Sarah Snook’s 'The Birds' Series Brings Alfred Hitchcock’s Horror Classic Back To Life
Credits: Sarah Snook Shows Jimmy a Tim Tam Slam, Thought Keanu Reeves Giving Her a Tony Was a Fever Dream/ The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon via YouTube/ Production: Broadway Video, Universal Television/ Distribution: Broadway Video, Universal Television
Credits: Sarah Snook Shows Jimmy a Tim Tam Slam, Thought Keanu Reeves Giving Her a Tony Was a Fever Dream/ The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon via YouTube/ Production: Broadway Video, Universal Television/ Distribution: Broadway Video, Universal Television
Sixty-three years after Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds terrified audiences worldwide, the iconic horror classic is getting a new life. The film famously transformed ordinary birds into a force of pure terror, and now Sarah Snook is attached to headline a fresh adaptation. Unsurprisingly, the project has already begun turning heads across Hollywood.
And with the skies once again darkening over one of horror's most famous stories, here is everything you need to know about the new adaptation of The Birds.
Sarah Snook to lead a dark new take on The Birds
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While Emmy winner Sarah Snook is set to headline the horror revival as a brand-new protagonist, Myra Massey, The Leftovers and Watchmen writer Tom Spezialy has boarded the project to craft its latest chapter. Backed by Universal International Studios and David Heyman's Heyday Television, the limited series will reimagine The Birds as a present-day thriller set in Alaska, with a murder mystery unfolding at its core. After more than a year in development, the high-profile package is now heading to the marketplace.
But fans expecting a direct remake of Hitchcock's classic may be in for a surprise. Speaking at SXSW London, Heyday Television executive Sue Gibbs revealed that the series is instead returning to Daphne du Maurier's original novella for inspiration. Rather than recreating the 1963 film, the adaptation will explore the unsettling idea of nature suddenly turning against humanity, a theme Gibbs noted feels especially "timely" in an era shaped by climate change. After several failed attempts to revive The Birds over the years, this latest version may finally be the one that takes flight.
“We’re going back to the source material, the Daphne du Maurier novella, and using that as inspiration,” she said. “And at its heart, it’s looking at when nature turns on you. Obviously, with climate change, that is very timely.” Gibbs told SXSW London.
But unlike Hitchcock's original nightmare, this time the terror is not coming only from the skies.
What new horror is The Birds unleashing this time?
Inspired by both Alfred Hitchcock's classic film and Daphne du Maurier's original story, the series follows traveling magistrate Myra Massey as she returns to her isolated Alaskan hometown for what should have been a routine death hearing. Instead, she discovers her childhood friend's bullet-riddled body and becomes entangled in a growing murder mystery. As Myra digs deeper, a terrifying wave of bird attacks begins sweeping across the region, turning a simple investigation into a desperate fight for survival.
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The new adaptation also dramatically reshapes the franchise's central hero. Unlike Melanie Daniels, the helpless damsel in distress of Hitchcock's film, Myra is being positioned as a far more self-reliant protagonist forced to solve the mystery with no one coming to save her. The project is executive-produced by Tom Spezialy, Sarah Snook, David Heyman, and Jennifer Gabler Rawlings, adding another major title to Heyman's growing television slate alongside HBO's upcoming Harry Potter series.
And with Sarah Snook now leading the flock, The Birds appears ready to spread its wings once again, bringing a fresh wave of mystery, survival and terror to a whole new generation.
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Have you watched Alfred Hitchcock's The Birds? And what are your thoughts on Sarah Snook leading this bold new reimagining of the horror classic? Let us know in the comments.
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Edited By: Adiba Nizami
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