The Logistics of Chaos: Directing 'Lord of the Flies' With 36 Child Actors With Marc Munden
“I thought, well, who needs another Lord of the Flies?”

'Lord of the Flies'
In this episode of the No Film School Podcast, GG Hawkins speaks with BAFTA-winning director Marc Munden about directing the new Netflix adaptation of Lord of the Flies, written by Jack Thorne.
Munden discusses revisiting William Golding’s novel, shaping the series’ visual language, filming on a remote island in Malaysia, working with 36 young actors, and how limitations around child actors’ schedules helped inspire the show’s hallucinatory nighttime look.
In this episode, we discuss:
- Why Munden was initially conflicted about adapting Lord of the Flies again
- How Jack Thorne structured the four-part series around Piggy, Jack, Simon, and Ralph
- Using the rainforest as an alien, living ecosystem that mirrors the boys’ collapsing society
- How production restrictions led Munden to develop an infrared-inspired visual approach for nighttime scenes
- Rehearsing for five weeks with 36 child actors before shooting
- Directing young performers toward natural behavior instead of “performing”
- How Munden uses analog production books filled with references, sketches, script pages, and notes
- Why post-production became a continuation of discovery, including iPhone footage and evolving portrait sequences
- Munden’s advice for emerging filmmakers: make films, learn to write, be kind, and keep learning from others
Guests:
Subscribe to the No Film School Podcast on:
Get your question answered on the podcast by emailing podcast@nofilmschool.com
Listen to more episodes of the No Film School podcast right here:










