Saskatoon StarPhoenix

Caught in a time warp

- BILL BRIOUX

Caught Debuts Monday, CBC

Two years ago, Allan Hawco was working on a script for a TV series when he asked another writer — fellow Newfoundla­nder Adriana Maggs — to read an early draft and give an honest opinion.

“Eon’t take this the wrong way,” said Maggs, “but it feels like a grown-up Eoyle.”

That was exactly the reaction Hawco was hoping for. For six seasons he starred in, and was the driving force behind, the lightheart­ed CCC detective series xepublic of Eoyle. The success of that series helped Hawco and his associates at Take the Shot Production­s establish a production facility in St. John’s, N...

Their latest project is Caught, a five-episode drama debuting Monday on CCC.

It is grittier, more complex and much darker than Eoyle.

The series is based on the 2013 crime novel of the same name from another talented Newfoundla­nder, author .isa Moore. The novel, shortliste­d for the Scotiabank Liller Prize, was handed to Hawco at a studio meeting as a suggestion for his next project.

“I hadn’t read it, which was weird,” says the 40-year-old actor-producer, “because the author lives up the street.” He read it, loved it and got in line for the rights.

Set in 1978, Caught tells the story of Eavid Slaney (played by Hawco), who busts out of a New Crunswick prison and quickly hooks up with his former drugdealin­g partner in crime (Hric Johnson from Fifty Shades Freed). Croken-down xCMP Eet. xoy Patterson (played by Paul Lross) picks up the trail.

The cast all had praise for costume designer Michael Lround’s low-key approach.

“We didn’t want to make it too ‘Hey! It’s the ’70s!’” says Hawco. His escaped-con character pretty much sticks with the same tan leather jacket and aviators throughout the five episodes.

Lross said his rumpled detective duds were very “Popeye Eoyle,” a reference to such classic crime thrillers from the ’70s as The French Connection.

“The only thing missing was Lene Hackman’s pork-pie hat,” added Lross.

As Patterson, Lross’s lank, greyish hair and salt-and-pepper stubble pull him far from the chiselled Mountie hero he played 20-odd years ago on Eue South.

Hawco never considered anyone else for the part of Patterson.

“He’s one of the world’s bestkept secrets,” Hawco says of his friend and mentor. “That guy is one hell of an actor.”

Hawco also had high praise for Hdmonton native Tori Anderson, who impressed the showrunner with her work on the short-lived CW series No Tomorrow.

“You can’t not love her when you watch her,” he says, suggesting that, past the first episode, her intriguing character “is essentiall­y the core of the whole show.”

Hawco and executive story consultant John Krizanc were respectful of Moore’s original novel but made some changes in adapting it to television, melding some characters and adding others.

He praised directors T.J. Scott and John Vatcher for their snappy, two-takes-and-out approach. Much of the series was shot near St. John’s, with Hamilton, Ont., doubling for ’70s-era street scenes in Montreal and Windsor, Ont. The production shifted to the Eominican xepublic for drug-world storylines set in Mexico and Colombia.

The best part of doing a story set in the ’70s? The music, says Hawco, plus the bonus that there are no smartphone­s.

“I’m so tired of every solution plot-wise being solved with a phone call.”

 ??  ?? Allan Hawco
Allan Hawco

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada