TV, eh? | What's up in Canadian television | Page 992
TV,eh? What's up in Canadian television

Heartland’s bear-y scary situation, Part 2

When the “Previously on Heartland” intro rolled before last night’s episode, I was pretty sure that darned grizzly bear was going to show up and cause trouble. I was wrong, but Sunday’s instalment wasn’t without danger.

Seeing Ty tumble off the cliff was certainly dramatic, and he’s lucky he escaped with just a large bump on his head. (Kudos to the producers for making sure they covered the whole concussion thing rather than assuming he was all right.) The male bald eagle rescue itself may have gone without a hitch—I did wonder how he or Amy would get to the top of the tree if the situation called for it—but getting back to the truck didn’t. Note to self: always carry a bag of trail mix with you. Also? Make sure you have a horse like Bear along. The newest equine member of Heartland seems destined for a future on the Calgary Police Force, and that’s a pretty cool gig if you ask me. (Those hoping Amy and Ty will have a baby soon had to make do with the two cradling a male bald eagle rather than a sprite of their own.)

Aside from the drama out on the trail with Amy, Ty and the horses, “Over and Out”—written by Pamela Pinch—had some heart-stopping moments at the ranch and the Reserve. After bonding during their own near-death experience—telling Bob they trashed the ATV—Adam and Georgie seem headed for romance. After all, why else would they be texting after-hours? And how will Stephen react when he returns from the summer? The fact Adam hinted his mother is exerting pressure on him to succeed will likely cause he and Georgie to bond and, perhaps, share a first kiss before the fall leaves fly.

I always enjoy it when Lisa is kicking around the ranch—her feisty attitude leads to some great moments—so I was glad to have plenty of scenes with she and Jack, Katie and Lou. With Lou struggling to keep her packed calendar in order, Lisa stepped in to try and help and a defensive Lou got her back up. The thing with Heartland is, grudges never last long; by episode’s end the ladies were on the same page and Lou even got some alone time with her daughters.

Heartland airs Sundays at 7 p.m. on CBC.

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Link: Cross-cultural concept lured Steph Song back to TV for Blood and Water

From Glen Schaefer of The Province:

Cross-cultural concept lured Steph Song back to TV for Blood and Water
For a while there, actor Steph Song had the market cornered for Vancouver-themed stories in film and TV.

After a five-year break to marry and have a baby, Song is back on the small screen for another of those stories, as a police detective investigating the death of a rich man’s wayward son in the cross-cultural eight-part mystery series Blood and Water.

“They lured me back with a great concept,” Song said of the show, whose Asian and white characters speak a mixture of English, Mandarin and Cantonese. Continue reading.

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Steph Song finds Blood and Water in her bones

Blood_Water2

OMNI isn’t a network I look to for scripted dramas. In fact, it’s not generally a network I look to at all.  But with tonight’s premiere of Blood and Water, the multicultural network is suddenly home to one of the most intriguing Canadian series on air.

A half hour, eight-part procedural, Blood and Water stars Steph Song as Detective Jo Bradley leading her first case, the murder of a man from a prominent Chinese-Canadian family, immediately following her diagnosis of uterine cancer. While her boss admonishes her to slow down on the investigation, her doctor encourages her to quickly make a decision between chemo and a hysterectomy. Full of her own doubts, she faces the second-guessing of her resentful more senior partner, played by Peter Outerbridge.

Drawn in by the premise, flawed characters and quiet intensity, Song jumped on a plane from Australia where she’s been living with her husband and three-year-old daughter back to Vancouver which has been her home through Dragon Boys, Everything’s Gone Green and my personal favourite, jPod.

Born in Malaysia and raised in Canada, when Song was 14 her mother decided she couldn’t take the Saskatoon winters anymore. Two weeks later the family was on a plane to Australia.

Early in her career, particularly when she moved to Los Angeles, Song saw more Asian caricatures  in the roles on offer — the bad guys, the dim sum waitress, the request to put on an accent. “That’s not me,” she says. “But now doors are opening and the industry is getting more diverse.”

Much is made of the fact that Blood and Water is a trilingual series — English, Mandarin and Cantonese — but the premiere sets up the initial action and characters in English and there’s nothing jarring to non-Chinese speakers about the eventual subtitles. Plus an audience used to sampling Scandinavian noir and the like on Netflix are sure to be less subtitle-phobic than the olden days of TV (circa 1995).

The multilingualism of her current show isn’t a gimmick, either. It’s a reflection of the Vancouver I see all around me and a way in to these characters. Bradley, for example, understands but does not reply to characters addressing her in Chinese. Though put in charge of the high-profile case for optics, as her last name suggests she was adopted by non-Chinese parents.

Song points out that her character is an outsider to both cultures. Adding to her isolation: because her diagnosis means she won’t be able to have children, her lineage stops with her. And because she’s adopted, her only connection to her lineage would be to trace it backward.

Like her character, Song is no stranger to juggling different cultures, and calls both Canada and this type of meaty role “close to my bones.”  Regardless of language or ethnicity, “we’re all fighting our own battles, and I think this show will appeal to a wide demographic.”

Blood and Water airs Sundays on OMNI.

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Link: Blood and Water a crime drama that reflects urban reality

From Tony Wong of the Toronto Star:

Blood and Water a crime drama that reflects urban reality
In OMNI’s original crime drama Blood and Water, Vancouver has never looked more exotic. At least from the lens of television.

The victim in the show is Asian. The lead detective in the show is Asian. Her boss is Asian. Virtually all the protagonists, apart from Toronto actor Peter Outerbridge, are Asian.

If you’ve lived in Vancouver, which has a substantial Chinese-Canadian presence, hearing Mandarin on the street isn’t unusual. And the hypothetical situation of seeing an Asian cop and an Asian police lieutenant isn’t far-fetched. Continue reading.

 

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Link: Aboriginal Film Company Is Taking The Federal Government To Court Over Lost Tax Credits

From Emma Loop of Buzzfeed:

Aboriginal Film Company Is Taking The Federal Government To Court Over Lost Tax Credits
An Aboriginal film company is taking the federal government to court over a decision that cost the company nearly $200,000 in tax credits for a new late-night comedy show. The tax credits would have gone toward the cost of making the first season of Derek Miller’s Guilt Free Zone, which aired six episodes on APTN in 2014. Continue reading.

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