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<i>Percy Jackson and the Olympians</i> (TV series)

Percy Jackson and the Olympians (TV series)

2023 American television series


Percy Jackson and the Olympians is an American fantasy television series created by Rick Riordan and Jonathan E. Steinberg for Disney+, based on the book series of the same name by Riordan. Walker Scobell stars as Percy Jackson, alongside Leah Sava Jeffries and Aryan Simhadri.

Quick Facts Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Genre ...

Development on the series began in May 2020, following a pitch by Riordan to Disney Branded Television. Jonathan E. Steinberg and Dan Shotz were announced as showrunners in July 2021, with James Bobin hired to direct the first episode in October. Scobell was cast in the lead role in January 2022, with Jeffries and Simhadri joining the cast in May. By September, Anders Engström and Jet Wilkinson were also set to direct multiple episodes of the series. Filming began in June 2022 in Vancouver, British Columbia, and concluded in February 2023, with additional cast members revealed throughout 2022 and 2023.

Percy Jackson and the Olympians premiered on December 19, 2023, on Disney+, with the first season consisting of eight episodes. It has received positive reviews from critics, who largely praised its faithfulness to the source material, worldbuilding, and cast performances. The series was renewed for a second season in February 2024.

Premise

Twelve-year-old demigod Percy Jackson is accused by the Greek god Zeus of stealing his thunderbolt and races to find it and restore order to Olympus.[1]

Cast and characters

Main

Recurring

  • Virginia Kull as Sally Jackson, Percy's selfless mother[5]
  • Glynn Turman as Chiron / Mr. Brunner, a centaur disguised as Percy's Latin teacher.[5] While the character only pretends to be disabled to disguise himself among humans by using a magical wheelchair, the character has a disability in the form of a brace in his hind left leg as a war injury. The creators made this change to address disability, though they noted it would be "just a detail" during the first season[6]
  • Jason Mantzoukas as Dionysus / Mr. D, the god of wine and curmudgeonly director of Camp Half-Blood[5]
  • Megan Mullally as Alecto / Mrs. Dodds, Percy's stern mathematics teacher who secretly serves the god Hades as one of the three Furies[5]
  • Timm Sharp as Gabe Ugliano, Sally's husband and Percy's stepfather. Executive producer Rebecca Riordan stated that his abusive behavior, present in the book, was toned down for the show as its cruelty would be a lot more obvious on screen than on the page, and "this isn't supposed to be a horror show".[7]
  • Dior Goodjohn as Clarisse La Rue, a strong-willed daughter of Ares who bullies Percy[8]
  • Charlie Bushnell as Luke Castellan, a cunning son of Hermes and the counselor of the Hermes cabin[8]
  • Andrew Alvarez as Chris Rodriguez, a son of Hermes and Luke's half-brother[9]
  • Adam Copeland as Ares, the arrogant and daring god of war[10]
  • Nick Boraine as Kronos,[lower-alpha 1] the King of the Titans who appears as a voice in Percy's dreams[11]

Guest

Series author Rick Riordan makes cameo appearances as a teacher in the headmasters' office at Yancy Academy and as a statue at Aunty Em's Garden Gnome Emporium.[22][23]

Episodes

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Production

Development

In November 2018, Rick Riordan stated that he believed he would have no creative control over a Disney reboot of the Percy Jackson novel series if it were to happen, much like his experience with the film series with 20th Century Fox.[25] In December 2019, Riordan pitched an adaptation of the novels to the Walt Disney Company,[26] which had acquired Fox in March of that year.[27] By May 2020, a Disney+ series based on Percy Jackson was in the works, with the first season set to adapt the first book in the series, The Lightning Thief.[28] Riordan revealed in March 2021 that searches for the series' directors and cast was underway,[29] with James Bobin being announced as the pilot episode's director in October.[30] Jonathan E. Steinberg and Dan Shotz were also announced as showrunners in July.[31]

The series was greenlit in January 2022, with Disney Branded Television, 20th Television, and the Gotham Group producing the project. Steinberg, Shotz, Bobin, and Riordan were announced as executive producers alongside Rebecca Riordan, Bert Salke, Monica Owusu-Breen, Jim Rowe, Anders Engström, Jet Wilkinson, Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Jeremy Bell, and D. J. Goldberg.[1] At the D23 Expo in September, Anders Engström and Jet Wilkinson were revealed to be executive producing the series as well.[32] The same month, Riordan revealed that Engström would direct the third and fourth episodes while Wilkinson would direct the fifth and sixth.[33] The series was reportedly made with a budget of $12 to 15 million per episode.[6]

In February 2024, Disney+ renewed the series for a second season, which will adapt the second book in the series, The Sea of Monsters.[34] In April 2024, Albert Kim was announced as a new executive producer starting with the second season.[35]

Writing

Drafts of the pilot episode were being reviewed by March 2021.[29] In April 2021, it was announced that Steinberg would serve as co-writer and executive producer of the pilot alongside Riordan.[36] The same day, Monica Owusu-Breen, Daphne Olive, Stewart Strandberg, Zoë Neary, Joe Tracz, and Xavier Stiles joined as writers.[31] Each season of the series will adapt one installment of the book series, with the first season being an adaptation of The Lightning Thief.[29] There are also plans to adapt additional material within the franchise for the series.[6] In addition to writing the pilot, Riordan and co-showrunner Steinberg created a series bible for the show, as well as planning the plot for the first season and creating ideas for potential future seasons.[31] The first season consists of eight episodes.[37]

Writing for the second season had begun by March 2023, though Riordan cautioned that it had yet to be greenlit at that point.[38] Plans for future seasons include a further exploration of Chiron's disability.[6]

Casting

Preliminary casting began in April 2021.[39] In January 2022, Walker Scobell was cast in the lead role as Percy Jackson, with this being announced in April.[2] The next month, it was announced that Leah Sava Jeffries and Aryan Simhadri would respectively portray Annabeth Chase and Grover Underwood, two close friends of Percy.[4] Jeffries' casting received online backlash due to Annabeth not being depicted as black in the novels, which Riordan claimed was racism, and stated, "Once you see Leah as Annabeth, she will become exactly the way you imagine Annabeth, assuming you give her that chance, but you refuse to credit that this may be true."[40] Logan Lerman, who played Percy in the film series, praised the casting of Scobell, Jeffries and Simhadri in their roles.[41]

In June, Virginia Kull, Glynn Turman, Jason Mantzoukas, Megan Mullally, and Timm Sharp were announced to be appearing in recurring capacities as Sally Jackson, Chiron, Dionysus, Alecto, and Gabe Ugliano, respectively.[5] The same month, Dior Goodjohn and Charlie Bushnell joined the cast in recurring roles as Clarisse La Rue and Luke Castellan, respectively, while Olivea Morton was announced to portray Nancy Bobofit in a guest role.[8] Adam Copeland was cast in the recurring role of Ares in October, while Suzanne Cryer and Jessica Parker Kennedy were cast in the guest roles of Echidna and Medusa, respectively.[10] In November 2022, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Jay Duplass, and Timothy Omundson were announced to guest-star as Hermes, Hades, and Hephaestus, respectively;[15][14] as were Lance Reddick and Toby Stephens in January 2023, announced to portray Zeus and Poseidon, respectively.[19] Jason Gray-Stanford was cast in an undisclosed role in March 2023,[42] later revealed to be Maron.[12]

Filming

Principal photography began on June 2, 2022, in Vancouver, British Columbia,[5][30] under the working title Mink Golden,[43] and concluded on February 2, 2023.[44] The series utilized an LED stage powered by Industrial Light & Magic's StageCraft visual effects technology.[45]

Design

Tish Monaghan serves as the costume designer.[46][47]

Music

By October 2023, Bear McCreary had been writing music for the series, after previously working with Steinberg and Shots in the series Human Target, Black Sails and See.[48] Members of the music company Sparks & Shadows, which McCreary was a co-founder of, were involved.[48] The score for the series was released digitally by Hollywood Records on December 22, with Sparks & Shadows credited as composer and McCreary credited with writing the themes.[49]

Quick Facts Percy Jackson and the Olympians, Soundtrack album by Bear McCreary ...
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Marketing

A teaser for the series was revealed during the D23 Expo in September 2022.[50] Rotem Rusak of Nerdist highlighted how the teaser featured the opening lines of The Lightning Thief,[51] while Kendall Myers of Collider noted the teaser's dark tone.[52] A second teaser trailer for the first season was released on September 19, 2023.[53] The trailer was released on November 16 and was viewed 84.3 million times in the first 10 days across all social media platforms.[54]

Release

While the season was initially expected in early 2024,[55][56] Hulu announced episodes would be available to stream beginning December 20.[57] The first season premiered on Disney+ with two episodes on December 19, 2023, a day earlier than previously scheduled.[58] Eight episodes[37] were released weekly until January 30, 2024.[59][60]

Following the season finale, Disney+ released the behind-the-scenes documentary A Hero's Journey: The Making of Percy Jackson and the Olympians.[61]

Reception

Audience viewership

In December 2023, Disney announced that 13.3 million viewers watched the premiere episode in its first six days on Disney+ and Hulu.[62] In January 2024, Disney announced that 26.2 million viewers watched the premiere episode after three weeks.[63] The second through fifth episodes each amassed at least 10 million viewers after seven days.[63] In total, the series was streamed for 110 million hours over seven weeks on Disney+ and Hulu.[34] According to Whip Media's TV Time, Percy Jackson and the Olympians was the most streamed original television series across all platforms in the United States during the weeks ending on January 28, 2024, and February 4, 2024.[64][65]

Critical response

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, 92% of 60 critics' reviews are positive, with an average rating of 7.2/10. The website's consensus reads: "A faithful adaptation of Rick Riordan's novels, Percy Jackson and the Olympians is a lovingly realized odyssey through adolescence and myth."[66] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 73 out of 100 based on 26 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[67]

Nicole Drum of ComicBook.com wrote "Some of the best casting ever in a television series, fantastic performances, and even the magic of the visuals and world-building, the series is about as perfect a television adaptation as you can get, as if it's been favored by the gods themselves."[68] Matthew Creith of TheWrap praised the writing, describing it as "quick-witted, the action is stellar, and making Percy's journey an episodic tale helps to propel the young character forward in exciting directions."[69] Kathryn Porter of Paste wrote, "From the casting to the writing to the production design, we get the adaptation of The Lightning Thief that we have been wanting for over a decade to see, and there is nowhere to go but up."[70] Aramide Tinubu of Variety wrote, "The series depicts a genuinely inclusive world, showcasing storylines and characters that will captivate fans for the next decade. At long last, Riordan's work has been given the extensive visual adaptation it deserves."[71]

Accolades

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Notes

  1. Prior to being credited as Kronos, Boraine is credited as "Voice in Dream".
  2. Miranda is credited as a special guest star.

References

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