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More Jack Irish in the pipeline

Producer Ian Collie says he hopes to produce at least two more Jack Irish telemovies.

If you loved Jack Irish here’s the good news.

Producer Ian Collie has plans for two more telemovies.

As he explained to TV Tonight, he convinced novelist Peter Temple to look beyond assigning him the rights to one telemovie of Jack Irish: Bad Debts.

“A stand alone, one-off telemovie is quite a hard sell. What would be better is to pitch it as a franchise such as Rebus or Wallander. That’s what executives want,” he explains.

“So we optioned four Jack Irish books. There are two that we are introducing and hopefully we’ll do the other two, and he has a fifth as a work in progress. The game plan is to do all five as a Jack Irish suite of telemovies.”

The second, Jack Irish: Black Tide airs this Sunday night on ABC1.

But there are plans to adapt Dead Point and White Dog novels.

Collie, from Essential Media, had the opportunity to option the novels after the rights to Bad Debts had lapsed with another producer.

“I thought ABC was the right home for it because he’s hard to define. He’s not an archetypical homicide detective or private investigator, he’s actually a bloke like you and I, maybe with a bit more presence, who gets caught up in the eye of the storm,” he says.

“So it’s not a neat genre sell to all networks and also it’s very character driven….. also because I’d established relationships with the ABC by doing Rake and a number of other things like Stepfather of the Bride.”

Temple had made attempts to adapt Bad Debts but under Collie, Andrew Knight wrote the screenplay with Matt Cameron adapting Black Tide.

“Peter had found it really hard because he had to drop characters and storylines and make it 2 x 100 minutes as a two-part telemovie. But the ABC wanted a self-contained telemovie. I think he found it too hard to emotionally cut himself off. He loves TV but maybe not the actual machinations of it,” says Collie.

“Both Andrew and Matt really channeled the detective voice. When it came to constructing the dialogue they could almost lift from the book and other times they had to create their own dialogue but hear Peter Temple’s voice in it. There’s a laconic, droll delivery with humour that is a bit ironic.”

The two telemovies have attracted solid reviews for ABC1 and strong ratings in a competitive timeslot. The ensemble cast has assembled some of the best character actors in the country.

“Getting Guy Pearce was a coup. We had a few Jack Irishes in mind, but it just shows you how much telly has changed, internationally, that it’s attracting big players,” says Collie.

“Obviously a film star isn’t going to do a long-running series but the fact that it was a telemovie in Melbourne ticks a few boxes.”

He also attributed the stellar cast to three drawcards: Temple, Pearce and Knight / Cameron scripts.

“I think they acted like a magnet to attract a great cast,” he says.

“A lot of the cast are only here for one day but in a sense it probably works for them. It’s an embarrassment of riches and for some roles in particular it was really hard to make the call.”

Jack Irish: Black Tide airs 8:30pm Sunday on ABC1.

3 Responses

  1. The acting was great in this first one, the basic story was good too, but the script had several plot and logic issues that detracted from my enjoyment of it. I can understand how Temple would’ve had problems cutting a book-length work like this down for a TV movie, it seems Andrew Knight had problems too. Unfortunately his version went to air.

    For example – the three heroes are fleeing the bad guys and talk to the murdered SB cop’s wife, she tells them she doesn’t know what the evidence is but has a good idea where it is hidden. “You’ve got a long drive”, she says. Next they are arriving at an isolated farmhouse the location of which is never mentioned, and we never find out what it’s connection to the cop was or how his wife knew about it.

    The former planning Minister is in a wheelchair, but we never find out when or how this happened, or what plot purpose it serves (aside from making for a horrific way for him to be murdered).

  2. I hope they make more Jack Irish telemovies, but the sticking point is Guy Pearce’s film career. I’m not saying that Pearce would turn down the opportunity, but as he is in so much in demand overseas, the scheduling of filming the telemovies becomes so important.

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