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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 180
Monday, 29 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 02:33 UTC
  • UTC02:33
  • EDT22:33
  • GMT03:33
  • CET04:33
  • JST11:33
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← The MonexusCulture

Stephen Poliakoff Returns to Television with ‘The Order,’ an International Political Thriller

The multi-BAFTA and Emmy-winning writer is set to return to long-form television with ‘The Order,’ a sprawling international political thriller whose scale and ambition signal a vote of confidence in the prestige drama format.

Stephen Poliakoff photographed during a public appearance; image supplied via Variety. Getty Images · Variety

Stephen Poliakoff, the writer whose name has for four decades been shorthand for ambitious, chamber-scale British drama, is preparing to step back in front of the cameras. Variety reported on 28 June 2026 that the multi-BAFTA and Emmy-winning dramatist has set his next project: The Order, an international political thriller that Variety describes as "epic" and "historic" in scope. The announcement, an exclusive from Variety's television desk, confirms that Poliakoff intends to operate once again at the scale of his late-1990s and 2000s landmark work rather than the tighter, single-room pieces that have occupied more of his recent career.

What matters here is not merely the return of a singular voice. It is the signal that the prestige long-form drama — the form Poliakoff helped define for British television, and which streamers and public broadcasters have spent the past decade retrenching from — still has room for a writer who treats television as a place for historical argument rather than episodic plot.

A career built against the prevailing current

Poliakoff's distinctive contribution has always been the marriage of meticulous period research with a near-operatic attention to the textures of private life: the back staircase, the overheard conversation, the small betrayal that exposes a country's larger one. The Order, by Variety's account, takes him into the international political thriller — a register that British television has rarely sustained, and one in which the centre of gravity has long belonged to American cable and, more recently, to the global streamers.

For a writer long associated with BBC drama — the broadcaster that incubated his early work and gave him the room to develop his voice — to be announcing an "international" thriller suggests a co-production structure designed to sell abroad before it airs at home. That is the reality of prestige drama in 2026. A writer of Poliakoff's standing can no longer rely on a single commissioning editor in a single country.

The political thriller, reconsidered

The label "political thriller" is doing heavy lifting in Variety's write-up, and it is worth pausing on what it tends to mean. In recent years the form has been dominated by American productions that treat politics as a surface genre — interchangeable plots of leak-and-chase, with thriller mechanics bolted on to lend topicality. Poliakoff's record points in a different direction. His best-known works have tended to be historical, often set at moments when the political and the intimate become indistinguishable.

The Order's positioning as both "historic" and "international" therefore raises the question of which archive Poliakoff is now drawing on, and which political order he intends to anatomise. Variety's exclusive does not specify the period or the jurisdiction, and that reticence is itself informative: the production is still being assembled, and the central pitch is the writer's name rather than the headline of the plot. For now, the substance remains a deliberate blank at the centre of the announcement.

Why this matters for British drama

The British television industry has spent the past five years in a state of quiet retrenchment. The streamers that, in the late 2010s, were commissioning freely from writers of Poliakoff's generation have consolidated; budgets have tightened; the long-form historical drama — the Wolf Hall, Crown, Years and Years territory — has become a rarer commission than it was. Within that environment, an announcement of an "epic" new Poliakoff project functions as a small piece of counter-evidence. It suggests that at least one production entity believes there is still a market for the writer's particular brand of slow, dense, historically rooted storytelling, and that the cost of doing it at scale can be recouped across multiple territories.

That calculation is not guaranteed to pay off. International co-productions of this kind have a poor recent hit rate; the overhead of running shoots across jurisdictions, the difficulty of writing a story that lands in London, Berlin and Los Angeles simultaneously, has defeated several well-resourced predecessors. But the fact that a writer of Poliakoff's standing has been assembled a package at all is a signal worth taking seriously.

The counter-read

The obvious counter-narrative is simpler and less flattering: The Order is an attempt to retrofit an internationally saleable thriller chassis onto a writer whose strengths lie elsewhere. Poliakoff's most distinctive achievements have rarely been thrillers in the conventional sense; they have been dramas in which the political is felt as atmosphere rather than engineered as plot. If The Order leans too hard on the genre mechanics — the courier, the leak, the countdown — it risks flattening precisely the qualities that make a Poliakoff drama worth waiting for.

On balance, the available evidence leans cautiously optimistic. Variety's exclusive frames the project in terms that emphasise its scale and historic ambition, not its plot furniture; the writer himself is on record, across decades of interviews, as sceptical of thriller conventions and committed to the slower accumulations of historical drama. The Order, on the evidence so far, is being built as a Poliakoff piece first and a thriller second. Whether the international co-production economics of 2026 will tolerate that priority is the open question.

What remains uncertain

The Variety exclusive does not specify a broadcaster, a commissioning window, a director, or a cast. The production's geographic footprint, its budget envelope, and its likely premiere date are all undisclosed. Poliakoff's previous projects have had notoriously long gestation periods, and there is no reason to assume The Order will be different. For now, the announcement is best read as a statement of intent rather than a delivery schedule.

What is on the record is enough to justify attention. A writer of Poliakoff's standing has decided that the international political thriller is the form worth his next several years. In a British television environment that has been quietly contracting, that decision is itself a piece of news.

The Monexus culture desk framed this as a story about the state of British prestige drama, not as a personality profile — Variety's exclusive centres the writer, but the underlying question is whether the international co-production model can still accommodate the kind of long-form historical work Poliakoff does best.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire