Shōgun’s Showrunner Justin Marks Opens Up About Maintaining Authenticity To Japanese Culture While Crafting The Intense Show
Adapting a massive novel like Shōgun into a ten-part miniseries takes a whole village, and showrunner Justin Marks admits that it’s all about keeping the authenticity of Japanese culture while remaining respectful. For those who don’t know, Shōgun is the latest drama show to hail from FX. The miniseries follows the lives of three individuals – a ship pilot from Europe, a daimyo from Japan, and a young woman whose family has been dishonored and who has to prove her worth in the chaos that occurs. Shōgun is based on the novel of the same name by James Clavell, and the book itself (when bought in its complete version) has a whopping total of 1,312 pages. So yes, there is a lot of story to bring to life.
When speaking to CinemaBlend to promote the new FX series (one of many great shows available on Hulu), the showrunner for Shōgun commented that the difficult part of bringing this intense but beloved book to life was finding a way to make sure that the show was authentic in the way it delivered Japanese culture, while also building something that resembles what it was like to live in 1600’s Japan when there is still “a lot of debate” on what life was like back then. Justin Marks told us:
Honestly, the rise of Asian-centric media has been a significant talking point over the last few years. Two Best Picture winners – the 2020-winner, Parasite, and the 2023 victor, Everything, Everywhere, All At Once – were Asian-centered stories, the former coming directly from South Korea.
((Image credit: FX))
TV shows have also blown up in the last few years, from Squid Game, which is receiving a Season 2, to the Japanese hit Alice in Borderland, which has already gotten a Season 3 order and has become one of the best shows to binge-watch on Netflix.
These pieces of media and FX’s Shōgun all have one thing in common – using community voices to portray an authentic experience properly. Justin Marks brought up that as a showrunner, they had to really “rely on those voices” during the undertaking of making the show in order to keep it historically accurate while also using international cinema as inspiration for the production process:
With so much time and effort poured into the set designs, costumes, and more just from the trailer seen online, Shōgun’s authenticity will be unlike any other show – and will indeed join the ranks of one of FX’s best dramas.
Shōgun received another miniseries adaptation in the 1980s and several awards, including the Primetime Emmy Award for Outstanding Limited Series. The first two episodes of FX’s version of Shōgun will be released on February 27th, while a new episode will be released every week until its finale on April 23rd, 2024, as part of the 2024 TV schedule.