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Andrew Airlie is the Indiana Jones of Canadian spies in The Romeo Section

If a show was shot in Vancouver, there’s a strong chance Andrew Airlie has appeared in it. The Glasgow-born, Toronto-educated, Vancouver-resident Airlie has starred in Reaper, Defying Gravity, Cedar Cove, The Killing, and Chris Haddock’s Intelligence, among many others. And he’ll always also be orange guy from the House pilot to me.

His starring role in Haddock’s CBC homecoming, the Vancouver-set spy drama The Romeo Section, feels like watching an actor at home in his setting as well as in his character Wolfgang McGee’s rumpled linen suit.

I talked with Airlie on location during the last day of filming the first episode, at the beautiful St. Andrew’s-Wesley United Church downtown. He revealed we had our own spy-like connection: he’d learned of a potential new Haddock show on CBC from an anonymous tip I’d shared on the TV, eh? Twitter account.

“The next day I bumped into Chris on the beach walking our dogs and said ‘I hear you’re coming back to CBC.’ He asked ‘where’d you’d hear that?’ so I said ‘I have my sources.’ He said ‘no, seriously, where’d you hear that?’ I said I read it on TV, eh? and he asked me to keep it under my hat because it wasn’t official yet.”

My set visit was embargoed so it’s only now I can reveal my own secret: I got a sneak peek of the scene in Wednesday’s premiere where Wolfgang strides wordlessly down the aisle of the church, a woman cleaning in the foreground. Spoiler alert.

Airlie did spill a few more details of the intricately serialized show. My take is that McGee is like the Indiana Jones of Canadian spies, minus the running from boulders – professor by day, independent intelligence contractor by other parts of the day.

“He was an operative in the Canadian intelligence community earlier in his career, but now he’s officially off the books. The value and the problem for the government there is they’ve got deniability if I mess up – it means I’m going to be wearing it – but it also means I have no accountability to them.”

Season 1

The first episode doesn’t spell things out for the audience, but the premise of the show is promoted as McGee managing “Romeo and Juliet spies” — informants engaged in intimate relations with intelligence targets.

“There are a few different worlds set up in the first episode,” Airlie explained. “You can see this first episode is setting the table for what’s going on in these worlds, and it looks like this guy Wolfgang is going to navigate through most of them but you’re not sure how, and it’s going to be interesting to see what exactly is he doing.“

“You should assume that anyone could be lying at any moment. So in this world, who do you trust and how much do you trust them?” Airlie added. “Wolfgang especially is attuned to that. He’ll say and do what’s necessary to achieve his objectives. There’s a lot of lying going on.”

Creator Haddock echoed that sentiment. “Thematically, what lies underneath it all is the duplicity of the human animal and society at large, nations at large. It’s the fronts everybody puts up, the false selves and the false organizations. Everybody’s lying. People find that delightful, somehow.”

The Vancouver on display in The Romeo Section so far looks beautiful, with fewer gritty corners than Intelligence, more gleaming buildings and scenic backdrops, but there’s a similar underbelly slowly being revealed in the spy drama.

Airlie sees an importance in the show’s unabashedly Vancouver setting. “I think it’s a shame there hasn’t been more of an aspiration to set Canadian series definably in Canada,” he said. “19-2 is doing a tremendous job of that right now, and I’m proud to be part of something that’s Canadian set and particularly Vancouver set.”

The scenes filmed in the church involve a storyline in the first episode about a foreign national seeking sanctuary in Canada. “Our lead is asked by his contact in CSIS to check the guy’s background to see if he’s really who he says he is,” explained Haddock. “Is he worthwhile developing as an intelligence asset or is it more worthwhile to send him back to where he came from, or to the US? We get to discuss the theme of sanctuary, which is a worldwide theme right now with the forced immigration of peoples.”

Airlie is a writer himself, occasionally co-writing with Sliding Doors writer/director Peter Howitt, and the team has even met with Haddock for writing advice. “He’s very generous — he supports newbies and those of us who have been doing it for a while,” said Airlie. “I can’t speak highly enough of him.”

He was contracted to Reaper when Intelligence was filming its second season and says he was “gutted” not to continue with that Haddock series to the end. “I’ve been stopped more about Intelligence more than anything else I’ve done – well, up until Fifty Shades of Grey. It’s remarkable how many people have stopped me about Intelligence relative to all the other stuff I’ve done that was bigger and better promoted. Canadians really connected to that show.”

Airlie is gracious about my continued association of him with House, too, despite it being a one-shot guest appearance. “I could tell when they were making that pilot it was going to go big,” he said. “The writing was extraordinary, and Hugh (Laurie) was great, as was Lisa (Edelstein).” Coincidentally, Airlie’s son has acted with both Laurie, in scenes that were cut from Tomorrowland, and Edelstein, with a recurring role in her Girlfriend’s Guide to Divorce.

The Romeo Section showcases Airlie’s talents far more than that memorable but brief role, however. Both Airlie and Haddock have confidence that CBC audiences will gravitate toward it, and CBC has given them every reason to believe the broadcaster has confidence in the show.

Haddock mentioned the stillness of the camera as a stylistic choice allowing a focus on “the characters and the looks between them and the things left unsaid.” Airlie thinks the series succeeds at being simply “a good story well told.”

“We’re not doing a series to compete with Marvel and DC. God love ‘em and if you’re looking for that kind of entertainment they’re well done and they’re on every other night of the week, so you’ll have no problem finding them,” Airlie added. “But that’s not what we’re making. I think we’re making a series for an audience that’s underserved on network TV.”

The Romeo Section airs Wednesdays on CBC. 

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Vikings storms onto DVD and Blu-ray & win a trip to Ireland

I don’t normally cover DVD and Blu-ray reviews for TV, Eh?, but when Season 3 of Vikings was sent to me, I had to give it a look. Aside from being in my wheelhouse—it’s history—Touchwood and Momentum Pictures have teamed with Tourism Ireland to offer Vikings fans a pretty cool prize: a trip to Dublin and a visit to the Season 4 set (the details on the contest are at the bottom of the page).

Season 3 of the Canada/Ireland co-production—on sale Tuesday—was the most expansive and dramatic so far. King Ragnar Lothbrok (Travis Fimmel) led his troops to Paris where he plotted to take over the city and its riches while Floki (Gustaf Skarsgård) planned to unseat Ragnar over his partnership with King Ecbert (Linus Roache) and fascination with Christianity through Athelstan (George Blagden). Throw in some truly killer battle scenes—the siege of Paris is incredible—and the death of two major characters and creator Michael Hirst is on a roll.

Aside from all 10 episodes contained in the DVD and Blu-ray sets are some great bonus features. There are the requisite Season 3 trailers that teased the broadcast and deleted scenes. While most deleted scenes and episode moments deserve to be on the cutting-room floor, these give some real insight into fringe characters like Porunn (Gaia Weiss) and Torstein (Jefferson Hall).

In celebration of the DVD Blu-ray release, Momentum Pictures partnered with Tourism Ireland and fans of the show can enter to win a trip to Dublin, Ireland, the home of the Vikings set. It includes airfare for two, seven nights’ accommodation, daily Irish breakfasts and a visit the Season 4 set. Enter here.

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When Murdoch met Mark Twain: Five facts for tonight’s case

William Shatner’s guest appearance on Murdoch Mysteries has been discussed almost as much as whether or not Crabtree would be freed from prison. Shatner portrays American novelist, essay writer and speaking Mark Twain in Monday’s new instalment, “Marked Twain,” and doesn’t disappoint. Here are some key facts about tonight’s case before it begins.

Margaret is back!
Fans of Arwen Humphreys rejoice, because Margaret is back and better than ever. Thomas is being considered for a membership at the exclusive Empire Club and Margaret is doing her best to make sure he gets in. The Empire Club is a real thing; established in 1903 (the year this season of MM takes place) and was created to keep ties with Britain strong. And while Mark Twain never really spoke there, several other notable folks did, including Winston Churchill, Ronald Reagan, A.Y. Jackson, Roberta Bondar, Indira Gandhi and Prince Philip.

Not everyone loves Mark Twain
He may have written beloved books in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, but not everyone liked Twain at the time. He was against the way countries like Britain had settled territory around the world through colonization and military force. Hence, Mr. Twain becomes a target.

A certain someone is Twain’s biggest fan

Murdoch_George

The Curse of the Pharaohs makes an appearance
In a very cool way.

Higgins goes undercover
The Constable First Class dons a top and tails, slicks his hair back, adopts a British accent and ingratiates himself with the Empire Club’s members to suss out the wannabe assassin.

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

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Heartland’s hard lessons

I tend to give Lou a lot of grief in my Heartland reviews. Though she always means well, I’ve never been a fan of how involved she gets in other people’s lives and—last season especially—over-thinking how to best protect Georgie and Katie from the details of her eroding marriage.

But after watching Sunday’s latest, “Begin Again,” and thinking about it some more, I totally get her actions. Banning Katie from horse-riding lessons and quickly hanging up phone calls with Peter makes perfect sense in Lou’s world. Why involve the kids when separation is difficult enough for the couple? Every family is different, but I think they all want the same thing: to make the best of a bad situation. Resolving to allow Katie to continue her riding and her pledge to Georgie to work harder at making the transition more seamless is an important step. I certainly can’t fault Lou for trying her best … and admitting when what she was doing wasn’t working out. 

Kudos to Michelle Morgan for taking on a difficult storyline over the past two seasons, and for Heather Conkie and her writing crew for continuing to produce thoughtful, educational scenes that reflect real life and not what Hollywood tends to portray. Using Stephen, a.k.a. “Bacon Boy,” as an example for Georgie has gone a long way to showing things can work out when everyone tries.

Sunday’s new episode wasn’t all about Lou, however. After a night out partying, Ty graduated and is a professional veterinarian. It’s been great watching him grow as a man and a vet, and Amy’s gift of a plaque and fantastic desk was the perfect way to wrap up that story.

I’ve been a big fan of Shaun Johnston’s ever since I started watching Heartland. The man can do more with that moustache and craggy face than most in the industry, and that was never more apparent than his touching scenes with Paint. I don’t want Jack to stop being involved in everyone’s life, but his chat with Paint cemented it: he’s thinking of his own mortality and the legacy he’ll leave for family and friends. Paint has been put to pasture, and Jack realizes he’s headed that way.

I can only hope that’s still a long way off.

Notes and quotes

  • “I’m playing for a horse, because he appreciates talent.”
  • This week’s tune: “Wherever You Go” from Fortunate Ones

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

 

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Troubled Haven returns for last bow

Remember when the only thing Haven fans were concerned about was who Audrey Parker was?

Back in Season 1, the FBI agent showed up in that strange Maine town, had a crush on cop Nathan Wuornos and flirted with that scallywag Duke Crocker. Vince and Dave were the comic relief, bumbling around while keeping the town’s biggest secrets under wraps while Chief Wuornos quietly took care of folks with Troubles. I really miss that show, especially after getting a sneak peek at Sunday’s two-hour season return episodes, “New World Order” and “Power.” Listen, I still love the trio of Nathan, Duke and Audrey, but the ludicrous lengths the show’s storylines are going has me shaking my head, and that’s saying something for a guy who loves sci-fi and fantasy series.

Where past seasons were all about stemming the Troubles and perhaps curing them, it only takes minutes for the entire show to be reset back to square one when the Trouble slugs infect everyone in Haven. Throw in an impenetrable fog bank and it looks like Haven is royally screwed. Ending generations of secrecy, Dwight and Nathan reveal to their cop brethren Haven is full of Troubled folks and they need to be handled with kid gloves lest things get bad. I won’t give away any more plot points, but I will say there’s minor movement forward in the Croatoan story and Audrey tells Charlotte to “get out of my town.”

If I seem a little frustrated, it’s because I am. I’ve been a fan of Haven from the very beginning, and I have to say it’s becoming a bit of a slog. Each week finds the main characters going through the same actions and repeating the same lines. Nathan and Audrey go from smoochy to in danger of breaking up forever. Duke feels put upon until he emerges a hero. Dwight looks around with a mildly shocked look on his face. Dave and Vince bicker with each other. And, in the grand scheme of things, nothing is ever really solved.

With just 13 episodes left until the end—10 after this week’s twofer—some pretty interesting stuff better happen or I may skip it all and wait until the series finale.

And that’s coming from a fan of Haven.

Haven airs two back-to-back episodes this Sunday at 7 and 8 p.m. ET/PT on Showcase.

Haven‘s regular timeslot starts next Sunday is 8 p.m. ET/PT on Showcase.

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