Lisbeth Salander is returning — this time to television
One of the most iconic crime thrillers of the 21st century is officially heading back to screens. Sky has commissioned a series adaptation of The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo, bringing Stieg Larsson’s globally beloved Millennium universe into a modern, long-form television format.
The eight-episode project is being developed as a Sky Original, signaling a major prestige push for the network — and a fresh take on a story that has already defined an entire genre.
Who’s behind the new adaptation
The series will be written and executive produced by Steve Lightfoot (Hannibal, Behind Her Eyes) alongside Angela LaManna (The Haunting of Bly Manor). Production duties fall to Left Bank Pictures, the studio behind several high-profile British dramas.
Executive producers include Andy Harries, Charlotte Moore, and John Phillips for Left Bank, Sam Hoyle for Sky, along with industry heavyweights Amy Pascal and Scott Rudin. International distribution will be handled by Sony Pictures Television, with U.S. pre-sales already underway.
When and where it’s filming
Production is scheduled to begin this spring in Lithuania, with the series set to premiere across Sky platforms in the UK, Ireland, Italy, Germany, Switzerland, and Austria. The setting choice hints at a cold, grounded visual tone — fitting for a story rooted in secrets, surveillance, and long-buried crimes.
A modern take on a familiar mystery
At its core, the series will follow disgraced journalist Mikael Blomkvist and brilliant hacker Lisbeth Salander as they investigate the decades-old disappearance of a young woman from a powerful family.
However, this adaptation won’t simply retell the novel beat for beat. According to the official description, the show will bring the story into the present, while staying true to the investigative DNA and moral tension of Larsson’s books — with themes designed to feel even more relevant in today’s political and digital climate.
A franchise with massive legacy power
Stieg Larsson completed three Millennium novels before his death in 2004:
- The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo
- The Girl Who Played with Fire
- The Girl Who Kicked the Hornets’ Nest
The series later continued under David Lagercrantz, and most recently Karin Smirnoff, expanding the universe with new chapters. Collectively, the Millennium books have sold over 100 million copies worldwide — a staggering figure that underscores the property’s enduring appeal.
A history of screen adaptations
The Millennium saga has already seen multiple screen lives:
- A Swedish film trilogy, starring Noomi Rapace and Michael Nyqvist
- A 2011 Hollywood adaptation led by Rooney Mara and Daniel Craig
- A standalone reboot, The Girl in the Spider’s Web, released in 2018
Despite strong performances, none of the previous adaptations fully explored the long-form potential of Larsson’s dense, layered storytelling — something television may finally unlock.
Why this version matters
A series format allows Lisbeth Salander’s complexity — her trauma, intelligence, rage, and moral code — to breathe in ways a two-hour film never could. With prestige-TV creatives at the helm and a clear intent to modernize the material, Sky’s version has the opportunity to redefine the definitive screen adaptation of the Millennium universe.
Final Words
The Girl with the Dragon Tattoo has always been more than a mystery — it’s a story about power, abuse, resistance, and truth. By reimagining it for television and grounding it in the present day, Sky may finally deliver the version fans have long been waiting for.
Lisbeth Salander is back — and this time, she’s got eight hours to burn the system down.
