Interview: Scott Swofford of “Granite Flats”

Posted on April 5, 2013 at 9:27 pm

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EiatBUo6crs

It’s 1962 when recently widowed Beth and her son Arthur move to rural Granite Flats, Colorado. They meet a town thrown into fear and suspicion after a terrible explosion at the nearby air base. As the military and police investigate, Arthur and his new friends explore the mystery and begin to unravel a web of secrets that will change Granite Flats forever.

Granite Flats is a new series on BYUtv, premiering Sunday at 7 and available On Demand, on iTunes, and pretty much every place.  It is that rarest of shows in this era of micro-targeting, a genuinely family-friendly story that can be enjoyed by all ages and discussed afterward.  Producer/director Scott Swofford talked to me about what they wanted to accomplish, where the idea came from, and the surprising reason it is set in the 1960’s.

Your background is in documentary, isn’t it?

Yes, but in the IMAX world you’re called upon all the time to do re-creations, and that is more like drama than documentary.  And this project is kind of a pioneering thing.  We’re trying to do family entertainment that isn’t kiddie shows.  The ususal skills set didn’t apply because this was new for everyone.

How did it get started? 

We had this channel with university support that was primarily used for forums and speeches but could be much more.  You’re on in 60 million homes; what could your voice for good be in the world?  Viewers wanted entertainment.  Don’t you want to be educated, edified, and enlightened? The answer we got was, “Entertain us and sneak in what ever you want.”  It’s like, kids want to eat pizza but we want them to eat broccoli.  If there’s too much broccoli, they won’t eat it.  Reality is popular now, but scripted stories transport us to someplace, we get invested in characters, and it’s more emotional, not just intellectual.

Was it a challenge for BYUtv to produce a scripted show? 

This market has done scripted before, like “Touched by an Angel.”  The execution phase has been easy for us but we hadn’t generated original programming.  It’s an opportunity for us because hardly anyone is in this category of programming that is truly for the whole family and not just something that is inoffensive enough so kids can watch.  We were committed to a story that was appealing to kids but also had a sophisticated plot line to make it interesting.  We decided to set it in the 60’s.  By putting our desire to communicate in a time machine it makes it easier to be compelling, other side of the county than mad men.  And it was routine in a 60’s story that you would not have some of the bad language and family-unfriendly themes of shows set in our time.

It began with a 20 minute concept piece called “Heaven Under the Table” about a kid who lost his dad and struggled with the idea of where he went.  He saw a satellite and thought maybe it was his dad.  We dropped into it all the shenanigans the government was doing in the Cold War.  

Tell me about the people who are working on “Granite Flats.”

We have a highly diverse group of writers including a Mormon, an Orthodox Jew, A Buddhist, an agnostic — which helps us explore issues of faith, struggles, making choices, and ethical dilemmas.  And many of the actors we went to were very experienced and very expensive.  But they said “I don’t get to do anything like this.”  They loved the script, so they signed a not for profit SAG contract. Our budget is about a third of what Hollywood spends on a drama.  We are lucky to have a lot of vets who have done this before.

What were some of the challenges of having the story set in another time period?  Was there a lot of research involved? 

Some details I pull right from my memory, the pencil sharpeners and the classrooms.  But sidewalks?  Air conditioners?  Power poles? We have to Google everything.  The costume designer got a lot of old LIFE magazines.  Fortunately, there’s a retro surge in clothing so that wasn’t hard to find but the vehicles were a challenge.  We filmed in a mining town called Magna, Utah.  They were great — they let us redo signage and recreate storefronts, ferreting out the nuggets of that era.

The younger actors had some surprises.  We shot a scene with a 30-year-old actress.  She was shocked by the coin pay phone and jumped when it dinged.  Kids in the cast ask, “what does this mean?” about the idiomatic expressions.  But their parents say we’ve improved their language!

What makes you think this will appeal to all ages? 

If they sit down and watch together, which is the goal, the parents will want to ask, “Did we we really do that to ourselves in the Cold War” and kids will say, “How is that chracter going to deal with the bully?”  And I showed my grandchildren and my 96-year-old father the first two episodes and they both said, “Why did you bring only two? What happens next?”

 

 

 

 

Related Tags:

 

Television

All My Children and One Life to Live are Back!

Posted on March 28, 2013 at 3:59 pm

The two popular soap operas cancelled by ABC in 2011 are back at last!  The Online Network (available on Hulu and iTunes) will have new episodes starting on April 29.  Fans should know that “All My Children” is leaping five years ahead from where it left off, so children in the broadcast version will now be teenagers.  It is very exciting to see the way fan support can lead to a reboot here as it did with the Kickstarter campaign for Veronica Mars.

Related Tags:

 

Internet, Gaming, Podcasts, and Apps Television

Bindi Irwin Stars in Hallmark Channel’s “Return to Nim’s Island”

Posted on March 9, 2013 at 8:00 am

Bindi Irwin, the 14-year-old daughter of wildlife enthusiast Steve Irwin, stars in “Return to Nim’s Island,” a Hallmark Channel Original Movie World Premiere on Friday, March 15 (8 p.m. ET/PT, 7C).

“Return to Nim’s Island” kicks off Hallmark Channel’s new Walden Family Theater, created by Walmart, P&G, Walden Media and ARC Entertainment. “Return to Nim’s Island” is based on the novel Nim at Sea by Australian author Wendy Orr and is the sequel to the 2008 action-adventure international box office hit “Nim’s Island.” In “Return to Nim’s Island,” Nim (Irwin) and her father Jack (Matthew Lillard; “The Descendants,” “Scream”) discover that greedy resort developers plan to buy their beloved Nim’s Island and turn it into a tourist destination, endangering the local wildlife. So Nim takes it upon herself to recruit some animal allies in her battle against the forces who care more about profitability than morality. One of her assistants includes Selkie, a savvy sea lion and Nim’s best pal. Selkie winds up getting kidnapped by a fisherman and his sons (John Waters, Sebastian Gregory, Jack Pearson) who intend to sell her. Nim realizes she can’t depend on her animal cohorts alone and relies on her first human friend, Edmund (Toby Wallace), to help save her home. Along with Jack’s intern, Felix (Nathan Derrick), Nim and Edmund work together and try to defeat the developers and save the beloved island and its endangered species.

Related Tags:

 

Based on a book Environment/Green Series/Sequel Stories About Kids Television

Contest: H2O — Just Add Water

Posted on March 6, 2013 at 8:00 am

“H2O” is the delightful Nickelodeon series about three teenage girls who gain special powers after a visit to a mysterious island.  And I have copies of the whole first season to give away, with a special bonus — a 90-minute feature film version.  Send me an email at moviemom@moviemom.com with H2O in the subject line and tell me what superpower you would most like to have.  Don’t forget your address!  (US addresses only.)  I’ll pick the winners at random on March 12.  Good luck!

Related Tags:

 

Contests and Giveaways Television Tweens

Floor Plans of Movie and Television Living Spaces

Posted on March 4, 2013 at 3:49 pm

On Etsy, you can find floor plans of the homes of movie and television characters by Iñaki Aliste Lizarralde that are works of art in themselves.  Look at the homes of Will and Grace, Carrie Bradshaw, Dexter, the Golden Girls, Monica, Rachel, Chandler, and Joey, and “Breakfast at Tiffany’s” Holly Golightly.

Related Tags:

 

Behind the Scenes Understanding Media and Pop Culture
THE MOVIE MOM® is a registered trademark of Nell Minow. Use of the mark without express consent from Nell Minow constitutes trademark infringement and unfair competition in violation of federal and state laws. All material © Nell Minow 1995-2024, all rights reserved, and no use or republication is permitted without explicit permission. This site hosts Nell Minow’s Movie Mom® archive, with material that originally appeared on Yahoo! Movies, Beliefnet, and other sources. Much of her new material can be found at Rogerebert.com, Huffington Post, and WheretoWatch. Her books include The Movie Mom’s Guide to Family Movies and 101 Must-See Movie Moments, and she can be heard each week on radio stations across the country.

Website Designed by Max LaZebnik