Times Colonist

Montreal emerging as new production hub

- BILL BRIOUX

MONTREAL — “Every actor should be lucky enough to film in Quebec,” said Peter Coyote. “It’s a charmed environmen­t.” At 75, the idiosyncra­tic American actor and Emmy Awardwinni­ng narrator has become more and more reluctant to leave his northern California ranch. “I have my dogs and my fruit trees,” he says.

The script for The Disappeara­nce, however, lured him across the border. Currently in production outside Montreal, the six-hour miniseries will air on CTV in 2017.

Coyote plays a retired judge plunged into despair when his beloved 10-year-old grandchild goes missing. He read the first two scripts, loved them and figured he’d have a light schedule as the grandfathe­r.

“Then I came up here and I got the other four episodes of night shoots in Montreal in the winter outside and I thought, ‘Oh, you want to kill an old Jew, this is how to do it.’ ”

Coyote is kidding. He brushes up on his French between takes with francophon­e cast and crew members as well as Production­s Casablanca producers Joanne Forgues and Sophie Parizeau. He says he sees Canadians “as grownup Americans.”

The Disappeara­nce is one of several English-language production­s shooting in Montreal. With the TV business already booming in Vancouver and Toronto, Montreal is fast becoming a popular third option as a Canadian production hub.

A second straight mild fall has probably helped. Generous tax incentives, seasoned crews and the relatively low Canadian dollar haven’t hurt either. Producers say Montreal also offers several “looks,” doubling well for North American as well as European capitals.

Not every show stays. The ABC/CTV drama Quantico packed and left after one season, opting to shoot season 2 in New York. That series is set in and around New York, where production incentives are at an all-time high.

The producers of the upcoming series Jack Ryan were happy to take up the slack. A TV version of Tom Clancy’s book and movie franchise is scheduled to begin production in Quebec in the New Year. John Krasinski (The Office) will star as the savvy CIA operative, with Carlton Cuse — who’s been shooting U.S. cable shows in Vancouver (Bates Motel) and Toronto (The Strain) — among the executive producers.

The series will be available on Amazon Prime Video, a Netflixlik­e streaming service rumoured to be headed to Canada as early as next month.

Other shows in production in Montreal include Bellevue, a CBC mystery series starring Oscar winner Anna Paquin (True Blood). She plays a police detective investigat­ing the disappeara­nce of a transgende­r teen in her hometown. Allen Leech (Downton Abbey) and Shawn Doyle (Fargo) costar. Just wrapped is 21 Thunder, a new drama set in the world of pro soccer. Colm Feore (The Borgias) is among the stars. It’s set to première on CBC next summer.

Back for a fourth season in and around Montreal is Mohawk Girls, a dramedy set on a reserve. It returned late last month on APTN. Real Detective, a U.S. cable drama based on real cases and starring Vancouver-native Devon Sawa, is back in production for a second season.

The CBC drama This Life has shot in Montreal for two seasons. An adaptation of a popular RadioCanad­a series, it stars Torri Higginson (Stargate Atlantis) as a single mom/lifestyle columnist coping with cancer. The Comedy Network has also banked a fifth season of Just for Laughs: All Access.

 ??  ?? Peter Coyote stars in The Disappeara­nce, airing on CTV in 2017.
Peter Coyote stars in The Disappeara­nce, airing on CTV in 2017.

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