Funny, You Don't Look
Canadian
By: Katrina Onstad
Date: June 5th 2009
Source:
The New York Times
Note: This is
just the parts of the article where THE
BRIDGE is mentioned.
To read the full interview, click
HERE.
NBC just introduced "The Listener," about a telepathic paramedic; ABC has
picked up "Copper," described as "Grey’s Anatomy" with rookie officers;
CBS has scheduled another police procedural, "The Bridge," as a midseason
replacement next winter. All three programs are shot in Toronto.
"The Bridge," a CBS-CTV co-production, is another street cop show, this
time loosely based on the career of a former Toronto police union boss
named Craig Bromell. A controversial figure, he was once accused of being
one of several officers who beat up a homeless man. (The case was
settled.)
"All around the world people have this uneasy alliance with their police:
'Do what you can to protect us, but if you have to break the rules to do
it, don't let us catch you,'" said Alan DiFiore, a show runner of "The
Bridge."
While members of the Strategic Response Unit on "Flashpoint" sport
Canadian flags on their jackets, "The Bridge" seems to be moving toward a
more generic sense of place.
"Cops are the same in Italy, Canada, Spain,"
said the show's star,
Aaron Douglas, best known as Galen Tyrol in "Battlestar
Galactica."
"I'm playing it like Anytown, U.S.A."
This is, in part, because of Mr. Bromell: a Toronto setting could leave
the show vulnerable to lawsuits. But a Canadian-generated program set in
Anytown, U.S.A., may be philosophically problematic for a heavily
regulated television system, one that offers significant tax breaks and
subsidies for shows that employ only Canadians in key positions on and off
camera. The tax dollars that contribute some of the $2 million-an-episode
budget of "The Bridge" are there to promote local productions, part of a
larger policy intended to help Canada achieve some kind of artistic
independence from the cultural behemoth next door.

American networks are
showing increasing interest in series produced in Canada.
Above, Aaron Douglas, standing, is a star of "The Bridge," a new police
series shot in Toronto.
* A
version of this article appeared in print on June 7, 2009, on page MT2 of
the New York edition * |