The Sex Pistols were huge Chuck Taylor fansvia thefashionts.wordpress.com

Danny Boyle will direct a new TV series about the rise of the Sex Pistols

Pistol is based on the memoir of the band's guitarist, Steve Jones, and charts the inception of the punk scene

Danny Boyle will direct a six-part television drama about the rise of the iconic punk band, the Sex PistolsPistol will depict the seismic cultural shifts when the punk scene emerged on the streets of Britain in the mid-70s. ”Imagine breaking into the world of The Crown and Downton Abbey with your mates and screaming your songs and your fury at all they represent,” the Trainspotting director told The Guardian. “It is the detonation point for British street culture where ordinary young people had the stage and vented their fury and their fashion, and everyone had to watch and listen and everyone feared them or followed them.”

The show will be based on Lonely Boy, the 2016 memoir by guitarist Steve Jones, whom Boyle has described as “a young, charming, illiterate kleptomaniac – a hero for the times... who became, in his own words, the ‘94th greatest guitarist of all time’.” 

Co-written by Craig Pearce and Frank Cottrell-Boyce, Pistol will follow on the trajectory of the young Sex Pistols from the West London council estates where they grew up, to the international infamy that surrounded them when they released their legendary album, Never Mind the Bollocks

Vivienne Westwood, Malcolm McLaren, Nancy Spungen, and Chrissie Hynde are among the other significant characters whose roles in the Pistols’ story will be dramatised in the series. The American network FX also announced this week that the show will feature Babyteeth’s Toby Wallace as Jones himself, and Game of Thrones star Maisie Williams as the punk fashion icon, Jordan.

Read Next
FeatureWayward, a Twin Peaks-y new thriller about the ‘troubled teen’ industry

Mae Martin talks about their new Netflix miniseries Wayward, a dystopian thriller centred around a sinister brainwashing school for kids

FeatureHappyend: A Japanese teen sci-fi set in a dystopian, AI-driven future

We speak to director Neo Sora about Happyend, a coming-of-age drama where teenage DJs push back against an algorithmic future

GuideClara Law: The 90s indie filmmaker you need to know

From Hong Kong to London to Australia, Law’s films chart a dreamy, restless search for home – and they’re finally getting the spotlight they deserve

FeatureHackers at 30: The story behind the cult cyber fairytale

Director Iain Softley reflects on the legacy of the ultra-stylish cult classic, which follows a group of teen hackers in Manhattan who uncover a sinister corporate conspiracy