FX announces a âShogunâ remake and a Silicon Valley-set limited series thriller
FX will dive deeper into limited-run series with two new projects: a âShogunâ revival and a Silicon Valley-set conspiracy thriller. The series orders were announced Friday at the cable networkâs Television Critics Assn. presentation.
The cable network has had massive success in the format in recent years, stacking up Emmys and critical acclaim for âFargo,â âAmerican Crime Story: The People v. O.J. Simpson,â âAmerican Horror Storyâ and âFeud: Bette and Joan.â
The new projects come from filmmakers like Alex Garland (âAnnihilationâ) and Andrew Macdonald (âEx Machinaâ) and gather an inclusive crop of talent that includes Sonoya Mizuno (âCrazy Rich Asiansâ) and Jin Ha (âJesus Christ Superstar Liveâ) and returning network stars Nick Offerman (âFargoâ) and Alison Pill (âAmerican Horror Story: Cultâ).
RELATED: Chris Rock will star in the fourth season of FXâs âFargoâ Âť
The remake of âShogunâ is based on the New York Times bestseller from James Clavell. FX didnât announce casting or an air date for the 10-episode project, but revealed its considerable behind-the-scenes heft.
Macdonald and Allon Reich of DNA TV, and Michael De Luca (âMoneyball,â âThe Social Networkâ) are executive producers, Tim Van Patten (âThe Sopranos,â âBoardwalk Empireâ) will direct multiple episodes and Ronan Bennett (âPublic Enemiesâ) will write the series, which will shoot in the U.K. and Japan.
The original âShogunâ starring Richard Chamberlain, which aired on NBC over five nights in 1980, is credited with launching the miniseries format on television.
âThe themes of an outsider encountering a new culture are as relevant today as then,â said John Landgraf, CEO of FX Networks, who noted that Clavellâs daughter, Michaela, will also serve as an executive producer.
Back on California soil, the network has ordered eight episodes of a tech-infused, shady-workplace drama called âDevs,â starring Mizuno as a computer engineer who suspects her company of murder.
Offerman plays her boss at the fictional San Francisco-based Amaya. (First hint that the firmâs up to no good: It has a âsecretive development division,â according to the FX description).
The series, from Garland, Reich, Macdonald, Eli Bush and Scott Rudin, will air next year.
âAfter reading all eight scripts and hearing Alexâs brilliant vision and commitment to direct all of the episodes, it was an easy decision to order âDevsâ to series.â Landgraf said.
In addition to the two new limited series, FX announced on Friday that Chris Rock will headline the fourth season of âFargo.â
The series, expected to start production next year, will be the first regular-series TV role for Rock in nearly a decade.
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