Amy Adams and Patrick Wilson have opened up about how Apple TV's new Cape Fear series reinvents the classic thriller – including one major change to the Bowden family.
The new 10-part psychological horror thriller stars Javier Bardem as Max Cady, the notorious killer previously played by Robert Mitchum and Robert De Niro, while Adams and Wilson play married attorneys Anna and Tom Bowden.
In previous versions of the story, the central lawyer figure was Sam Bowden, played by Gregory Peck in the 1962 film and Nick Nolte in Martin Scorsese's 1991 remake.
But in this version, there is no Sam Bowden – with creator Nick Antosca instead introducing Anna and Tom as two new characters whose lives, marriage and family are bound up in Cady's conviction.
Speaking exclusively to Radio Times, Adams explained that making Anna the defence attorney opens up a very different dynamic between her character and Cady.
"I think us flipping the gender on the defence attorney allows for a lot more complication and power dynamic between the two of them," she said.
"Anna was in a state that left her very compromised and very easy to be... pulled into his charm, which then led her to not trust herself in her belief in him. So it really just allowed for a lot of complexities in her decision-making and her secrets."
Antosca said the change was central to making this Cape Fear feel like more than a straightforward retelling.
"We wanted to preserve the DNA of Cape Fear, but bring something very contemporary to it, make it a new story, and that's why it was really important to me that in this version the family's happiness is built on Max Cady's suffering," he said.
"That's why we made both the husband and wife be involved in the trial this time. One is the defence attorney, one is the prosecutor. They're married and they have kids because Max Cady was put on trial and because he was convicted, so it's not some incidental forgotten crime from Sam Bowden's past."
He added: "There is no Sam Bowden in this story. We've invented two new Bowdens."
Wilson said the move to TV also gives the story room to explore new corners of the Cape Fear world, rather than simply padding out the films.
"I think the advantage is being able to go more in depth with each of these characters, and even characters that you don't know," he said. "There's a lot of characters in this that are not in either of these movies...
"The last thing you want is to take an idea or a film and stretch it out for the sake of just creating a series. That never ends well creatively, in my opinion.
"They've really expanded these characters and they all have their own journeys and their own tensions. So the feeling is of extreme paranoia, but it's not just told through the Bowden family and Max Cady."
Wilson added that the 10-episode format allows the series to show "Max's backstory" and "lots of different aspects that you're not used to seeing" even in Cape Fear's original source material, the 1957 novel The Executioners.
Antosca added that longer-form storytelling was key to his vision of Cape Fear as a "contemporary nightmare".
"I love TV storytelling because it gives you so much room to play with character and to play with suspense, and tension, and dread," he said.
"And the scariest thing about Cape Fear to me is the methodical dismantling of a family – like the destruction of the family, driving wedges between the parents, pulling the kids away, taking possession of them.
"Seeing that happen in this mysterious but methodical way over time is really scary, and that's what attracted me to the idea of telling a kind of contemporary nightmare version of Cape Fear in a TV format."
Cape Fear premieres on Apple TV on Friday 5 June 2026. Start your seven-day free Apple TV trial here.
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