Scrapped film In August 2001, producer
Scott Rudin optioned the film rights to
The Corrections for
Paramount Pictures. The rights still have not yet been turned into a completed film. In 2002, the film was said to be in
pre-production, with
Stephen Daldry attached to direct and dramatist
David Hare working on the screenplay. In October 2002, Franzen gave
Entertainment Weekly a wish list for the cast of the film, saying, "If they told me
Gene Hackman was going to do Alfred, I would be delighted. If they told me they had cast
Cate Blanchett as [Alfred's daughter] Denise, I would be jumping up and down, even though officially I don't care what they do with the movie." In January 2005,
Variety announced that, with Daldry presumably off the project,
Robert Zemeckis was developing Hare's script "with an eye toward directing." In August 2005,
Variety confirmed that the director would be helming
The Corrections. Around this time, it was rumored that the cast would include
Judi Dench as the family matriarch Enid, along with
Brad Pitt,
Tim Robbins and
Naomi Watts as her three children. In January 2007,
Variety wrote that Hare was still at work on the film's screenplay.
Television series HBO pilot In September 2011, it was announced that Rudin and the screenwriter and director
Noah Baumbach were preparing
The Corrections as a "drama series project," to potentially co-star
Anthony Hopkins and air on HBO. Baumbach and Franzen collaborated on the screenplay, which Baumbach would direct. In 2011, it was reported that
Chris Cooper and
Dianne Wiest would star in the HBO adaptation. In November 2011, it was confirmed that
Ewan McGregor had joined the cast. In a March 7, 2012, interview, McGregor confirmed that work on the film was "about a week" in and noted that both
Dianne Wiest and
Maggie Gyllenhaal were among the cast members. But on May 1, 2012, HBO decided not to pick up the pilot for a full series.
Netflix series In April 2026,
Netflix announced a new limited series adaptation, with
Meryl Streep set to star as Enid Lambert.
Cord Jefferson, director of ‘’
American Fiction’’, is directing the series from a script by Franzen himself. Streep’s attachment to the project dates to 2024, when it was in development at
CBS Studios. Jefferson, Streep, and producers Mark Roybal and
Paul Lee serve as executive producers, with the series produced by
Paramount Television Studios.
Radio In January 2015, the
BBC broadcast a 15-part radio dramatization of the work. The series of 15-minute episodes, adapted by
Marcy Kahan and directed by
Emma Harding, also starred
Richard Schiff (
The West Wing),
Maggie Steed (
The Imaginarium of Doctor Parnassus),
Colin Stinton (
Rush,
The Bourne Ultimatum) and
Julian Rhind-Tutt (
Lucy,
Rush,
Notting Hill). The series was part of
BBC Radio 4's
15 Minute Drama "classic and contemporary original drama and book dramatisations". == References ==