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Peaky Blinders: Season Three Coming to Netflix

Peaky Blinders TV show on Netflix: season 3 (canceled or renewed?).

Peaky Blinders TV show on Netflix and BBC Two. Image via BBC.

Deadline reports the US third season of Peaky Blinders premieres on Netflix Tuesday, May 31, 2016. In UK, Peaky Blinders series three premieres on BBC Two, tomorrow, May 5th.

The cast of Peaky Blinders includes: Cillian Murphy, Sam Neill, Helen McCrory, and Tom Hardy. Paddy Considine and Alexander Siddig are joining for season three. Below, read an interview with creator and writer, Stephen Knight.

Set in 1919 Birmingham, England, the Peaky Blinders gang is led by the fierce Tommy Shelby (Murphy). In the series logline, Shelby is described as “a crime boss set on moving up in the world no matter the cost.”

The BBC says:

 

Series three of the multi-award-winning BBC Two gangster epic sees Tommy Shelby pulled into the glamorous and dangerous world of international intrigue in 1920s Britain, putting his entire organisation and family at risk, and forcing him to question everything about his own ambitions and desires.

 

Check out this BBC interview on Peaky Blinders, season three, with Steven Knight, writer and creator.

 

This period in history is scarcely represented on UK television screens. What was your motivation and inspiration for creating Peaky Blinders?
The inspiration was motivated by stories I was told by my parents who lived in Small Heath, Birmingham and both had connections with illegal bookmakers as many people had in those days. My mum was a bookies’ runner at nine years old and my dad’s uncles were Peaky Blinders and gangsters. He told me lots of stories about how they looked, how they dressed and how people felt about them and how life was in those days, so I always felt this was a drama waiting to be told.

Where did we leave Tommy Shelby in series two?
At the end of series two we see Tommy has escaped death by the skin of his teeth, to fight another day. There was a threat hanging over him that a favour would be called in, and in series three we find him two years later when that favour is just about to be called in. It’s a huge imposition and it takes him to places no self-respecting gangster would normally go.

What sort of man is Tommy at the start of series three?
Tommy’s trajectory is always upwards, but it’s never smooth and never simple. He has to do things at the request of some very powerful people and all of it illegal as ever. The consequence of his success will be huge. Already he has made a lot of money and his living standard is unrecognisable from when we first met him at the beginning of series one and that trajectory will continue. His is a cash business and he is converting that cash into objects.

What are the main themes of series three?
The themes that are prevalent are power, the abuse of power, and the effect that power has on Tommy and the family. It is also about how everyone is trying to escape where they are. It’s a question of, are any of them able to escape? Can any of them get away from their past, the history, and in a sense their destiny? It’s about aspiration and if you look at it sociologically, it’s about people from the working classes in England and can they ever – no matter how much money or material wealth they have accumulated – ever escape where they are from.

What’s in store for Arthur in this series?
I’m hoping Arthur’s storyline will be a surprise to people because he was like a shot-down aircraft at the end of series two and it’s not what people will be expecting. I can say that he is not on the road to hell in a handcart. He’s found some sort of redemption but again the question is, will it work? Will he be able to escape from who he has always been and what fate seems to have in store for him?

Where did we leave Polly in series two and what can we expect for her character in series three?
Polly had just carried out an act of vengeance at the end of series two, which I’m sure the audience applauded (I know I did). She got rid of someone who had been particularly awful to her. She isn’t someone who deals with guilt well and she is still carrying that. She’s quite a religious woman and in series three we see how that faith is challenged – does she stick with it or does she abandon it and of course she meets a man which sort of changes everything.

Michael had not crossed the line in the sand that makes him a true Peaky Blinder. How does this series test his decisions?
There is huge jeopardy involved in Tommy’s business and the emerging situation that develops throughout series three make it a necessity for all members of the family to do things they don’t want to do. Michael comes at this from a surprising angle and is required to approach that line and whether or not he crosses it is to be seen.

In series two John was trying to be more his own man. How has he grown in this series?
In series three John wants to establish himself and not just as third fiddle in the family hierarchy. An opportunity does present itself and John is more than capable of filling the shoes of anyone who chooses to absent himself. He is encouraged by his wife Esme (played by Aimee-Ffion Edwards) who also wants a different life, but rather than aspiring to a life of wealth and big houses, Esme is missing the life she used to have as a gypsy traveller. There are real pressures on John to keep his life together as well as remain part of the Shelby family.

You’ve said in the past that series one was opium, series two was cocaine, what is series three?
Opium was essentially used by people who were trying to alleviate acute pain and that seemed reflective of the tone of the first series. The second series was cocaine reflected by the wildness and the madness of the early 1920s. People were revving it up and getting into gear. In the third series I think it is power and the effect that has on people; how they respond to it and how intoxicated they can become as a result of it. Even though the other drugs are still around in series three, it is more of an existential thing for Tommy.

When you sat down to write the third series had you already mapped out the journey or do you approach each series individually?
I never map things out in advance. It would be better if I did and more economical in terms of time, but I’ve found that if you work out a plot line from beginning to end, at the beginning it becomes very rational. I prefer to just start writing because I find the process of writing offers all sorts of random possibilities that are much more like life – far-fetched and unbelievable.

Describe the character of Father Hughes? Is this Tommy’s toughest adversary yet?
I would describe him as the most evil character that has ever appeared in Peaky. He is part of a very powerful group. He represents various pressures of the time and a particular sort of self-justification and righteousness that the Shelbys have always fought against. He is more of a spiritual authority than a political authority therefore he is more of a difficult enemy for the Shelbys to take on.

What does Paddy Considine bring to the role of Father John Hughes?
To get Paddy to play this part was sensational because he is just so, so good. And one of the great pleasures of this series is that I know I can write Cillian and Paddy together and just know that it is going to happen. It is brilliant.

How much of Alfie Solomons was on the page and how much did Tom Hardy bring to the role?
On the page is the ‘stuff’; the stuff he’s got to do and he has to make it from A to B and with Tom in particular, almost exclusively, there is a lot of improvisation that is very exciting. But the most important thing is that Tom arrives with the character and the character is so manufactured in the moment that it is fantastic to watch his performances unfold.

The opening of the series is multi-layered. We have the backdrop of the wedding and a deal going down with Russians, all in front of the bride’s gathered guests. Was this always your vision of Tommy’s happy day?
Tommy’s wedding is a typical Birmingham wedding – a big fight and a family dispute. I like the idea of kicking everything off together in the same place and weddings are great for that and technically it is a great way to meet the family again. I wanted to explore the idea of when business meets family, which has essentially been what Peaky Blinders has been about right from the beginning. Can the two be separated? What we see in this series is how the two collide.

Are there things that you already have planned for the Shelby family further down the line?
I want the family trajectory to continue upwards and for them to become wealthier and more powerful. The only thing I want to do is for Tommy to become knighted – to become Sir Thomas Shelby for various nefarious reasons! But I just want to shine the light on the 1920s and hopefully the 1930s with this family. The only clear thought I have for series four, if there should be one, is to include the general strike of 1926.

Has there been a particular scene that you have written for Peaky Binders that, on seeing the final version turned out to be better than you ever imagined?
The execution scene at the end of series two, where everything came together beautifully; it was brilliantly directed and a brilliant performance by everyone concerned, particularly Cillian. That is the scene that I had most satisfaction with of anything I have ever written.

When you created the series, was Tommy Shelby always your central character?
It always began with that central character of Tommy. He was always going to be the second oldest, so that it was not a natural thing for him to be in charge, proving that he is in charge for a reason.

How did the brothers and Aunt Polly develop around him?
Aunt Polly was a real person, she was my dad’s auntie and very, very formidable. I never met her but I came from a big family with lots of brothers and sisters so just dealing with how people get along is quite interesting. It was natural to use that experience in the story.

How have the actors grown into their roles over the course of the three series?
Cillian began with Tommy as a man with a mission; someone who was going to change things right from the opening scene in episode one, series one. He was in a situation where, following the First World War, he felt dead already and so he could break the rules. He was broken by what he saw and what he experienced. He could have made a choice to kill himself but he decided to carry on. In series two he experienced success and getting what he always thought he wanted, and now in series three he is questioning that. I think Cillian mapped that out beautifully all the way through, from the first to the last moment of this series so far. He is such a fine executor of a character’s progress. It’s a long process in television, unlike in film where you can really get your hands round a character quickly.

The character of Arthur Shelby is fractured and torn. How has Paul Anderson reacted to the various twists and turns his character has taken?
Paul Anderson, particularly in series three, is playing a character at a crossroads in his life because of the woman he has married, and is having to examine his loyalties to her and the Shelby family. He really has to explore if he’s able to escape the world he’s living in and consider if he is fit to do anything else in life. Paul has tracked that beautifully in his portrayal of Arthur, in not just this series but throughout.

Polly is such an important character within the family. How does Helen McCrory make this role her own?
The entire show is almost like a dance where the characters all go hand in hand, and always there with them, between them, arm in arm, is Polly. Helen McCrory is simply the mistress of all of this. She is so good at being scary, being formidable, being vulnerable – and especially in this series we see this vulnerability much more at the fore. It’s a real joy to have actors of this calibre to take these characters on.

How much are you involved in the design and look of the show?
Luckily, we are not starting with a blank canvas now we are two series in. We want to keep the show embedded in this world because it works, and the audience like it but because the characters have moved on they are in different places now, with bigger environments and more opulent homes, so the direction and the style moves along with it. It is an evolution rather than a revolution.

 

What do you think? Are you a fan of the Peaky Blinders TV series? Do you plan to watch the third season on Netflix or BBC Two?

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