Absolutely. Here’s a treatment for a six-part Netflix miniseries that reimagines Oliver! through Fagin’s eyes in a 2026 underworld of scams, phishing, petty theft, and digital exploitation.
FAGIN.EXE
A six-part limited series inspired by Dickens and Oliver!
Logline:
In a decaying London loft where orphaned kids once learned to pick pockets, a charming, feral old criminal now trains abandoned teenagers to run phishing scams, identity theft rings, and voice-cloning fraud. When a strangely innocent new boy arrives, the whole enterprise begins to wobble—forcing Fagin to choose between survival, affection, and the possibility that he has become the very machine that devours children.
Tone and approach
This is not a literal remake of Oliver! but a darkly funny, melancholy, propulsive reinvention. It keeps the architecture of Dickens—the hunger, the found-family criminal tribe, the unstable sentimentality, the theatrical villainy, the city as a machine for grinding children—but translates it into the world of cybercrime, app-based grifts, burner phones, AI voice scams, and gig-economy desperation.
The tone sits somewhere between Dickens, Peaky Blinders, Mr. Robot, and a sad street-level Coen brothers comedy. It should have grime, velocity, wit, and moments of almost absurd warmth. Fagin is not simply a villain. He is funny, cultivated, deluded, manipulative, deeply adaptive, occasionally tender, and morally rotten in ways he prefers to call practical.
The visual world is a glorious collision:
Victorian criminal den meets modern scam factory.
A ragged loft under the eaves of an old London warehouse. Ancient beams, patched skylights, dangling wires, thrift-store velvet curtains, battered tea kettles, surveillance monitors, gaming rigs, cracked iPhones, soldering stations, headsets, stolen routers, and kids in hoodies moving through it all with the nimble choreography of pickpockets from 1838.
Core premise
Fagin runs a crew of abandoned, semi-feral children and teens out of a loft in East London. He calls them his “scholars,” half-joking, half-serious. In older days, they might have stolen watches and handkerchiefs. Now they steal passwords, pension checks, crypto wallets, NHS credentials, social security data, and grief-stricken grandparents’ bank access. They also run street-level distraction thefts when needed. Fagin sees no contradiction. A lifted wallet is merely “analogue phishing.”
His loft is both grotesque and weirdly alive: a school, a shelter, a theatrical club, a criminal startup, a fake family, and a child-exploitation system disguised as opportunity.
Into this comes Oliver, younger than the others, open-faced, underfed, and unfashionably sincere. He is not a hacker prodigy. He is not “street smart.” What he has is a rare trait in this universe: he still expects adults to mean what they say. Fagin, amused by him, keeps him close. That turns out to be dangerous.
Around them orbit modern versions of familiar figures:
Nancy is no longer just the tragic girl of the streets. She is the smartest operational mind in the loft, one of Fagin’s former children now in her twenties, who can run social engineering calls, train kids to mirror accents, and talk her way past two-factor authentication with a smile and a cigarette. She knows the system is poison, but the loft is the only thing she has ever known.
Bill Sikes is a ferocious enforcer and logistics man—part violent boyfriend, part collections muscle, part old-school criminal who despises the digital turn but enjoys the money. He does smash-and-grab, intimidation, debt collection, and “problem resolution.”
The Artful Dodger becomes “Dodger,” a teenage prodigy at intrusion kits, spoofed domains, and physical theft alike. He is funny, vain, brilliant, and ten seconds from burnout.
Mr. Brownlow is reimagined as a lonely older widower and retired fraud investigator—or perhaps journalist—who becomes suspicious after a bizarre attempted theft and recognizes that Oliver does not fit the mold of the others.
The story becomes about children as labor, crime as inheritance, and whether love offered inside a corrupt system counts as love at all.
SERIES ARC
The six episodes chart the rise and fracture of Fagin’s kingdom. At first the loft feels energetic, even playful. The scams are elaborate, witty, and unsettlingly ingenious. But gradually the machinery underneath comes into view: these are children being trained to weaponize empathy, mimic trust, and industrialize deception. Oliver’s presence reopens buried feelings in Nancy, insecurities in Dodger, paranoia in Bill, and—most threateningly of all—something like conscience in Fagin.
By the end, the question is not simply whether Oliver escapes. It is whether Fagin can understand the moral meaning of what he has built before it collapses on everyone.
EPISODE-BY-EPISODE TREATMENT
Episode 1 — “Please, Sir, Log In”
We open in a modern institutional setting: a bleak underfunded youth facility, foster intake center, or church-linked shelter where boys line up for food beneath motivational posters and flickering LEDs. Oliver, slight and quiet, has already learned the new rules of the poor: keep your shoes, guard your phone, trust nobody.
After a minor incident—perhaps he stumbles into trouble over missing supplies or refuses to participate in some petty theft ring—he runs. He is noticed by Dodger, who spots vulnerability the way a hawk spots movement. But instead of robbing him outright, Dodger recruits him.
Dodger takes Oliver through London not as a tourist but as an initiate. Delivery bikes, luxury towers, betting shops, pawn shops, vape clouds, old churches, cashless cafés, and every doorway holding somebody excluded from the prosperity rising above them. Finally: the loft.
There we meet Fagin. Not a cackling antique villain but a mesmerizing old fox in layered clothing, cracked spectacles, nicotine fingers, and a battered velvet dressing gown worn over a football shirt. He lectures the children on deception as if teaching literature. He talks about browser cookies like a mystic talks about fate. He calls phishing “theater with invoices.”
The episode ends with Oliver being shown the rules of the loft. Fagin frames them as jokes, rituals, folklore. Never use your own face. Never use your own phone. Never steal from anyone poorer than you unless they are a fool, in which case they have volunteered. Never fall in love with a mark. Never pity a voice on the line. Pity is how they get you.
At first Oliver thinks this is all performative nonsense, like children pretending to be gangsters. But then he sees the machine running. One group is writing urgent texts to fake delivery customers. Another is voice-cloning a grandson to call a grandmother. Another is making spoof bank pages. In the corner, older boys with headsets are softly, professionally emptying an old man’s savings while asking whether he had trouble sleeping after his recent surgery. It is appalling and mesmerizing.
Fagin, sensing Oliver’s discomfort, does not push. That is his genius. He seduces. He feeds him. Gives him dry socks. Gives him a name tag for a headset as if he has joined a repertory company. Fagin does not say, You are trapped here. He says, You are safe here.
The final movement of the episode is a “lesson” staged by Dodger. He takes Oliver on what appears to be a simple street errand—very Oliver Twist, very handkerchief territory—except the object stolen is not a wallet but a phone long enough to bypass two-factor authentication on a target account. Oliver does not fully understand what has happened until the victim turns, Brownlow intervenes, and Dodger vanishes. Oliver is left standing there holding the device and looking exactly like the thief.
Brownlow studies him. Oliver looks terrified, not guilty. That is the first crack in the story.
Back at the loft, the kids howl with laughter at Oliver’s disastrous first outing. Fagin watches him more closely now. Not because Oliver failed, but because he did not lie well. In Fagin’s world, that is either a fatal weakness or a very rare kind of strength.
Episode 2 — “The Scholars”
This episode lets us fall in love with the loft before asking whether that affection is morally obscene.
We see the rhythms of the place. Shared noodles at 2 a.m. Boots drying over radiators. Scavenged birthday cake. Fierce loyalty, savage teasing, ingenious schemes. Fagin presides over all of it like an anarchic schoolmaster, teaching “modules” in misdirection, password resets, invoice fraud, accent mimicry, and what he calls “narrative management.” A mark, he explains, is merely a person longing for a story that makes their anxiety manageable.
Dodger is the prince of the place: cocky, admired, brilliant. He’s nineteen or maybe seventeen or maybe twenty-one—no one is sure. He writes code, lifts phones, runs burner networks, and secretly dreams of scaling beyond the loft into real organized cybercrime money. He likes Oliver in spite of himself, partly because Oliver is absurdly unsuited to their trade.
Nancy enters the center of the series here. She is not merely one of the gang; she is the emotional adult in a house with no adults. She smooths conflicts, teaches younger kids how to eat slowly so they do not throw up after being hungry, and can turn on a terrifyingly polished call-center voice in half a second. She clocks at once that Oliver is younger in spirit than the others. Fagin sees a recruit. Nancy sees a child.
Bill Sikes, meanwhile, is introduced as the opposite of the digital world: physical, blunt, suspicious of keyboards. He calls phishing “begging by laptop.” But he appreciates the cash. He handles intimidation, cash extraction, and discipline when someone skims from the house or attracts police interest. His relationship with Nancy is combustible, coercive, half-romantic only in the bleakest Dickensian sense.
The plot of the episode revolves around Oliver’s initiation into a scam call. Fagin and Nancy coach him. He is supposed to play a grandson stranded abroad, needing money wired urgently. But when he hears the elderly woman on the line grow flustered and worried, he falters. He starts telling the truth in fragments, or something close to it. Nancy kills the call just in time.
Fagin is irritated but fascinated. He tells Oliver he has a different use: not a closer, perhaps, but a face. A clean face. Someone who does not yet look like he belongs to a crime scene.
Brownlow reappears, now curious. He has reviewed a security clip from the street incident and becomes convinced Oliver was being used. He starts asking questions in exactly the places one should not ask questions. The audience begins to understand that Brownlow may not simply be kind; he may also be dangerous, because he believes systems can still be repaired through reason.
The episode ends with a gorgeous, ugly sequence: the loft celebrating after a lucrative scam haul, music blasting, noodles and beer and laughter, children dancing in stolen trainers beneath Victorian rafters. Oliver smiles in spite of himself. Across the room, Nancy sees it and looks heartbroken, because now he belongs a little.
Episode 3 — “Nancy”
This is Nancy’s episode.
We learn she arrived at the loft at twelve, half-frozen and furious, and that Fagin—whatever else he is—did in fact keep her alive. The series leans hard into this ambiguity. He is not a cartoon abuser. He is more interesting and more terrible: a man who can sincerely love children while profiting from their ruin.
Nancy’s talents are showcased. She can impersonate a compliance officer, a hospital clerk, a bank investigator, a debt counselor. She reads people instantly. She trains kids to hear class markers in vowels, to mirror speech tempo, to introduce a tiny bureaucratic annoyance that lowers suspicion. She is magnificent at this, and miserable.
Oliver becomes attached to her. He mistakes her competence for invulnerability. She is the first person to tell him plainly what the loft is: not a game, not a refuge, not a family exactly, but a place that takes what would have killed you outside and uses it to kill parts of you indoors.
Brownlow finally meets Oliver properly through chance—or what looks like chance. Perhaps Oliver is sent on an errand and intercepted; perhaps Brownlow follows him. In any case, Brownlow offers him food, warmth, and an odd kind of respect: he speaks to him as though he has agency. Oliver, who has been patronized, recruited, ordered around, and protected in corrupt ways, finds this almost incomprehensible.
He also finds Brownlow dull. This matters. The loft is evil, but it is vivid. Brownlow is decency, but decency often enters drama wearing beige. Nancy understands immediately why children do not simply walk toward goodness when offered.
Bill grows suspicious that Nancy’s feelings toward Oliver are destabilizing her. He does not care about Oliver one way or another; he cares about weakness. Fagin, too, sees the danger but names it differently: attachment creates leakage.
Mid-episode comes the key set piece: a large coordinated scam that blends old and new Dickens. Kids physically tail a courier carrying reset devices while others trigger fake alerts and two members of the crew run a “fraud prevention hotline.” Oliver is inserted as a runner because he still looks harmless. The operation goes wrong when he warns a target. Small act. Huge consequence.
Back at the loft, Bill wants him beaten and expelled. Nancy intervenes. Fagin overrules Bill, but not out of kindness. He says Oliver may yet be “educated.” Bill hears this as softness. Nancy hears it as menace.
At the end of the episode, Nancy secretly contacts Brownlow. Not because she trusts him, exactly, but because she no longer trusts the loft to leave Oliver intact.
Episode 4 — “Bill Sikes”
A pressure-cooker episode. The old criminal world strikes back at the new one.
The scams have drawn attention from people above Fagin’s pay grade: organized crime operators who handle mule accounts, data brokers, and transnational laundering. Fagin has always told the children they are independent. We now discover that is only partly true. The loft sits in a food chain. Data goes upward. Money gets shaved. Protection is conditional.
Bill is suddenly central because these higher-level operators trust violence more than code. He is sent to settle disputes, retrieve cash, and prove the loft is still disciplined. He likes this role too much.
We also learn more of his bond with Fagin. Bill is not one of the children; he was never sentimentalized. Fagin values him because Bill is the hard edge Fagin himself cannot embody for long. Fagin performs menace. Bill is menace. Their alliance is practical and ancient.
Oliver’s attempted rescue begins to take shape. Brownlow, with Nancy’s furtive help, tries to extract him quietly. Dodger, however, discovers fragments of the plan. His reaction is not straightforward betrayal. He feels wounded. Oliver leaving is not just desertion; it is an accusation. If Oliver can leave, then the rest of them are staying by choice—or so it seems in the twisted arithmetic of trapped people.
This episode should have the feel of tightening wires. Surveillance increases. Phones are smashed. Fagin institutes old-school countermeasures—note-passing, room checks, loyalty tests. The loft starts to feel less like a carnival and more like a besieged state.
Nancy is caught in tiny inconsistencies, not enough for proof but enough for danger. Bill becomes watchful in the way of abusive men who sense an emotional shift before they know its object. Fagin, too, begins to suspect that the moral weather in his loft is changing.
The centerpiece is a brutal, almost archaic event: Bill drags Oliver along on a physical burglary meant to remind everyone that the loft can still do real crime with crowbars and windows, not just keyboards. It mirrors the classic housebreaking section of Oliver Twist, but in a gentrified London townhouse full of smart locks, baby monitors, and app-controlled lights. The old and new worlds collide literally.
Oliver panics. The job collapses. Police attention intensifies. Bill barely escapes and now becomes convinced that Oliver is catastrophic luck in human form.
The episode ends with Nancy making her choice: not flirtation with escape, not fantasy, but active treason against the only home she has ever had.
Episode 5 — “Brownlow”
This episode shifts point of view toward Brownlow and the possibility—never wholly reassuring—of rescue.
Brownlow’s world is quiet, ordered, digitally literate but not digitally native. He lives among books, old case files, forgotten photographs, and the debris of a life spent believing systems matter. He may be a retired fraud investigator, prosecutor, or journalist; in any case, he has watched crime become frictionless and has found the new era spiritually exhausting. There are no longer pickpockets in alleys, only invisible theft at scale.
He is drawn to Oliver partly out of decency, partly because Oliver feels like a human clue that points backward—from abstract cybercrime to actual exploited children in actual rooms. Brownlow cannot rescue all the victims of scam factories, but perhaps he can rescue one boy and expose one operation.
Nancy meets him in secret. These scenes are crucial and should avoid sentimentality. She is not redeemed by contact with goodness. She is frightened, skeptical, intelligent, and fully aware that people like Brownlow often “save” one child while leaving the machinery untouched. Still, she gives him information.
Fagin, meanwhile, is unraveling. Not melodramatically at first. More like a man whose mythology is failing. He has always told himself that he turns waste into usefulness, that he offers shelter in exchange for labor, that the children are safer with him than in institutions or on the street. All partly true. All increasingly indefensible. The series now allows him extended monologues that are witty, self-justifying, and nearly persuasive until one remembers that he is explaining why it is acceptable to train children in predation.
Dodger is forced to choose too. He can side with Fagin and survive inside the hierarchy, or aid Oliver’s flight and admit that the kingdom he hoped to inherit is built on rot. His eventual choice should feel painful, not saintly.
Bill discovers Nancy’s betrayal. The confrontation between them is the emotional nadir of the series. It should be intimate, ugly, and unglamorous—the collapse of an old alliance shaped by dependency, fear, and ruined tenderness. Nancy is not destroyed because she “loved too much”; she is destroyed because she tried to interrupt the transfer of harm from one generation to the next.
At the episode’s end, Oliver escapes—or appears to. Brownlow gets him out physically. But the cost is catastrophic. Nancy pays for it. The loft erupts. Fagin loses control of Bill, then of the crew, then of the story he has told about himself.
Episode 6 — “Fagin”
The finale is Fagin’s reckoning.
The loft is half-emptied, half-raided, half-abandoned—one of those Dickensian places that seems to rot in real time once its spell breaks. Police, rival criminals, social workers, journalists, and opportunists all begin to close in. The children scatter according to temperament: one vanishes into county lines trafficking, one goes back to care, one shacks up with an older boyfriend, one turns informant, one simply disappears into London.
Fagin remains in the ruins like a theater manager after the audience has fled.
This final episode is less about plot mechanics than moral exposure. Oliver is with Brownlow now, but rescue is imperfect. He is guilty, traumatized, intermittently homesick for the loft, ashamed of missing people who harmed him, and haunted by Nancy. Brownlow’s house is safe but not magically curative. The series refuses the easy ending in which decency instantly feels like home.
Dodger returns once, perhaps to retrieve hidden wallets or drives, perhaps simply to look at Fagin and understand what remains. Their conversation should be one of the best scenes in the series. Fagin tries to cast himself as a relic, a lovable rogue displaced by scale and technology. Dodger, who has worshiped him, finally tells the truth: Fagin was never a relic. He was an adapter. He turned children into whatever the market required.
Bill, depending on the tone desired, may die in panic and flight, or be captured, or vanish into the underworld. His end should feel less like poetic justice than like a force of nature finally hitting a wall.
Fagin himself gets no clean redemptive arc. Better something stranger. Perhaps he is arrested and, in interrogation, remains dazzling and ridiculous, still trying to charm the room. Perhaps he escapes briefly into the city and wanders among contactless readers, CCTV domes, delivery drones, luxury developments, and rough sleepers, suddenly obsolete even in criminality. He sees that the future belongs not to picturesque dens like his, but to faceless industrial fraud networks with no songs, no velvet curtains, no self-mythology—just extraction.
And for one instant, perhaps, he understands that what he called warmth was merely style laid over exploitation.
The last image should echo the old story but sting in a new way. Oliver looks out a window at London—still unequal, still hungry, still manufacturing children for use. Somewhere in that city another loft, another encrypted chat, another “scholarship” is already forming. Dickens’ point survives the update: society creates Fagins and then acts shocked when they appear.
Main characters
Fagin
A flamboyant, funny, ferociously intelligent criminal in late middle age or older. He is part con man, part teacher, part parasite, part foster father. He can be affectionate and monstrous within the same minute. He thinks in metaphors, resents sentimentality in others while indulging it in himself, and believes survival excuses almost everything.
Oliver
Not naïve in a sugary sense, but still morally porous in a way the others are not. He is the last person in the room to assume corruption is normal. That makes him weak, irritating, and precious.
Nancy
The emotional core. A survivor who has turned her alertness, wit, and social intelligence into criminal excellence. She knows the loft better than anyone and understands that love inside exploitative systems is never simple.
Dodger
A digital prince and half-child entrepreneur. Charismatic, funny, envious, loyal until loyalty becomes self-betrayal. He is what Oliver might become and what Fagin hopes to mass-produce.
Bill Sikes
Embodied threat. A man from the older physical underworld who hates softness, distrusts screens, and solves problems with force. He is less psychologically ornate than Fagin, which makes him more frightening.
Brownlow
An older man from the lawful world who still believes evidence and decency can matter. He is not a magical savior; he is merely one of the few adults who can still see Oliver as a child.
Themes
The series is about child exploitation disguised as mentorship, crime as labor market, digital fraud as the modern pickpocket economy, and the seductive glamour of belonging even in corrupt systems. It also asks a very Dickensian question: when institutions fail children so thoroughly, who gets to claim moral superiority over the criminals who absorb them?
It should also preserve Dickens’ fascination with performance. Everyone here is acting: scammers, victims, social workers, police, rich philanthropists, lonely retirees, even the children themselves. Identity theft becomes the modern equivalent of stolen handkerchiefs because both are really about one thing: who gets to move through society unseen, and who is always exposed.
Why it works as Netflix
Each episode has a strong engine: arrival, initiation, loyalty, pressure, betrayal, collapse. The world is visually rich and highly marketable—Victorian criminal iconography fused with cybercrime aesthetics. The premise is familiar enough to feel mythic, but different enough to feel fresh. It offers young breakout roles, one great older lead, high tension, moral ambiguity, and an emotional spine through Nancy and Oliver.
Most importantly, it avoids becoming a gimmick. The cyber update is not there for cleverness alone. Dickens’ original concern—children processed by urban poverty into usable criminal labor—translates frighteningly well to 2026.
If you want, I can next turn this into a proper pitch document with:
series overview, comps, episode summaries, character one-sheets, and opening scene teaser.