CBC Pilot Burn-Off Time | Tangled
When I published an article about Tangled (CBC: CBC/Shaftesbury Films/Colossal Entertainment/Salient Point Productions Ltd., 2010) last week, I figured it would get a slightly above-average number of readers for a day, then flatline. Pilot news and reviews generally don’t do well on URBMN, with the exception of B Team.
Tangled is by far the most-searched-for program this month on URBMN. The article promoting Tangled has 13 comments (not including mine) so far. Think about it – thirteen comments for a pilot aired in the dead of summer. I’m usually lucky if one person gives a tinker’s piss about an unsold pilot on CBC, never mind thirteen.
Tangled is the sort of show that fits with CBC’s desired female demographic, yet can also attract a decent male audience. Aside from the budgetary restrictions that can hobble a show like Tangled, I have no idea why CBC would reject this. Foreign references are copious, but The Tudors gets away with worse.
Sarah Wayne Callies is Sally or Chloe – it depends on which part of her life one follows. A sham marriage is planned around Sally/Chloe and Nick Hobbes (Bill Ward.) Hobbes is seen as a rogue freelancer/former CIA golden boy stealing intel from Sally/Chloe’s employer, the North Atlantic Intelligence Agency (NAIA.) NAIA is also trying to nail down main antagonist Oleg Gasparian.
Needless to say, there are the twists and turns common to an espionage show. It’s all familiar stuff, but Tangled at least couches the espionage in proper human drama. As a pilot, Tangled gives viewers a reason to care about Sally/Chloe’s life, convoluted as it is.
Callies is a bit stiff and monotonous as Sally/Chloe, but serviceable enough as a lead. Ward plays Hobbes almost effortlessly. Leslie Hope plays Sally/Chloe’s sister Marlene rather well, understandably miffed that Sally/Chloe has been playing dead for twelve years. Hope doesn’t have a big part in the pilot, but she makes the most of her role.
I’m not exactly fond of the acting in Tangled. The acting is a bit underplayed in general, aside from Ward’s character and a few minor characters I can’t name. At the same time, the balance of action and drama sells Tangled. Had Tangled made series, I’m sure it would have found its own level.
This isn’t the best pilot I’ve seen on CBC in 2010. The Cult ranks highest on my list, for its excellent acting and choice of subject matter. Tangled is still very good, better than the bet-hedging of the concept would suggest. I sincerely hope Shaftesbury Films sells the series to another network or cable channel.

Sometimes the best programs on CBC Television are the pilots aired once, then dropped in the middle of the harbour. The Cult (
Soon, Rachel speaks to Lucas through the television. Lucas eventually sees rain and fish fall from inside the halfway house. Could Rachel really be the second coming of Mary, Mother of Jesus, or is Lucas suffering from mental disabilities? The Cult doesn’t answer this question, not that first episodes of serial dramas ever do.
I grant Republic of Doyle its existence, although I haven’t revised
In the year and change I’ve written about television for URBMN, CBC has never aired a standalone pilot that has gone on to become a series…until now. B Team (
Alex is too nice, allowing herself to be pushed around by boss Janet Brown (Veena Sood.) The pilot helpfully points out every character’s role and/or personality traits. Karl Lesage (Rémy Girard) is The Civil Servant. Burt Lancaster (Matthew MacFadzean) is The Wiener. JoJo Lum (Jeananne Goossen) is The Translator. Lisa Hampton (Carolyne Maraghi) is The Friend, and so on.
I respect B Team for its intricate plotting, but the pilot is just not funny. It’s the typical CBC sitcom – predictable, no laugh track, underacted in places. B Team‘s underlying concept is solid, yet there’s little in the way of satire. Espionage should be rife with satire. B Team has no excuse for being as weak as it is.
It’s the Stanley Cup Playoffs, and CBC needs content during the lulls between playoff rounds. That’s right, it’s CBC Pilot Burn-Off Time again. Memory Lanes (
Memory Lanes‘ plot is simple. Bud Murray dies. His two sons, Ryan (Stiles) and Sean (Masterson), each obtain half-ownership of his heavily-mortgaged bowling alley. Ryan’s life is the alley, while Sean is a successful restaurateur. Ryan and Sean are diametric opposites. You should know what happens next. You’ve seen The Odd Couple, right?
I don’t think Memory Lanes would rate a pilot if Ryan Stiles was removed from the show. There’s nothing in Memory Lanes‘ concept or execution that makes me want to watch more episodes. It makes me wonder what CBC passed up in order to exploit Stiles’ name value. I’ve seen worse shows on CBC, but I can’t see what the network would pair Memory Lanes with.