Everything about Strange Empire, eh?

Aaron Poole rules a lonely, Strange Empire

It’s lonely at the top. Poor Captain John Slotter, trying to sort through his daddy issues and pave his own way in the wild west, with the help of his medium/madame wife Isabelle and with the backdrop of the massacre of a caravan-full of men that he may or may not have engineered. It’s exhausting work, juggling the start-up of a mine, the extension of the transcontinental railway, and putting the now-stranded women to work as whores.

“Not only is there sex and violence and some cool eye candy, but the events are based on the fabric of our country,” says Strange Empire’s Aaron Poole, who plays Slotter with a mixture of cruelty, pain and bravado. “Some of the violence is so brutal because there’s this sense we’re telling family secrets. There’s times when ‘cut’ will be called and we all start moving, because that’s what we’re trained to do, but there’s this hush of having witnessed something. I think the CBC should be lauded for that. ”

“It’s THE story. Our nationality came out of different incorporated areas to protect the use of the land and the resources in the earth. The story is about moving people off that land to dig that shit up out of the earth. That’s what the violence comes out of, that’s what the magic comes out of, that’s what the drama comes out of, that’s what all of Strange Empire comes out of.”

He sees parallels with today’s stories too, including how mining companies are protected and how different modes of life clash as populations get more dense. “Those are the fights that occur in the microcosm of Strange Empire and Janestown.”

Gathered at Janestown are those who are desperate to keep their way of life “and make some vision of the future that can salvage the thousands of years on the land they’ve established” and those — like John Slotter — who have come from afar to “turn what they see as a blank canvas into their version of paradise. That’s the struggle.”

Though he’s had recurring roles and guest spots in television before — “I was in purgatory on a cop show for a year” — Poole thought of himself as a film guy before Strange Empire came along, including producing and acting in the award-winning This Beautiful City.

“Strange Empire has the historical authenticity but [creator Laurie Finstad Knizhnik] mythologizes it and elevates it.”

“This is one of the best creative experiences I’ve ever had. It’s like a novel, and there’s all these little embellishments that get to be explored off the main line.”

There’s some doubt his character was responsible for the massacre — thought not in Kat Loving’s mind — but Slotter rules Janestown through fear and with a complete disregard for others’ autonomy, and violence surrounds him.  It’s difficult for Poole to leave that darkness behind him at the end of the day, but it’s not clear he wants to.

He talks of living in Vancouver as an immersive experience, away from his daughter and his life back home in Toronto, and he chose to live in Gastown because it’s of the same period as Strange Empire. “I choose to paint myself in a corner in those ways,” he says. “I can go relax as Aaron, obviously. I mean, I’m an asshole, but I’m my own kind of asshole.”

“You do anything for 13 hours in a row and you see it when you close your eyes. That’s part of what I’m loving about the creative process.”

He points out that the set of Strange Empire assists with that immersion. There is a soundstage for the interior of the Slotters’ mansion, but the rest of Janestown lives intact on the grounds of the sprawling set that used to be home to Arctic Air. The geography of the exterior of the mansion, the cribs, bunkhouse, and graveyard — none of it is cheated.

“We were shooting a brutal scene for my character and there was a murder of crows that had decided to camp there for the morning,” Poole recounts. “They were cawing in the shot for the whole time. It was like the pathetic fallacy – it felt like the environment was contributing to the scene.”

“Leaving it behind is hard. I don’t want to entirely. My days off are boring. I mean Vancouver’s a lovely city but this is the juice, man. If you’ve decided to act and write about cool stories, this is such a cool story.”

Strange Empire airs Mondays at 9pm on CBC. Catch up on previous episodes at cbc.ca/strangeempire.

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Link: Strange Empire doesn’t need to save the CBC

From Cameron Archer of Gloryosky:

Why Strange Empire Doesn’t Need To “Save The CBC”
With Strange Empire, Laurie Finstad-Knizhnik’s new CBC Television show, two narratives dominate the show’s current publicity – the woman-oriented western angle, and the drama that’s “more substantial” than CBC’s other homegrown dramatic fare. With this in mind, Strange Empire’s debut earned 319,000 viewers on October 6, 2014. Its second episode earned 312,000 viewers on October 13, 2014. That’s not a good start for the latest show that’s allegedly too “un-CBC” for CBC. Continue reading.

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Don’t panic: Good advice for galactic hitchhikers and the CBC

CBC’s early fall numbers are in and they don’t look good.

First the caveats:

  • Ratings are only one metric of success (albeit one advertisers and therefore networks care about)
  • Reported numbers are overnights, meaning they don’t include people who watch later, and are statistical estimates (though this is true for every show on every network)

The cold, hard truth remains: CBC’s numbers are low. Their stalwart performers such as Murdoch Mysteries and Heartland are lower than usual. Shiny new shows have debuted lower than the shows they replaced.

It’s fall, which means American shows with their giant marketing machines are dominating the Canadian networks, as they usually do in the fall.

Comparing apples to apples, the scripted numbers are just lower on CBC this fall, a fall some of us hoped would see the emergence of a new CBC, with a new leader at the helm and some risky new programming peeking out amid the familiar faces.

But that’s the thing about risks, right? They’re risky.

Murdoch Mysteries was earning 1.4 million at the same time last year. This year, in its 8th season, it’s hovered just above and below the million mark. But keep in mind this year it’s against newcomer Gotham, currently the #6 show in Canada and more than doubling Murdoch’s numbers. Last year it was against 9-year-old Bones, which earned only a couple hundred thousand more. Murdoch can handle the competition and still get around a million viewers to watch the night it airs.

Not every dip is so easily explainable by the fact that viewers are first watching the sexy new show everyone’s talking about. Mercer and 22 Minutes are up against  quiet behemoth NCIS, as they were before. I suspect they’ll recover at least somewhat as the season goes on, and they’re still reaching more people than CBC’s imports and new series.

The Honourable Woman and Janet King didn’t make a big splash. The latter didn’t make even a little splash. Canada’s Smartest Person seems to be a hit in the app store but not necessarily in its broadcast timeslot.

More disappointing is how CBC’s dark, serialized Western Strange Empire is faring. 319,000 in the first week, 312,000 in the second. I’m not surprised; Intelligence is the last dark, serialized drama on CBC I remember and it was cancelled for low ratings. So were the lighter, less serialized Cracked and Arctic Air, yet they got better numbers.

But Strange Empire seemed to signal a CBC that was willing to take that cable-like leap again, eyes wide open to the difference in tone and structure from anything else on their network. They had to know that they have no ideal lead-in, and that the captive audience watching their promos may not be the audience who would watch a show that’s more Deadwood than Heartland.

They have  sci-fi co-production Ascension coming up as well as The Book of Negroes miniseries, both of which may or may not fit into an overall vision for a new brand that moves away from more populist fare to shows a private broadcast network likely wouldn’t touch.

But populist fare is … popular. And one show doesn’t make a brand. And most new shows fail. And sometimes the value of cachet balances out the value of ratings. And always on CBC the season will be allowed to air in full without the threat of cancellation, and I would rather have one season of wonderful than a syndication package of nothing special.

For CBC to move toward a new programming vision, if that’s what they’re attempting to do, they’ll need the time to make that transition and possibly the will to sacrifice ratings in the short term.

To mix my movie metaphors: patience, grasshoppers. Don’t panic.

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Link: Strange Empire creator and star on CBC’s Q

From CBC:

Strange Empire: Darker CBC show shoots holes in Wild West genre
CBC TV’s edgy new series Strange Empire has been getting rave reviews for its strong writing, stellar acting and woman-centric twist on the Wild West genre. Set in 1869 Alberta, the show focuses on three women — a Metis cowgirl, a madame and a doctor — who are all dealing with tragedy while fighting for independence, justice and survival. Guest host Piya Chattopadhyay speaks with show creator Laurie Finstad-Knizhnik as well as Canadian actress Cara Gee, who plays a strong-willed Kat Loving. Continue reading and listen here.

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Review: All roads lead to whoring – Strange Empire’s “Buckskin Princess”

Strange Empire’s second episode demonstrates that Janestown is the Hotel California of the wild west: even those who have the resources to leave end up back at the nascent town.

The Slotter’s maid says there’s no way out of this hellhole; Ling adds the only surefire way is a hole in the ground.

The women who have been stranded there after the stagecoach slaughter are frantic to leave or to find their missing men so they can. But with civilization comes an economy, and in this empire, until the mine or the railroad become more than a Slotter man’s dream, women are the product.

The women waiting for their men or for onward passage they can’t afford are offered whoring work in the house or the lower-class “cribs,” and told stories of the Indian savages who await them if they try to leave.

Before Isabella Slotter offers a little whoring work to Mrs. Brigg’s daughter, Mrs. Fogg — she of the outfits and psychic interests to rival Isabella but without the youthful beauty or megalomaniac husband — confesses to Mrs. Briggs that she was once a lady’s maid until the lady’s husband demanded more than a little darning. The grateful expression on her face at a hint of acceptance from Mrs. Briggs is poignant.

“Buckskin Princess” opens with Kat Loving smudging in the forest, believing she sees her missing husband Jeremiah stepping out of the mist. When the figure come into focus it’s only Ling, Isabelle Slotter’s mysterious henchman.

Kat is ruthless in defending her own and in telling her truth, but she won’t believe her husband is dead like all the other husbands. And since she isn’t like all the other wives, fair enough I guess. Without a body there is hope.

So she leaves her adopted daughters — dressed as boys, knowing that Slotter will be looking for them — while she searches for Jeremiah and their adopted boy Neil so they can continue on their way to start their own ranch. What could possibly go wrong?

Throughout the episode the cinematography lingers on what should be the beautiful treed landscape, but the beauty is often marred by the threat of violence. Amid the pretty trees Kat finds more bodies, including Mrs. Briggs’ men and horse, and Jeremiah’s hat. She has money and a plan, but odds are she won’t leave without him.

The Blithelys have money too, enough to buy passage to leave, and Thomas orders Rebecca to arrange it in his usual charming way. Partway through the voyage, the driver demands more money and then a little extra — he tries to rape Rebecca in front of her injured husband. After a struggle with Thomas’s gun,  Rebecca shakily aims it at her attacker before Kat rides by to save the day, shooting the man’s hat off while declaring “I aimed high.” I believe her.

Melissa Farman plays Rebecca beautifully as a socially awkward, sheltered woman who is stepping into her own skin for the first time. The character could easily be a collection of ticks and Asperger’s cliches but in her hands she is someone learning to rely on herself instead of who she’s been told she is by first her parents, then her foster father-turned-husband.

She’s puzzling over the conflicting information she has about Captain John Slotter – did he order the attack on the stagecoach men, or are his offers of shelter a lifeline?  “You’ll end a whore. That’s all you need to know,” Kat tells her.

But what other option does Rebecca have with the rapist driver run off, an unknown route onward, and her husband incapacitated in the back of the wagon? “You able?” Kat asks before they part, the Blithleys on their way back to Janestown, and takes Rebecca’s word for it that she is. It’s a whole new world for the young Mrs. Blithely in many ways.

But it’s Kat who ends a whore first, trading herself for her girls when she shows up just in time — again — to rescue her girls from punishment for helping fix a card game, and Slotter shows up just in time to foil the rescue.

Slotter and Isabelle discuss their plan for world domination — or at least Janestown domination — which involves trying to entice a couple of investors to  back his mine so he has a legacy apart from his father’s railway.

John Slotter explains he intends to build an empire on the mining town. “Indians, Negroes and Celestials. Strange empire, yours,” replies the man. Slotter needs Isabelle’s wiles to beef up his sales proposition.

The Slotters’ discussion also involved a kiss where Isabelle looked like she wanted to crawl out of her skin. Isabelle’s social standing went up when she went from whore to wife but the transition might not have been too big a leap. Slotter even casually points out to her that Isabelle can be offered to the investors in the absence of another suitable whore.

With intel Ling gleaned from the telegraph, Isabelle conducts a seance to try to steer one of the investors to put his recently deceased father’s money into coal. It doesn’t work, but it turns out she does believe in spirits despite using the appearance of them for her own  devious purposes. “I believe there Is a world outside of this one,” she tells Ling. You’d have to, wouldn’t you, if this was your shiny new world.

The seance was just the appetizer of Isabelle’s deviousness, though. A disturbed girl left behind by her family can’t be put to work as a whore after all when it turns out she’s “already occupied.” Rebecca delivers her baby, saving her life but leaving her barren as Thomas is horrified to learn. Bad, science experiment. Bad!  He’d be even more horrified to learn she stabbed the wagon driver who’d attacked her on the way back from the birth, leaving him bleeding out on the ground. One of the Blithelys is starting to adjust nicely to their new circumstances.

When her investor plan falls through, Isabelle decides to take the girl’s baby as her own and present him to Slotter’s father as his namesake and reason to shower money on the happy family. Even babies are commodities, it seems.

Despite those demonstrations of evil power, Isabelle seems unable to exert it over Kat, even thought Kat has submitted herself to be a whore.  Mrs. Loving ends up choking her while calling her husband a murderer, which is possibly not the best negotiation strategy for a woman who could put you and your children to whoring.

Even the hole in the ground wouldn’t be an escape for Kat as long as she needs to pay off the two girls’ potential earnings. “Be informed, Mrs Loving, that if I have to bury you that’ll cost too,” Isabelle says.

Rebecca is horrified at the sight of Kat in whore’s clothes and takes the money Thomas has given her to provide for their passage to Toronto and gives it to Isabelle to buy Kat back. Isabelle arranges an elaborate plan to auction Kat off to the highest bidder, preserving the illusion to the investors that they are being offered the prime whore while using the card sharp Jack to outbid them, even when they’ve surpassed Rebecca’s funds.

Are we seeing a glimmer of kindness from Isabelle? Or self-preservation? “It’s for the best,” she tells her husband when she reveals Kat has been sold. “She troubles you.”

With the sisters’ shenanigans with Jack there was slightly more levity in “Buckskin Princess” but the show’s not in danger of making me laugh just yet

The episode ends with one of Slotter’s men burying Rebecca’s attacker and Kat staring at Jeremiah’s hat while the girls sleep — an echo of the first episode’s closing scene, but even less cozy. What do they now owe and to whom, and what payment might be extracted?

Kat and Rebecca can check out any time they like, but can they ever leave?

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