I loved Episode 1, but Episode 2 blew it out of the water. Some observations:
* Mrs. Coulter is severely messed up, but Ruth Wilson plays her in such a way that she still occasionally evokes sympathy
* I remembered the instance of Mrs. Coulter's monkey assaulting Pan from when I read the books, but it still sufficiently shocked me, and having it happen as a result of Mrs. Coulter's normal controlled personality slipping made it all the more visceral
* The first time we heard Mrs. Coulter's monkey crawling through the vents, I thought it was the missing kids banging on stuff
* Introducing the "real world" Oxford early may be a change from the books, but it works for the visual medium of TV
* Giving the "real world" Oxford fully modern technology like new cars and state-of-the-art cellphones helps explain why Lyra's world looks more modern while still being 'stuck' with things like airships and older-model cars (which I actually like more as a visual aesthetic than the 19th Century vibe that Pullman described in the books)
* I think the letter-writing scene is from the books, but it was a little bit unneccsary, IMO, for the TV adaptation
* I'm surprised it took Lyra as long as it did to go snooping, but I guess it speaks to how manipulative Mrs. Coulter is
* Boreal straight-up murdering the journalist who talked to Lyra was super-crazy, but also super-effective
* Mrs. Coulter is severely messed up, but Ruth Wilson plays her in such a way that she still occasionally evokes sympathy
* I remembered the instance of Mrs. Coulter's monkey assaulting Pan from when I read the books, but it still sufficiently shocked me, and having it happen as a result of Mrs. Coulter's normal controlled personality slipping made it all the more visceral
* The first time we heard Mrs. Coulter's monkey crawling through the vents, I thought it was the missing kids banging on stuff
* Introducing the "real world" Oxford early may be a change from the books, but it works for the visual medium of TV
* Giving the "real world" Oxford fully modern technology like new cars and state-of-the-art cellphones helps explain why Lyra's world looks more modern while still being 'stuck' with things like airships and older-model cars (which I actually like more as a visual aesthetic than the 19th Century vibe that Pullman described in the books)
* I think the letter-writing scene is from the books, but it was a little bit unneccsary, IMO, for the TV adaptation
* I'm surprised it took Lyra as long as it did to go snooping, but I guess it speaks to how manipulative Mrs. Coulter is
* Boreal straight-up murdering the journalist who talked to Lyra was super-crazy, but also super-effective