By John Doyle, The Globe and Mail

Jessica Matten, left, plays Samantha Woodburn, and Brian Markinson plays Chuck ‘Buke’ Bukansky. // Michelle Faye Fraser // Prairie Dog Film // APTN

None of us are particularly enamoured of the year 2020. But before we write its obituary with satisfaction, let’s consider what kept us going. That was television, which just continued on as other arenas shut down. That was thanks to content already made. And Canadian TV kept chugging along, too, either in the all-Canadian category or in the made-in-Canada classification. We watched a lot of TV, allowing us to savour fine Canadian acting.

Now, you could say there were a lot of great performances of the kind we dislike. Such as certain CBC execs pretending to know how to run a public broadcaster with integrity and aplomb. Those were failed performances, so let’s not even go there.

Instead, here’s a list – not meant to be definitive – of great performances by Canadian actors this year.

Brian Markinson as Bukansky on Tribal (APTN): This underrated, minimalist First Nations police procedural arrived as something that hits you like a slap in the face. Markinson was brilliant, all addled rage and simmering resentment as Chuck (Buke) Bukansky, a bristling but almost broken-down veteran detective. He inhabited the role with relish and it was a punchy, powerful performance.

Jessica Matten, as Officer Samantha (Sam) Woodburn on Tribal (APTN): Playing Bukansky’s nemesis Matten pulled off something rare – a truly multilayered character in a police procedural. The Sam character is complicated, engaging in unsettling (for the viewer) games. Matten who was excellent in Frontier and Blackstone adds extra heft to an already potent role, an Interim Tribal Police Chief, a woman taking charge in a male-dominated field.

Season two of the APTN drama from Prairie Dog Film + Television is in production in Calgary.

Prairie Dog Film + Television’s Tribal is back on the case.

Produced by the Calgary-based prodco in association with APTN, production is now underway on the one-hour drama’s 10-episode sophomore season in Calgary.

Led by Prairie Dog Film + Television’s Ron E. Scott, who serves as showrunner, director and executive producer on the series, Tribal follows a newly appointed Tribal Police Force chief (played by Frontier‘s Jessica Matten) and her broken-down Metro Police detective partner (Unspeakable‘s Brian Markinson) as they investigate First Nation crime stories based on real cases.

Adam Frost serves as co-executive producer alongside Prairie Dog Film + Television’s Janet Hamley, while Tribal is produced by the company’s Scott Lepp. Writers include Scott, Frost, Adriana Capozzi and Jason Filiatrault.

Tribal was officially announced in May 2019 and was renewed in February 2020 ahead of its premiere on APTN that month. Season one ran for eight episodes.

Notably, season two sees the duo question who they can trust after a grisly discovery and deal with other developments such as a new task force leader and the further divide between their two police departments.

Both cast and crew are following COVID-19 health and safety protocols, according to a press release. Producer Lepp also told Playback Daily that the show has engaged a COVID safety consulting firm to develop, enforce and adapt protocols to ensure a safe workplace. Production is expected to wrap in February 2021.

In addition to Matten and Markinson, Garry Chalk and Julian Black Antelope are also set to return. As well, new cast members include Marci T. House, Stephen Huszar, Wesley French and Ashley Callingbull.

Produced in participation with the Canada Media Fund and the Rogers Cable Network Fund, Tribal is also made with assistance from the Government of Alberta, the Screen-based Production Grant and the Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit.

PRESS RELEASE
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

  • Critically acclaimed series goes to camera in Calgary
  • Award-winning leads Jessica Matten and Brian Markinson return
  • TRIBAL Cast and Crew return to set following COVID-19 enhanced health and safety protocols

CALGARY, AB – November 17, 2020 – APTN and Prairie Dog Film + Television’s one-hour crime drama series, TRIBAL begins production of Season Two today in Calgary.

In Season Two of TRIBAL, Chief Sam Woodburn and Detective Bukansky’s grisly discovery causes them to question who they can trust. Connie appoints a new leader of the Task Force as they try to uncover who is responsible for the “Tomb”, indigenous bodies buried under a water treatment plant. An uprise of crime continues. A white poacher is found dead on a reserve. A hostage is taken into custody. Murders linked to ritualistic manners take place. Are the “Starlight Tours resurrected”? Sam and Buke come face-to-face with the memory of Buke’s shooting, which has caused lasting traumatic effects. The divide between the Metro and Tribal police departments escalate, affecting Sam and Buke’s partnership.

TRIBAL’s cast and crew return to set following health and safety protocols due to COVID-19. TRIBAL’s Showrunner Ron E. Scott shares:

“It has been an interesting journey. We are looking forward to getting back to shooting with our hard-working cast and crew. Season 2 includes new dimensional, ripped-from-the-headlines stories, including missing and murdered indigenous people, police corruption and the effects of PTSD. We look forward to welcoming the new cast and crew to the series.”

TRIBAL’s award-winning cast returns including Jessica Matten (Frontier, Blackstone) and Brian Markinson (Mad Men, Unspeakable). The series will again feature the talented Garry Chalk, and Julian Black Antelope with new characters featuring Marci T. House, Stephen Huszar, Wesley French and Ashley Callingbull.

Filming will take place at various locations in Calgary, Alberta, Canada.

TRIBAL is led by Executive Producer & Showrunner Ron E. Scott, Co-Executive Producer Janet Hamley, Co-Executive Producer Adam Frost, and produced by Scott Lepp. The series will broadcast in Canada on APTN.

– MORE-

TRIBAL is produced in association with APTN, in participation with the Canada Media Fund and the Rogers Cable Network Fund, with assistance from the Government of Alberta, the Screen-based Production Grant and the Canadian Film or Video Production Tax Credit.

ADDITIONAL INFORMATION FOR MEDIA

DIGITAL & SOCIAL MEDIA

TRIBAL
Website: www.tribaltvseries.com
Facebook: facebook.com/tribaltvseries
Twitter: @tribaltvseries
Instagram: @tribaltvseries

APTN
Website: www.aptn.ca
Facebook: facebook.com/aptntv
Twitter: @APTN
Instagram: @aptn_ca

ABOUT PRAIRIE DOG FILM + TELEVISION
Founded by Ron E. Scott, Prairie Dog Film + Television is a world-class independent production company. With over 190 episodes of television produced, Prairie Dog’s content has streamed worldwide on Netflix, Amazon Prime Video and Hulu, and its programs have aired on major networks across North America (APTN, ABC, CBC, City TV, CTV, Global and Showcase). It is also active in global markets, including New Zealand, Australia, China, Europe, Russia and South Africa. In addition, their programming is used as an educational resource and has been donated to numerous universities, educational institutions and libraries around the world.

Prairie Dog’s programming has been recognized and awarded for excellence in Canadian drama through the Academy of Canadian Cinema and Television, the Leo Awards and the Alberta Media Production Industry Association – with over 150 nominations. Selected wins include Best Dramatic Series, Best Writing for Television Drama and Best Performance by an Actress at the Canadian Screen Awards.

ABOUT APTN
APTN launched in 1999 as the first national Indigenous broadcaster in the world, creating a window into the remarkably diverse mosaic of Indigenous Peoples. A respected non-profit and charitable broadcaster, it’s the only one of its kind in North America. The network is Sharing Our Stories of authenticity in English, French and a variety of Indigenous languages to approximately 11 million Canadian subscribers. With over 80% Canadian content, APTN connects with its audiences through genuine, inspiring and engaging entertainment on multiple platforms.

For media inquiries, please contact:
Justine Gamez Huckabay
Publicist, Intercommunicate
justine.gamez@intercommunicate.co

For more information about TRIBAL or Prairie Dog Film + Television, please contact:
Carmen Bachez
Associate Producer, Prairie Dog Film + Television
carmen@prairiedog.ca
(403) 457-7735

American film workers can now quarantine for just two days before stepping onto a set in the western Canadian province: “It’s a game changer.”

By Etan Vlessing

As the coronavirus outbreak bludgeons Hollywood with global travel restrictions, Alberta has rolled out rapid COVID-19 testing that has A-list stars now able to safely cross a closed U.S.-Canadian border and step onto a local film and TV sets in just two days.

Consider it Canada’s express lane for American talent and crews as cases of COVID-19 rise in both countries.

“We’re looking at real-time data to make sure we have the best possible (COVID) protocols, and the best protocols can be fast,” Doug Schweitzer, Alberta’s minister of jobs, economy, and innovation, tells The Hollywood Reporter.

The pilot testing program has American film and TV workers cutting to the front of the line by agreeing to voluntarily take a rapid COVID-19 test on arrival at Calgary International Airport.

Then they quarantine until they receive results within 48 hours, and if they test negative, casts, creatives, and crew members while being closely monitored can set foot on a local film or TV sets in as little as two days, rather than the mandatory 14-day quarantine restriction required at Hollywood production hubs in British Columbia and Ontario.

“It’s a game-changer for Alberta that I hope this means we have a new normal,” says Fargo producer Chad Oakes of Calgary-based Nomadic Pictures, which just wrapped production on the fifth and final season of Syfy’s Van Helsing amid the pandemic.

Alberta’s platinum service can also speed up the processing of non-Canadians as essential workers when applying for work permits, while the province is also leading the Canadian industry in pandemic production safety rules, including sick pay.

The recent agreement between Hollywood’s top studios and unions related to COVID-19 filming protocols stipulated that all union employees receive 10 days of COVID-19 paid sick leave, per production. “We see those protocols as the gold standard,” Damian Petti, president of IATSE Local 212 in Calgary tells THR.

Calgary-based Prairie Dog Film + Television recently signed up to five days of worker sick pay for pandemic-era production, a high-water mark for the Canadian industry.

Ron E. Scott, a showrunner and director at Prairie Dog, who is about to start production Nov. 17 on the second season of the APTN drama Tribal, points to stringent on-set safety protocols on his set. “Going in, I feel like we’ve done everything. We have the unions and guilds on board, and the film commission is in full support,” Scott tells THR.

Before the pandemic, Alberta busily hosted movie production for Jason Reitman’s Ghostbusters: Afterlife and a unit shoot Jumanji The Next Level, both for Sony Pictures; Focus Feature’s Let Him Go; and Walt Disney’s Togo, which starred Willem Dafoe and portrayed a famous sled-dog relay.

During the COVID-19 crisis, the province has also hosted shoots for Netflix zombie drama Black Summer and Syfy’s fan favorite Wynonna Earp, which shot six episodes this summer with revisions to the original storylines and no on-set infections, says executive producer Tom Cox of Seven24 Films.

Cox elsewhere is prepping a third season shoot for the comedy Jann, recently picked up by Hulu, and is currently filming 10 episodes for the 14th season of the CBC ranching family drama Heartland.

“We’re so far, so good, using essentially the same protocols, with some production differences, and that’s proving to be successful again,” Cox tells THR about keeping the COVID virus at bay on his sets.

Canadian singer and songwriter Jann Arden says she insisted Jann, a show she co-created and stars in, had to be shot in Calgary, her hometown. “Calgary has played host to so many TV shows and movies over the years, but it’s usually not playing itself. It’s usually some U.S. town or Montana, or Fargo, or Purgatory, never itself. I wanted to showcase Calgary, and show it off to the world. It’s a gorgeous city that literally has it all,” Arden tells THR.

Elsewhere in Alberta, Samantha Quantz, the locations officer for the Edmonton Screen Industries Office, says the recent success of her city’s NHL bubble model in allowing pro hockey players to safely play out their 2019-2020 season amid the pandemic, could be modified for a major Hollywood film or TV production seeking its own self-contained hub.

That scenario would see a film or TV crew rent out their own hotel, have sound stages at the 51,500 square foot Film Alberta Studios to themselves, and use the city’s DynaLife laboratories for rapid testing. “Those relationships are already there. We had a meeting with the labs that did all the testing. The turnaround is 24 hours,” Quantz explains.

Of course, among the biggest upgrades and perks that Hollywood producers want are still tax credits and other incentives to choose Alberta over rival locales. Calgary film commissioner Luke Azevedo points to the new Alberta Film and Television Tax Credit with a 22 percent all-spend rate for foreign producers, and no sales tax in the province.

On a CAN$5 million ($3.8 million) production budget, Alberta’s foreign film tax credit would rebate around $1.1 million ($840,000), on top of currency savings currently running at around 30 percent, based on the low Canadian dollar, and cheap hotel and car rental rates in Calgary and Edmonton as the local tourist industry faces a pandemic slump.

“We have great crews, we have great vistas, we have great infrastructure [and] our Calgary Film Centre,” Azevedo argues. “But at the end of the day it’s how we attract and incentivize people to come to Alberta.”

The Calgary Film Centre has three purpose-built sound stages with 50,000 square feet of space, three workshops and warehouse spaces, and William F. White International on site for equipment rentals.

At the same time, with Alberta’s film tax credit having a CAN$10 million ($7.6 million) per-production cap, Azevedo notes the incentive is under review by the provincial government to make it more competitive with rival locales that routinely attract tentpole projects.

“For us to compete with other provinces and other jurisdictions for a $100 million film, at that point it starts to be difficult for us, with the cap on the amount per-project,” he says.

That’s echoed by minister Schweitzer, who’s consulting with the local industry and Hollywood on how to bolster the provincial tax credit. “We’ve talked to industry leaders in the space, we’ve talked to people in Los Angeles and internationally to see how we can position our province for success and some of that relates to the tax credit,” Schweitzer says.

Tribal-season-one
Jessica Matten and Brian Markinson in an episode of the Calgary-shot Indigenous police drama, Tribal. Courtesy, APTN.

Eric Volmers, Postmedia News

After a six-month delay due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the second season of Tribal will begin production in Calgary next week.

Cameras are set to roll Nov. 17 for the 10-episode season that is scheduled to air in the fall of 2021 on the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, says creator, showrunner and director Ron E. Scott.

“We have protocols that are industry standard and above and we are all adhering to them and happy to do it,” Scott says, in an interview with Postmedia earlier this week.

APTN ordered a second season before the first premiered back in February 2020. Production was supposed to start in May but was delayed not only by the pandemic but also by insurance concerns. Insurance companies that serve the film and TV industry are now refusing coverage for COVID-19. Scott joined other members in the film and TV industry in lobbying the federal government to supply a short-term backstop insurance program. In late September, the federal government announced its “Short-Term Compensation Fund” for Canadian audiovisual productions. As much as $50 million will be available to the industry, administered by Telefilm Canada and the Canada Media Fund, to compensate independent production companies if there is an interruption or shutdown due to confirmed COVID-19 cases.

“It’s still being untangled,” says Scott. “But it means that they are committed to helping producers produce their shows. It’s all very new. We’ve been dealing with Telefilm and CMF, that underwrites it, for 20 years or so. We have a good relationship with them. So we can be confident going into production that we will have insurance to keep everything safe for cast and crew and everyone related to the production.”

Tribal is a police procedural that offers a traditional crime-of-the-week structure set against the backdrop of timely issues impacting First Nations People. Jessica Matten stars as Samantha Woodburn, the young interim chief of the Tribal Police Force who is mismatched with a non-Indigenous and bitter detective named Chuck (Buke) Bukansky played by Brian Markinson. The first season explored corruption, missing Indigenous women and pipeline protests among other storylines.

It also ended with a harrowing cliffhanger that had Woodburn and Buke discovering Indigenous bodies underneath a water-treatment plant. Both Woodburn and Bukansky will be deeply affected by the grisly scene going forward in Season 2, Scott says.

“Their relationship is growing, it’s evolving and progressing,” Scott says. “(Buke) starts trying to understand Native culture. He tried to start to get back with his wife or try to get back. Sam does the exact opposite, disconnecting from her family which is going to be very interesting.”

Season 2 will feature stories tackling issues such as Indigenous blockades and poaching on Native land. There will be an episode about a complex missing-person investigation and one about a hostage-taking inside a healing lodge.

“It talks about restorative justice and some of those deeper elements that are in question across the justice system in
Canada,” Scott says. “So it’s a very interesting episode.”

A member of the Metis Nation of Alberta, Scott created Tribal after enjoying critical and commercial success with Blackstone, an unflinching, five-season drama about corruption, addiction and violence on a fictional Alberta First Nations reserve. That series was filmed near Edmonton, but Scott has since moved his Prairie Dog Film and Television production offices to Calgary.

Season 2 will use many of the same locations as the first, including various areas of Calgary and the Tsuut’ina Nation just southwest of city limits. Tribal is just one of the projects Scott hopes to develop and film in the city.

“It’s been great for us to be in Calgary,” Scott says. “I was just on the phone with my agent today and my manager yesterday and we have several things that are very exciting that will possibly come to the Calgary area.”

Kari Matchett in a scene from the CBC series, Fortunate Son. Courtesy, CBC. MICHELLE FAYE / Calgary

The spotlight is on Calgary’s SEVEN24 Films as it garnered 18 nominations for Alberta Film and Television Awards, including a double nod for best dramatic series. Fortunate Son and Heartland are up against Tribal for a Rosie Award this fall.

Nominees were announced Aug. 12 in a variety of categories covering both film and TV productions in the province. Edmonton-based Sticks and Stones was the second-most nominated film company with 14. Other multiply nominees include Bamboo Shoots with 11 and Yardwork Films with 7.

Two Calgary-based shows were the top nominated. Tribal (Prairie Dog Film & Television) had 12 nominations while Heartland (SEVEN24 Films) had 10.

There are also a number of individuals with multiple nominations including Calgary producer-writer-director Matt Embry, screenwriter Julian Black Antelope, and director-writers Jordy Randall, Tom Cox, John Kerr, Ron E. Scott, Braden Croft and Kelly Wolfert.

A total of 54 Rosie Awards will be handed out in fall, chosen from 623 entries. Productions, from both long and short fiction and non-fiction, commercials, and new media, are vying for 21 Class awards. In addition, 33 Craft categories cover screenwriters, costume and production designers, cinematographers, editors, directors, make-up artists, special effects artists, sound technicians and composers. Of all finalists, 189 are from productions based in Calgary, while 100 are from Edmonton-based productions. There were also 20 finalists from other communities in Alberta.

The Alberta Film & Television Awards were to have occurred May 23 but were postponed due to the pandemic. They have been rescheduled to an online presentation on Oct. 8. The delay isn’t just inconvenient for nominees, it’s also a potential loss of revenue as the awards event is the largest fundraiser of the year for Alberta Media Production Industries Association (AMPIA).

The major category nominees are:

Jessica Matten and Brian Markinson in a scene from the Calgary-shot TV series, Tribal. Courtesy, APTN MICHELLE FAYE FRASER/Michelle Faye Fraser

Best Dramatic Series: Fortunate Son – Jordy Randall, Tom Cox and Andrew Wreggitt producers, SEVEN24 Films; Heartland – Jordy Randall & Tom Cox producers, SEVEN24 Films; TribalRon E. Scott, Janet Hamley and Nancy Laing producers, Prairie Dog Film + Television

Best Dramatic Feature: El Chicano – Art Robinson producer, WarChest Productions; Harpoon – Michael Peterson, Kurtis Harder, Laurie Venning and Julian Black Antelope producers, 775 Media; John 316 – JarvisG, Shaun Donnelly, Jordan Dietz and Chase Gardiner producers, Hot Shot Films; Parallel Minds – Carolyn McMaster, Wendy Hill-Tout and Rene Collins producers, Red Eye Productions; Root of the Problem –Carolyn McMaster & Margot McMaster producers, CHAOS a film company; True Fiction – Julian Black Antelope and Braden Croft producers 775 Media

Jann Arden in the Calgary-shot comedy series Jann. MICHELLE FAYE FRASER/CTV

Best Musical, Comedy or Variety Program or Series: Caution: May Contain Nuts – Camille Beaudoin & Eric Rebalkin producers, Mosaic Entertainment; Jann – Jordy Randall and Tom Cox producers, SEVEN24 Films; Red Deer Westerner Days – Brent Kawchuk & Bailey Stead producers, Bamboo Shoots; Ukrainian Shumka Dancers presents – Ancestors & Elders Ukrainian Shumka Dancers producers.

Best music video: Corb Lund and Ian Tyson – “Ride On,” Brock Davis Mitchell producer, DDG & Glean Productions; Johnny Summers – “My Funny Valentine,” Brent Kawchuk producer, Bamboo Shoots; Leeroy Stagger – “Strange Attractor,” Brock Davis Mitchell producer, DDG; Matty K – “Pistol in the Rain,” Brett Ferster producer, The Light Factory; Nuela Charles – “Long Way Down,” Brock Davis Mitchell producer, DDG & Glean Productions; T. Buckley – “Least a Man Could Do,” Brett Ferster producer, The Light Factory

Best Performance by an Alberta Actor: Aiden Moreno, Jann – Go With The Flowga, SEVEN24 Films; Howie Miller, Zombies And Indians, Dead West Productions; Reamonn Joshee, John 316, Hot Shot Films; Shaun Johnston, Heartland – The Eye of the Storm, SEVEN24 Films; Todd Houseman, Whiteface, Yardwork Pictures; Troy Greenwood, The Narrator, Encounter Media

Best Performance by an Alberta Actress: Amber Marshall, Heartland – Fight or Flight, SEVEN24 Films; Davina Stewart, The Old Farm, Potluck Productions/WesPhoto; Georgina Lightning, Tribal – “Runs With A Gun,” Prairie Dog Film + Television; Jann Arden, Jann – The Big House, SEVEN24 Films; Lady Vanessa Cardona, Whiteface, Yardwork Pictures; Vanessa Sabourin, Foundations – Resigned, Alberta Union of Provincial Employees

The full list of all nominees can be found at https://ampia.org/2020-alberta-film-television-awards/

The Alberta Film & Television Awards celebrate excellence and outstanding achievement in Alberta’s screen industries. They are the oldest film and/or television awards event in Canada, honouring its provincial production industry.