is an anarchist and a former member of Narodnaya Volya, the group that assassinated Tsar Alexander II. Soft-spoken and socially awkward, he is not taken particularly seriously by his comrades and is certainly not let in on any of the terrorist conspiracies that have made the group infamous, but this does not spare him from arrest and exile in Siberia after an Okhrana agent exposes him. After escaping, fleeing to Switzerland, getting arrested again, fleeing to London, then back to Russia, and then finally to Paris, he's tired, disillusioned, and bitter. He has little remaining faith in his original revolutionary ideals, but he does have one burning desire: to find and expose the Okhrana agent who destroyed his life.

Burtsev is neither a great leader nor a decent terrorist, but as it turns out, he is an entirely brilliant detective. Dubbed "The Sherlock Holmes of the Revolution" (yes, for real), he uses cold logic and deductive reasoning to take down the enemies of the revolution one by one, while clashing with both the local authorities, the secret police, and the Bolshevik leaders who may appreciate his methods but have an entirely different vision for the future.

Sadly, Cillian needs to grow some facial hair for the role:

cillian murphy
OK.

richard ayoade
Richard Ayoade as Maurice Leroy

(Completely historically accurate casting here.) A French detective that Burtsev hires to help him. Leroy is a former Okhrana agent himself, but was fired for spending all of his funds on booze and entertaining his lovers. If he can't rehabilitate his reputation, he'll take revenge on the uptight twats who drove him out of stable employment, so he makes common cause (title drop!) with the weird Russian anarchist to take down his former colleagues. The comic relief of the series, his motives start out selfish but become increasingly ideological as he grows closer to the revolutionaries.

anna chancellor
Anna Chancellor as Vera Figner

Burtsev's comrade from the Narodnaya Volya days, Figner is much more of what you'd expect from an anarchist revolutionary: fiery, eloquent, and passionate. A writer and organizer who has also done hard time as a result of the Okhrana's interference, she's the one person he definitely knows is not a mole.

charles dance
Charles Dance as Peter Kropotkin, the anarchist formerly known as Prince

The closest the Parisian exiles have to a leader, Kropotkin is a scientist, philosopher, and writer who gave up his noble title for the revolution. As the person ultimately responsible for deciding the guilt or innocence of the accused infiltrators, he is critical of Burtsev's motives and methods even as he is reliant on him to root out the various traitors.

Tom-Hardy
Tom Hardy as Yevno Azef

A prominent and respected organizer responsible for the assassinations of the Tsar's uncle, a popular Orthodox priest, and one of the Okhrana directors, Azef is above suspicion, even when he orders the death of a fellow revolutionary believed to be a spy. Burtsev suspects he's also in the pay of the Okhrana, but no one believes him, and the mystery around his guilt or innocence is the first season arc.

paul higgins
Paul Higgins as Mikhail Bakai

A Warsaw Okhrana agent who defects to the revolutionaries' side—kind of—Bakai is Burtsev's main informant. No one actually trusts him, but his Liga Politsii ("Police League") is instrumental in providing the information that takes down Azef and eventually others. Like Leroy, he's less interested in politics than in satisfying petty grudges.

rose leslie
Rose Leslie as Tatiana Tselin

A member of the Socialist Revolutionaries' Combat Unit, Tselin is a badass assassin on a mission to kill the Tsar. Like everyone else, she's hiding a dark secret.

petercapaldi3
Peter Capaldi as A.A. Lopukhin

The director of the Okhrana and the Big Bad for the first two seasons. The bastard lovechild of Inspector Javert and Cardinal Richelieu, he's in charge of running the foreign agents and playing a long game with the revolutionaries. He's a dark mirror to our heroes, using many of the same methods to root out terrorist conspiracies and clashing just as much with his superiors back in Russia.

I feel like I need to put in another "this is a real thing that happened" but at the end of season 2, he does a face-heel turn after being dismissed and ends being an informant for Burtsev as well.

AND STARRING:

alexei sayle
Alexei Sayle as Leon Trotsky

Look, I don't care if he doesn't look a thing like Trotsky and is entirely the wrong age. You want this to happen and know it should happen.

(Spoiler for something that happened over nine decades ago: Trotsky arrested Burtsev, making him the first political prisoner after the revolution.)

AND

tom-baker_1481006c
Tom Baker as the Spectre Haunting Europe, a.k.a. Karl Marx's ghost, who appears in the hallucinations and dreams of several of the characters. You're welcome.


I expect it would run for two or three seasons (with six episodes each) and then get abruptly cancelled. There is also a made-for-TV movie, set during the Berne Trial, that reunites the surviving characters and ends the series.

Date: 2015-07-06 02:53 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rinue.livejournal.com
Actually, now that I think about it, there might be a way I could help make this happen, although it's a long shot. I've been invited to pitch a couple ideas to a German tv company looking for English-language potential co-productions. Details here. I fall into that "graduates of recognized film and tv schools" category. If you wanted to pull together a pitch for this, maybe you also qualify? If not, I might be able to proxy submit it as one of my two, but you'd have to really trust me in a way I'm not even sure I trust me, because I think per the terms and conditions you'd have to give me your copyright at least during the time I was submitting the idea and possibly if was picked up you'd be stuck with me. Essentially, I would become your producer.

This is all clouds in the sky stuff, and also maybe super weird, but there it is. 9 page proposal due by August 3. Check it out and see whether it could be a right time/place for you to jam this in the face of some eurotv folks.

Date: 2015-07-06 09:39 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rinue.livejournal.com
Cool. I think this week is pretty booked for me, but I should have some time next week, so I propose I take what you've written above and massage it into the proposal format they want, then shoot you a run down of what we still need to figure out. I'll get that to you no later than July 15. Sound reasonable? I know have your e-mail address buried somewhere in my inbox from when you sent me a link to some of your students' films, but it might be easier for you to just send me a message at romiesays at gmail when you get a chance.

Date: 2015-07-07 02:29 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rinue.livejournal.com
Eeeeeexcellent. I wouldn't worry too much about knowing what you're doing, because essentially what you're doing is trying to clearly present an idea which the production company will either decide they want to know more about or will decide isn't right for them right now. Like a grant proposal, or trying to get a course greenlit, both of which I'm pretty sure you have a lot of experience with. If you go on anxious internet messageboards, people will obsess over whether their manuscript margins are right in the same way that actors will get crazy about whether their headshots are in style, but most of those people have never been on the other side of the table deciding what goes through.

Basically, all production companies are looking for a combination of "this sounds awesome" and "it's plausible that we could make this, given our resources." Plus a dash of "this would be neither too similar to something else we're working on nor so different it doesn't fit our brand." I guess it's a little bit like internet dating, where you want to come off as exciting but not desperate, but mostly people are looking at your picture and saying "yep, sexy." This idea is sexy and not too expensive. Whether it's sexy enough to overcome the fact that we're nobodies isn't really in our control.

As for the Bechdel test, I think it doesn't count if they're talking about the Tsar but does count if what they're talking about is the mechanics of assassination. Like if two hairdressers were talking about their salon, that would count even if that salon's clients were entirely male, but if they were talking about a client that wouldn't count. Talking about that client's hair type I think is a gray area.

Date: 2015-07-07 02:33 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rinue.livejournal.com
P.S. Goes without saying that if you want to bombard me with hundreds of pages of stuff, that's cool with me. Also cool to work with what's already set out. Any version of this is fun for me, because I essentially get to "watch" your show as it's unveiled; my end of things is basically geeking out and then sending fanmail to the tv company to say "greenlight more seasons" (which in this case means a first season).

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