May 17, 2026
ManyPress
War & Conflicts

A ‘Lord of the Flies’ for Our Time

In North America right now, Netflix has the conch. The phrase “lord of the flies” has been deployed by hacky comedians to describe brutal, survival-of-the-fittest violence for so long it’s almost lost

NF

ManyPress Editorial Team

ManyPress Editorial

May 15, 2026 · 7:00 PM3 min readSource: Foreign Policy
A ‘Lord of the Flies’ for Our Time

In North America right now, Netflix has the conch. The phrase “lord of the flies” has been deployed by hacky comedians to describe brutal, survival-of-the-fittest violence for so long it’s almost lost its power. (I can’t remember who said it, but the description of the group dressing room at Loehmann’s department store as “ Lord of the Flies in pantyhose” sure brought the house down for my grandmother and her friends.) The BBC’s new, robust adaptation of William Golding’s book reclaims the title

Created and written by Jack Thorne and presented in four hour-long episodes on Netflix in the United States, it is a terrific work that expands the original text in ways that range from thought-provoking to quite brilliant. And while there’s never been a period when this tale of what Theodore Dalrymple has called “the fragility of goodness” hasn’t been relevant, with current world leaders growing more frank in their bullying, there’s no better time than now to revisit the uninhabited, fruit-and-pig rich island that quickly turns from paradise to hell for a group of stranded English schoolboys. If it’s been a while since you picked up the 1954 novel that quickly became enmeshed in school curricula, it functions as both a grand metaphor for the darkness of human existence as well as a ripping good yarn—which is precisely what Golding had in mind. As a schoolteacher in the early 1950s, the World War II veteran and scholar of Greek literature was annoyed by adventure stories like R. Ballantyne’s Coral Island , a popular castaway adventure. He had witnessed unspeakable horrors in combat but also had few illusions about the way boys—even supposedly well-heeled boys—really behaved. (Having once been a boy myself, I can confirm that the on-off switch of group behavior when an adult is around is not dissimilar from the menagerie of toys when a human steps into—or out of—the room in Toy Story. ) With this in mind he created his marooned, archetypal characters: heroic Ralph, brainy Piggy, cruel Jack, and sensitive Simon, as well as the other “biguns” and “littleuns,” who work together for a while under a reasonable system of rules until base impulses and power dynamics turn the lagoon red. The book has been translated to film twice before—a very good though understandably muted 1963 version, and a not-so-good, Americanized (and somewhat modernized) version in 1990. I think the new series is the best, thanks to its rich cinematography, enveloping tone, and fantastic and perceptive performances. A wide shot of a group of boys gathered on a sandy beach. Several boys in matching blue button-down shirts and shorts sit on large gray boulders.

Key points

  • Created and written by Jack Thorne and presented in four hour-long episodes on Netflix in the United States, it is a terrific work that expands the original text in ways that range from thought-pro…
  • And while there’s never been a period when this tale of what Theodore Dalrymple has called “the fragility of goodness” hasn’t been relevant, with current world leaders growing more frank in their b…
  • If it’s been a while since you picked up the 1954 novel that quickly became enmeshed in school curricula, it functions as both a grand metaphor for the darkness of human existence as well as a ripp…
  • As a schoolteacher in the early 1950s, the World War II veteran and scholar of Greek literature was annoyed by adventure stories like R.
  • Ballantyne’s Coral Island , a popular castaway adventure.

AdvertisementAd Placeholder — Configure AdSense in .env.localNEXT_PUBLIC_ADSENSE_CLIENT=ca-pub-XXXXXXXX

This article was independently rewritten by ManyPress editorial AI from reporting originally published by Foreign Policy.

War & Conflicts