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Tuesday, September 20, 2011
CBC backgrounder on John A: The Birth of a Country
Competing visions of Canada gives more details about the show, with interesting comments from the actors.
John A: The Birth of a Country - A Review
Some quick commentary on CBC's John A: The Birth of a Country.
Pros: A pretty damn decent CBC costume drama with a lot packed into two hours. Excellent casting of Macdonald (Shawn Doyle), Brown (Peter Outerbridge) and Brown's wife Anne, but where did George-Étienne Cartier (Quebec téléroman actor David La Haye) get that beard, and why give him such greasy characterization? Director Jerry Ciccoritti moves the action very well. I'd give it a B+, sometimes even an A-.
Cons: A half baked history lesson packed into two hours. Definitely a C-
The plot is good, if a tad formulaic, but it gallops along. However, the history really disappoints. Let's get real. Cartier was the leader of the Liberal Conservatives in that period and it was his majorities that forced deadlock, that forced Brown to come to terms, not the humanizing ministrations of George Brown's wife Anne.
Why do these writers keep trotting out the same old clichés? Cartier chose Ottawa as the Capital. Period.
I can just visualize the story meetings. Hey, Shakespeare took liberties with history, why can't we? History is boring, let's tart it up. Who wants to learn all those dates anyway?
Producer Bernie Zukerman calls John A. "a political thriller, the story of personal hatred, public passion and a political poison pill. Only the fire of the conflicting energies of Macdonald and Brown could have created a new country – our country.” Sorry Bernie, you're only two thirds right.
Oh, well, the Americans have been doing booster history for years. I know you have to do this stuff to line up advertisers.
Let's hope the network doesn't dumb down the War of 1812. At least the CBC have given it to their documentary unit.
Question: I hate to be a grinch, but wasn't writer Bruce Smith the same person who messed up the Tommy Douglas story with his fantasy characterization of Jimmy Gardiner as a Hitler character? He got a bit of a fire on his tail on that one, and does a better job this time. Of course, Richard Gwyn is a great source.
Pros: A pretty damn decent CBC costume drama with a lot packed into two hours. Excellent casting of Macdonald (Shawn Doyle), Brown (Peter Outerbridge) and Brown's wife Anne, but where did George-Étienne Cartier (Quebec téléroman actor David La Haye) get that beard, and why give him such greasy characterization? Director Jerry Ciccoritti moves the action very well. I'd give it a B+, sometimes even an A-.
Cons: A half baked history lesson packed into two hours. Definitely a C-
The plot is good, if a tad formulaic, but it gallops along. However, the history really disappoints. Let's get real. Cartier was the leader of the Liberal Conservatives in that period and it was his majorities that forced deadlock, that forced Brown to come to terms, not the humanizing ministrations of George Brown's wife Anne.
Why do these writers keep trotting out the same old clichés? Cartier chose Ottawa as the Capital. Period.
I can just visualize the story meetings. Hey, Shakespeare took liberties with history, why can't we? History is boring, let's tart it up. Who wants to learn all those dates anyway?
Producer Bernie Zukerman calls John A. "a political thriller, the story of personal hatred, public passion and a political poison pill. Only the fire of the conflicting energies of Macdonald and Brown could have created a new country – our country.” Sorry Bernie, you're only two thirds right.
Oh, well, the Americans have been doing booster history for years. I know you have to do this stuff to line up advertisers.
Let's hope the network doesn't dumb down the War of 1812. At least the CBC have given it to their documentary unit.
Question: I hate to be a grinch, but wasn't writer Bruce Smith the same person who messed up the Tommy Douglas story with his fantasy characterization of Jimmy Gardiner as a Hitler character? He got a bit of a fire on his tail on that one, and does a better job this time. Of course, Richard Gwyn is a great source.
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