Townsville Bulletin

CABIN PRESSURE RISES

Fasten your seatbelts! There’s turbulence ahead in Theflighta­ttendant, writes Siobhan Duck

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RUMOUR has it Kaley Cuoco wasn’t completely on board with doing a second season of The Flight Attendant. After all, how do you top a season that saw her breakout character, alcoholic flight attendant Cassie Bowden, embroiled in a high-stakes game of espionage after waking up from a boozy bender next to a dead body? But any fears the lead actor had about living up to the lofty expectatio­ns of the series’ fans were soon allayed when she saw what was in store for Cassie and her crew.

Alison Hurbert-burns, host of Binge’s weekly TV podcast

Skip Intro, says it’s unusual for a second season to take off from page to screen so quickly – a sign the writers “had a vision for this all the way through” and were prepared to continue the story.

“The Flight Attendant deserved a second season because it kind of broke the genre,” HurbertBur­ns says. “I watch a lot of TV and this show is really unique.

It’s a dark comedy – and Kaley is so famous for her comedic chops, and you can really see how this show was built around her talent and adapted for her – but you don’t normally see that in female-led crime shows. There’s Killing Eve but… you could count them on one hand.”

This season begins with

Cassie loved-up and dried out in LA, where she’s living her best life with a sideline job as a jet-setting CIA operative. When she inadverten­tly finds herself in the frame for a bombing, she’s soon crossing continents, going toe-to-toe with hired assassins and facing the temptation of the mini-bar.

Cuoco’s co-star Griffin Matthews – who plays

Shane Evans, a federal agent masqueradi­ng as an airline steward – says the cocktail of glamorous locations, John le Carré-style spy drama and dark humour made The Flight Attendant great escapism during Covid lockdowns.

And with even more eyecatchin­g internatio­nal backdrops – not to mention superstar Sharon Stone – in season two, Matthews says it often felt more like filming a Hollywood blockbuste­r than a TV series.

Plus, he explains, trying to shoot overseas in the middle of a pandemic made filming just as exciting and unpredicta­ble as the material in the scripts.

“You feel the ‘ bigness’ – is that even a word?” he asks with a laugh. “It’s huge. Production is huge. Even going to Iceland, [which] I think was a last-minute change – we were supposed to go to Tokyo, and then the Olympics were kind of a mess with Covid. So they had to reroute us to Iceland and re-jig that storyline. It felt like we were on a little bit of a day-to-day roller-coaster just trying to get this season complete. But Iceland was epic.”

THE FLIGHT ATTENDANT NEW EPISODES STREAMING EVERY THURSDAY ON BINGE

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