Tag Archives: Featured

Interview: Backroad Bounty boys sound off

When Canadian Pickers went off the air, it left a void. There was no one tooling around the country in a van, digging through barns and basements looking for hidden treasures while serving up a slice of Canadiana on TV. Now another pair of dudes have picked up where the Pickers left off. Meet Peter “Bambam” Bamford (he’s the one who looks like a Duck Dynasty guest star) and Marty Gebel, the stars of Backroad Bounty.

Debuting Monday on Cottage Life, Backroad Bounty follows the two friends from London, Ont., as they drive around the province looking for things they can re-sell for a profit. Among the items they discover in Episode 1? An old phone booth and motorized bike Gebel went gaga for and a vintage fishing pole Bamford just had to have.

Bambam, what is a “Bam-tique”? You mention that right off the top in Monday’s first episode.
Peter “Bambam” Bamford: A Bam-tique is an antique, but I don’t buy porcelain dolls and Limoge china. Bam-tiques are things that you could hang in a man cave or a living room above a mantel.

Marty, what’s your specialty? What are you always on the lookout for?
Marty Gebel: I stay on top of what is trending. The stuff you see in magazines and on designing shows. I mix a lot of styles, but I also stay away from Victorian antiques, saucers and china as well. I love mid-century Modern, old science and medical stuff. Those are my favourites.

I loved Canadian Pickers, and I feel like Backroad Bounty kind of picks up where it left off. How did you get involved in this?
PB: Marty was on Canadian Pickers a few times, so he had his foot in the door. The idea for the show came up and he got short-listed for it. He has a great TV presence and has a great knowledge. They called him up and he threw my name in the hat as a co-host for the show.

MG: There’s a big contrast between us, and we’re friends.

PB: We’ve known each other for about four years and they called me up and asked if I wanted to be on the show. They came down and filmed a pilot and now we’re on TV.

You guys are literally climbing over stuff to get at things. Is that an everyday part of being a picker?
PB: Absolutely. That’s the whole thing. If you are willing to climb things … there are times when we’re going into century-old burn piles and junk yards … we go into that stuff. That’s what sets us apart from everyone else. We’re willing to do that to find a treasure.

MG: We’ve had all of our shots. I’m sure we made the insurance people nervous with the way we were climbing all over stuff. That’s the way it is. We go to locations like that in real life. You’re on call, you don’t know what to expect when you get there and you may not be wearing the right clothes but you climb around and get filthy and dirty.

Backroad Bounty airs Mondays at 9 p.m. ET/6 p.m. PT on Cottage Life.

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Murdoch Mysteries explores the dark side in Season 8

The closing moments of Monday’s Season 8 return of Murdoch Mysteries–“On the Waterfront, Part One”–isn’t like anything the series has done before. A showdown at Toronto’s waterfront between union workers–led by the dastardly O’Shea brothers–faces off against Det. William Murdoch (Yannick Bisson) and the rest of the Constabulary. Meanwhile, Dr. Julia Ogden (Hélène Joy) and Dr. Julia Grace (Georgina Reilly) are caught up in their own conflagration between members of the Suffragette movement and men who don’t take kindly to women wanting to vote.

The carefully choreographed scenes that cut back and forth from wharf to city square ramp up in tension to a boiling point viewers aren’t used to seeing from the CBC drama.

“It was fun to shoot,” Jonny Harris says of the scene between the dock workers and the police force, of which his Constable George Crabtree is a part. “All the dock workers were big sort of stunt guys and all the cops are station cops that have been on the show for years … not huge guys. Everybody went for broke on every take that day.” The conflagration at the dock is a result of union guys refusing to back down against the police, but it’s also about a police force seeking justice for the vicious attack on Inspector Thomas Brackenreid (Thomas Craig) at the hands of the O’Sheas. The Season 7 finale “The Death of Dr. Ogden,” saw the engagement of Murdoch and Ogden announced, but that happy moment was tempered by the discovery of Brackenreid’s beaten body on a dusty Toronto street.

Monday’s return does address the fate of the beloved Brackenreid while introducing a new boss in Det. Hamish Slorach (Patrick McKenna, Remedy), a man very unlike his predecessor.

As for Crabtree, Season 8 represents growth for the character. His up-and-down relationship with Dr. Grace is put on the back burner when a new lady enters his life in the form of a lady from the series’ past. Harris says Tamara Hope, who appeared in the very first episode of Murdoch Mysteries in 2008, reprises her role as Edna Garrison, a single mom struggling to make ends meet. Crabtree becomes a surrogate father to Edna’s son, a departure for a character usually relied upon for laughs.

“Over so many years, you want to keep your characters that people fell in love with, but you do need to make significant changes otherwise it just becomes redundant,” Harris explains. Does he ever wish Crabtree would show a dark side to him? The Newfoundland native smiles.

“He’s a pretty good guy,” Harris says. “I was liking Crabtree and Grace last year because they each had their moments of being petulant and jealous. I thought that was kind of nice. You have the romance between Ogden and Murdoch, which has always had its obstacles and troubles, but they’re mostly pure of heart. With Crabtree and Grace, it had to do with envy.”

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

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Review: Not-so hero worship on Heartland

The kiss. Oh, that kiss. It was brought to my attention last week that Georgie may not have witnessed a kiss between Prince Ahmed and Amy–we didn’t actually see it but I was reacting to the look on Georgie’s face–but it was confirmed Sunday as she replayed the online clip again for herself and then for Lou. Now the cat is out of the bag. Or the horse has jumped the fence. Pick your cliché; the point is Georgie and Lou know. And now Amy does too. How long until Ty finds out?

“The Big Red Wall” may have dealt with Amy being at first too scared to try getting Ahmed’s gift horse to jump over a high wall, but it was as much about Georgie putting a wall between she and her former hero. By episode’s end Georgie had torn down her picture shrine to Amy and was disgusted by the whole situation. Yes, Amy told Lou that nothing had happened between she and Ahmed–he made advances but she told him to back off–but nothing will be the same between the three girls until the family sits down and talks about it. And despite Ty being busy with Caleb wanting to fast-track train the horses and Tim giving him the rough side of his tongue, he’s going to surf the ‘net soon. Better nip this bad news in the bud before it explodes.

The only bright spot in Heather Cronkie’s script came via Jack and Lisa, and even that came with its share of challenges. Georgie and Lou’s idea to hold a simple wedding party for the happy couple threatened to turn sour when Jack’s old gal pal Val Stanton arrived from Florida to sort out some business at Briar Ridge. Jack was reluctant to tell Val he and Lisa were a couple even before she revealed her cancer was back; after she did he swallowed hard and invited her to the party instead. The silver lining? Val had been stringing Jack along for fun–various townsfolk had spilled the beans to her about Jack already–and she had nothing but well-wishes for he and Lisa.

I can’t help but think the arrival of Val and her son, Jesse, spell conflict in the coming weeks. Jesse, in the space of just a day or two, asked Amy to be Briar Ridge’s trainer twice and despite her protestations I bet he’s not going to give up without a fight. And just because Val said she was happy with Jack’s situation doesn’t mean she was being truthful with him.

Other notes 

  • “Peter called. Your husband? Said he was at work and he’d call you again when he got home. You know, his home, in Vancouver?”–Gotta love Jack’s little dig at Lou
  • I’ve always loved Shaun Johnston’s craggy face; he can portray so much emotion with a twitch of his moustache. Jack caught between Lou and Lisa at the table over discussions surrounding the wedding party was great.

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

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Laurie Finstad-Knizhnik builds her own Strange Empire

Aaron Poole, who plays Strange Empire’s Captain John Slotter, coined the hashtag #CBCnsfw – as in, Not Safe For Work – to promote the dark, serialized western on Twitter. This isn’t the public broadcaster’s attempt to groom a Heartland replacement, in other words. It’s more Deadwood and Hell on Wheels than Wild Roses or Road to Avonlea. 

“It’s a big departure for them. It’s huge. It really looks like cable,” said creator Laurie Finstad-Knizhnik, whose last series was the cable drama Durham County.

The first episode brings the main characters together in the barely-a-town, mostly-a-camp Janestown on the border of Montana and Alberta circa 1869. The story centres on Kat Loving (Cara Gee), Dr. Rebecca Blithely (Melissa Farman) and Isabelle Slotter (Tattiawna Jones), though men aren’t quite as scarce as some of the publicity materials suggest. It’s a brutal existence as these seekers of a new life fight for survival just north of the newly significant 49th parallel, where the wild west is even wilder.

“Popular opinion might have it that I want to kill everyone but no, I really don’t, I want to tell a story,” said Finstad-Knizhnik of her TV career, which included a start with Cold Squad. “I like to be able to tell the truth of it, and the truth of that time – 1869-1885 – is a pretty big turning point in Canadian history.”

She acknowledges there’s a lot riding on the first episode, but she seemed more blasé about the marketing and ratings than I did during a recent afternoon at the Aldergrove, BC, set.

CBC needs higher ratings than those of us excited to see what comes next from the brain behind Durham County, and if viewers don’t stick around after Murdoch Mysteries tonight – a series that’s vastly different in tone and structure – they may be reluctant to catch up with the story.

This is the kind of show I want on my public broadcaster, the kind of risk I’d love a broadcaster to be rewarded for, and yet I know placing too much weight on one show’s ability to turn the broadcaster’s ship around is a fool’s game. The show’s creator isn’t letting that weight crush her.

“My father (George Finstad) used to read the national news so I’m one hour from his timeslot with this. Watch out Peter Mansbridge,” she joked.

Strange Empire marks her return after Durham County ended unexpectedly in 2010. A wrap-up movie was announced and written but never filmed. Besides the atmospheric world-building, complex characterizations and darkness, a Western seems like a departure for her as well.

“I like genre a lot. It’s a great way to say something because nobody realizes you’re saying something.”

She used Durham County to subvert the serial killer drama and reveal what lies beneath the everyday violence of our world. She uses Strange Empire to explore ideas of intelligence, morality, and power.

She also does some genre busting with her three Strange Empire female leads: “the Indian princess — the Pocahontas –the madame and the doctor. I’m putting a twist on those three and fooling around from that point to turn them inside out.”

Kat Loving (Cara Gee) is Metis, belonging to neither the Indian nor the white worlds, protecting what’s hers (and adopting what’s not to place under her protection). Dr. Rebecca Blithely (Melissa Farman), travelling with her much older and creepier husband, is literally an experiment in feminine intelligence. And Isabelle Slotter (Tattiawna Jones) is Captain John’s whore turned wife and madame.

“It’s about the people you never hear about – the women, the Chinese, the Negro,” said Finstad-Knizhnik. “Their stories aren’t written. Ling is a great character. I didn’t want a town that had a Chinese laundry in it – I don’t want those stereotypes – so we have a Chinese cowboy.”

The focus on the women’s stories doesn’t make this the kinder, gentler Western. Or the less sexual. “I got really tired of blow jobs on Deadwood,” Finstad-Knizhnik said. “How many blowjob soliloquies can you really have? I thought OK, maybe you can have three but it turns out no, you can just keep going and going. So this is cunnilingus on CBC. Stay tuned for episode 5.”

Saying that writing is an excuse for reading, she delved into the real history of the time to create her strange world. She modelled Isabelle on Victoria Woodhull, a “wild American suffragette prostitute” who ended up running for president of the United States, married a banker and died in a country house in Britain. Woodhull was also a spiritualist, as is Isabelle.

“The suffragettes used the idea of ghosts and spirits to further their agenda, so it was Plato and Ben Franklin telling you you should give the vote to women and reform marriage rights,” she explained. “It was also about deep human feelings. People lost so many people then. Mothers losing babies, whole towns wiped out by plagues.”

Strange Empire is wonderfully intelligent and bold storytelling, and I’m trying not to worry about how much of a CBC audience will gravitate toward it and have the patience to get sucked into its ongoing story without the gimmick of a cliffhanger. CBC was willing to take the leap; I hope viewers will too.

“I started it with this idea that I could finally do stand alones,” Finstad-Knizhnik said. “‘You can do it,’ I said. ‘You can close the story.’ ‘Maybe the A story you can close and leave the other two open.’ And then I looked in the mirror and said ‘no you can’t, you’re never going to be able to close a story.’ And CBC went with it.”

Strange Empire debuts tonight at 9pm on CBC. Watch for episode reviews and interviews with Cara Gee, Melissa  Farman and Aaron Poole here in the coming weeks.

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Transporter back from the dead with Canadian comic relief

Like a good action hero surviving gunshots and headbutts, Transporter: The Series made it through some serious Season 2 uncertainty.

The action project, based on the film franchise created by Luc Besson, was in the midst of production in 2011 when lead Chris Vance was injured during filming in Toronto. Then U.S. network Cinemax dropped the show and there were showrunner changes. Now, with X-Files veteran Frank Spotnitz running things, the co-production between France’s Atlantique Productions, QVF Inc. and M6, along with The Movie Network and Movie Central in Canada, the show roars back to the pay channels on Sunday night with the first two back-to-back instalments of a 12-episode run.

Vance is Frank Martin, a ex-Special Forces operative who skips around the world transporting packages of various value–Sunday’s first storyline finds him protecting a 12-year-old boy who witnessed a high-profile murder–with bad guys always in pursuit. Along for the ride are Violante Placido (The American) as former French Intelligence Officer Caterina Boldieu; Charly Hübner (Unter Nachbarn) as Dieter Haussmann, Frank’s mastermind car mechanic; François Berléand as French Police Inspector Tarconi; and Canadian Mark Rendall (30 Days of Night) as computer whiz Jules Faroux.

“Jules is sort of the odd man out,” Rendall explains. “He’s not slick,  he doesn’t know what the hell he’s doing most of the time, he’s not built for all the action and shit that Frank gets into. He’s the behind-the-scenes guy who does all of the computer hacking and stuff.” Jules is the opposite of Frank, a necessary break from the dark violence that is such a big part of the series.

Rendall divulges Jules is around for the back half of the season; the Toronto actor–who counts voicing Arthur the aardvark on the iconic animated kid’s series among his body of work–spent a week in Prague filming his Transporter scenes. By the end of his time shooting Rendall had come up with a pseudo-back story for Jules: he came from a military family, so he never really made any friends and rebelled against his father, who worked for government agencies, by learning to hack. As for how Jules came into Frank’s life, Rendall divulges his character was working for a rival Transporter before moving over to his current employer.

Unfortunately, other than acting like he was swaying back and forth inside the back of a tractor trailer, Rendall didn’t get a chance to partake in any of the fisticuffs that are part of Frank’s career and a stable of the Transporter franchise.

“The closest I came to any kind of stunts was standing close to something that exploded or riding a horse,” he admits. “I really wanted Jules to be in a fight scene and punch someone out accidentally or hit someone with a computer. Maybe next season. We’ll see.”

Transporter: The Series airs Sundays at 9 p.m. ET/MT on The Movie Network and Movie Central.

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