Terminal City (TV series)
Terminal City | |
---|---|
Created by | Angus Fraser |
Starring | Gil Bellows Paul Soles Jane McLean Bill Mondy Michael Eklund Katie Boland Adam Butcher Ross Birchall Nico McEown Maria del Mar Nakul Kapoor Andrew McIlroy |
Country of origin | Canada |
No. of episodes | 10 |
Production | |
Executive producers | Angus Fraser Jayme Pfahl Gordon Mark (producer) Harold Lee Tichenor (consulting) |
Production location | Victoria, British Columbia |
Running time | 50 mins. |
Original release | |
Network | The Movie Network Movie Central City |
Release | October 17 December 19, 2005 | –
Terminal City is a Canadian miniseries about a woman (Maria del Mar) diagnosed with breast cancer. She's brought in to star on a failing reality TV show, turning it into a hit as her life and body begin to change.
Production
Angus Fraser, a native of Vancouver,[1] was the director-creator, with Rachel Talalay also brought in as a director.[2] As the writer, Fraser was partly inspired by a close call his mother had with cancer, and his own near-death experience when he was stabbed in the heart as a bouncer.[1] Originally conceived as a feature film, Terminal City was filmed in Victoria, British Columbia in 76 days and won 11 Leo Awards plus 2 nominations.
Cast
- Maria del Mar - Katie
- Gil Bellows - Ari
- Paul Soles - Saul
- Jane McLean - Jane
- Nakul Kapoor - Yash
- Katie Boland - Sarah
- Adam Butcher - Nicky
- Nico McEown - Eli
- Bill Mondy - Frank
- Michael Eklund - Henry
- Ross Birchall - Kristov
- Andrew McIlroy - Brendan
Plot
Fraser's plot follows a family woman who finds she has cancer and becomes the star of a reality show simultaneously.[3]
Critical reviews
Timeout says the show "prominently counts reality TV among its subjects, but its chief concerns—marriage, family and mortality—are timeless ones that are given fresh urgency by the way screenwriter Angus Fraser approaches them from odd angles."[4]
- "Terminal City...A new breed (and calibre) of must-see Canadian TV." - Gayle MacDonald, The Globe and Mail
- "World class writing and acting...HBO calibre." - John McKay, Canadian Press
- "A challenging, deeply disturbing 10-part hour drama that raises the bar considerably." - Jim Bawden, Star Week
- "Terminal City is one of the most original and intricate explorations of family dynamics ever created for television in this country." - Alison Cunningham, TV Times
- "Morality comes calling: Terminal City is like Six Feet Under with a comic twist." - Bill Brioux, Toronto Sun
- "Exceptional drama." - Alex Strachan, CanWest News Service
- "A challenging, relentlessly ambitious ride worth taking." - BB, Dose
- "Elegantly sinister, comic and deeply moving. Maria Del Mar in the tough lead role, handles it with aplomb." - John Doyle, The Globe and Mail
- "Challenging, evocative, addictive." - Rob Salem, The Toronto Star
- "New provocative drama." - Tara Merrin, Calgary Sun
Broadcasters
- In Canada, Terminal City originally aired its first run episodes on The Movie Network and Movie Central in 2005,[5] later being rerun on Citytv.
- In the United States, Sundance Channel picked up the series and began airing the series in March 2008.[6]
References
- ^ a b Macdonald, Gayle (October 24, 2005), The last laugh on breast cancer, The Globe and Mail, retrieved December 10, 2020
- ^ Moss, Marilyn (March 4, 2008), Terminal City, The Hollywood Reporter, retrieved December 10, 2020
- ^ Shattuck, Kathryn (March 6, 2008), "What's On Tonight", The New York Times, retrieved December 10, 2020
- ^ Johnston, Andrew (March 5, 2008), Terminal City, TimeOut, retrieved December 10, 2020
- ^ Terminal City: A Brave New Canadian Original Series From the Movie Network and Movie Central, Corusent, August 23, 2005, retrieved December 10, 2020
- ^ Gilbert, Matthew (March 6, 2008), 'Terminal City' takes risks with cancer, family, and fame, Boston.com, retrieved December 10, 2020
External links
- 2000s Canadian drama television series
- 2000s Canadian television miniseries
- 2005 Canadian television series debuts
- 2005 Canadian television series endings
- Citytv original programming
- Crave original programming
- Television shows filmed in Victoria, British Columbia
- Television shows set in British Columbia
- Canadian drama television series stubs