Tag Archives: CBC

Dustin Milligan looks ahead to X Company’s second season

Dustin Milligan is taking over the CBC one TV show at a time. He laughs when that’s mentioned, but it sure seems to be happening. The Yellowknife native can be seen on Season 2 of Schitt’s Creek where he plays love-lorn veterinarian Ted Mullens, and the sophomore go-round of X Company, returning to the network on Wednesday at 9 p.m.

“It’s an odd thing to be doing two great shows on a network that was such a big part of my formative viewing years,” Milligan says. “I was influenced by it quite heavily. I grew up on the CBC.” Far from the wintry weather, Milligan was lined up at the Department of Motor Vehicles in Los Angeles when we called to get the scoop on what’s to come for Tom Cummings and his unit when the high-octane Second World War thriller returns. When we last left the team, the American ad man had been shot while secreting away a Holocaust witness, radio man Harry (Connor Price) fell in love with the wrong girl and Alfred (Jack Laskey) had been captured by the Nazis, who were prepping to take advantage of his synesthesia for every plan the Allies have in motion.

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“The Season 1 cliffhanger had so much going on and revealed in the last-minute how quickly plans can fall apart,” he says. “The tone of Season 2 is that nothing is going to be easy anymore. What’s great about the first episode is that the proverbial shit is hitting the fan.” He’s right. Wednesday’s return, “Creon via London,” hits the ground running and never lets up. Gravely injured, Tom needs emergency medical attention and team leader Aurora (Evelyne Brochu) makes a decision that puts everyone in jeopardy. They’re all reeling emotionally—Aurora feels guilt over Alfred’s capture and Neil (Warren Brown) is shattered about killing the German soldier he bonded with—but have a mission to carry out and people depending on them in Germany and back in Canada at Camp X.

“Everything is darker and more real now,” Milligan says of Tom and the outfit. “Nothing is black and white—everything is shades of grey—and morally we’re all doing what we hope and believe is right in that moment. But we just don’t know.”

Series co-creator Stephanie Morgenstern revealed late last year the 10 upcoming storylines would be more serialized and the goal set for our heroes is to prepare for the ill-fated invasion of Dieppe. (On the morning of Aug. 19, 1942, Canadian forces suffered over 900 casualties and 2,000 were taken prisoner.) Production moved from Budapest, the show’s filming base, to Dieppe’s beaches for the two-part season finale.

“It was surreal because you get to the town itself and there are Canadian flags everywhere,” he recalls. “They remember Canada’s role so much, I get chills talking about it. It’s such a heartbreaking place because you look around at those pebbles and the cliffs and think, ‘How did they ever think that this was going to work?'”

X Company airs Wednesdays at 9 p.m. on CBC.

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Link: X Company: 5 Things you need to know about Season 2

From Bridget Liszewski of The TV Junkies:

X Company: 5 Things you need to know about Season 2
As we get ready to pick up with the spies of X Company, things have never looked more dire for the group of secretly trained agents. When we last checked in with the agents of CBC’s WWII drama about the real-life top secret spy training facility located east of Toronto, several team members were facing major danger. As Season 2 kicks off Wednesday, Jan. 27 at 9 p.m., co-creator Stephanie Morgenstern warns that the team may not be escaping that danger any time soon. Continue reading. 

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Link: Hold Your Fire Is Finally on CBC-TV’s Firsthand

From Jim Bawden:

Hold Your Fire Is Finally on CBC-TV’s Firsthand
It’s a coincidence, of course, but CBC-TV’s new and compelling documentary on alcoholism Thursday night at 8 gets  followed by an equally compelling new documentary on Toronto police procedures titled Hold Your Fire (at 9 p.m.). Because both hours are from Bountiful Films.

In the case of Hold Your Fire the wait has been well worth it.

Hold Your Fire was originally scheduled for October 22 at 9 p.m. on CBC-TV’s Firsthand. The stark and uncompromising look at the police shooting of Sammy Yatim is must-see TV. But the trial of a Toronto police office was still ongoing in October and ever cautious CBC chose to pull it and indeed several subsequent time periods were also abandoned. Continue reading.

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Link: Wasted: A Must-See NOT Documentary

From Jim Bawden:

Wasted: A Must-See NOT Documentary
Wasted is a top Nature Of Things documentary that puts a face on the compelling subject of alcohol addiction. You can catch it Thursday night at 8 on CBC-TV. Got that?

The hour begins with film maker Maureen Palmer’s profile of her partner Mike Pond who was a psychotherapist helping people with addiction in Penticton, British Columbia. And then he succumbed to alcoholism himself –living smack dab in wine country didn’t help needless to say. Continue reading.

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Baby talk on Murdoch Mysteries

“There hasn’t been any baby talk yet, but that’s the logical next step. Who knows how long that will take or how it will come about?” Hélène Joy would be a worthy foil for Det. Murdoch. I’m pretty sure she already knew William and Julia were going to adopt back when I spoke to her on the set of Murdoch Mysteries late last year. If so, good on her for keeping things vague from my prying questions.

The addition of Roland—the pair adopted him last week—made an immediate impact on our favourite couple: he threw their lives into complete disarray. Adding an infant to a television series is always a challenge, and it will be interesting to see how Murdoch Mysteries handles the little fellow from week to week. Will he be handed off to a nanny? I don’t think so, as Julia and William seem intent on having him there all the time. Perhaps he’ll be shown cooing in a corner, leaping about in William’s latest contraption, the Gleeful Bouncer—a.k.a. Jolly Jumper. One of the great strengths of the series continues to be the not-so-subtle nods to things we use in everyday life that were on the cusp of being realized in Murdoch’s world. Having a Gleeful Bouncer made me laugh out loud and be inspired by the creativity in the writers’ room.

Monday’s “The Big Chill” also paid homage to the 1922 documentary Nanook of the North. The murder of a man on-board the CGS Arctic introduced viewers to Nuniq, an Inuit man who struck me as a nod to Nanook. The thought was proven true when Crabtree befriended Nuniq and proposed he document him in the city’s hot spots and call it “Nuniq of Toronto.” Crabtree has had some pretty serious storylines so far this season, so it was fun to not only see him create play-by-play and colour commentating last week but serve as a drunken wingman for Nuniq this week.

Real Canadian history was covered as well. Captain Joseph Bernier—played with aplomb by InSecurity‘s Rémy Girard—really did explore the islands of the north and claimed the area for Canada and was given the Royal Geographical Society’s Back Award for his work.

“The Big Chill” had all the hallmarks of a classic Murdoch Mysteries episode, the perfect tonic for a cold January night.

Murdoch Mysteries airs Mondays at 8 p.m. on CBC.

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