Wilfred (Australian TV series)

Wilfred is an Australian comedy television series created by Adam Zwar, Jason Gann and Tony Rogers based on their award-winning 2002 short film. The story follows the lives of the eponymous dog Wilfred, his owner Sarah, and her boyfriend Adam, who sees Wilfred as a man in a dog suit. It was directed by Tony Rogers, produced by Jenny Livingston and stars Gann, Zwar and Cindy Waddingham.

Wilfred
Season 1 DVD cover art
GenreBlack comedy
Created byJason Gann
Adam Zwar
Directed byTony Rogers
StarringJason Gann
Adam Zwar
Cindy Waddingham
Theme music composerSam Mallet
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of series2
No. of episodes16 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producersJoe Connor
Ken Connor
ProducerJenny Livingston
CinematographyDavid Stevens (2007)
Germain McMicking (2010)[1]
Camera setupAaton Xterà (16mm)
Running timeApprox. 25 minutes
Production companyRenegade Films[2]
Release
Original networkSBS One
Original release19 March 2007 (2007-03-19) 
26 March 2010 (2010-03-26)
Related
Wilfred (U.S. TV series)

Two series were broadcast on SBS One, the first in 2007 and the second in 2010. The series won three AFI Awards and was nominated for a Logie.

Independent Film Channel acquired the international broadcast rights to the original two series of Wilfred in 2010. An American remake premiered on the cable channel FX on 23 June 2011.[3]

Background

Wilfred's creators, longtime friends Jason Gann and Adam Zwar, met at the University of Southern Queensland in 1990, where Gann studied acting and Zwar studied journalism.[4] Adam Zwar later met future co-star Cindy Waddingham and director Tony Rogers in September 2001 while filming a commercial for HBA health insurance (he was the buck-toothed client who sprayed the slogan "Three for free").[4][5]

The idea that became Wilfred came from a late-night conversation between Gann and Zwar in November 2001. Zwar told of how he was invited back to the home of a young woman whose dog became suspicious and jealous of him. The pair began improvising a scenario between a man and a protective dog, and quickly realized the story was a great basis for a short film – they wrote a script that night.[6][7] With a self-funded budget of A$4,000,[8] they shot the seven-minute film the following week, and two months later it won Best Comedy at the 2002 Tropfest, with Gann additionally winning Best Actor. In January 2003, the film was shown at the Sundance Film Festival in Utah. Despite some reservations about Wilfred's brief use of the word "cunt", it was well received by the American audience.[9][10]

After the success of the short, Zwar, Gann, and Rogers worked with Melbourne production team Renegade Films to extend the 7-minute short to a 20-minute pilot, merging the original footage seamlessly into new.[10] Networks were initially unenthusiastic about the pilot – according to Rogers, "Wilfred was rejected by every television network twice".[11] It was eventually picked up by Matt Campbell at SBS. Commissioning editor Debbie Lee offered the team unusually wide artistic freedom, saying "Go as far as you want – the more bent the better".[4] Finally, the 25-minute pilot episode was completed in 2006, comprising material shot over five years.[10]

Production

The first series of Wilfred was shot in and around Richmond, Victoria[12] beginning in April 2006, with David Stevens as director of photography. It was shot in 16mm on a budget of A$1.6 million.[13] Of this, $210,000 was provided by Film Victoria and $400,000 by the Australian Film Commission.[14]

Film Victoria approved funding for a second series in early 2009.[15] With Germain McMicking as director of photography, Wilfred II was shot in Kodak 16mm on an Aaton Xtera Super 16 using ARRI/Zeiss Ultra Prime lenses. Although he and director Tony Rogers considered using digital cameras, they were so happy with the film tests that they did not bother inquiring further about digital. The flexibility of film suited the production's modest budget and tight schedule. "Rebooting a RED camera isn’t something you want with actors under the lights in dog suits or in a taxing scene" said McMicking.[1]

Series 2 was shot over eight weeks, finishing in August 2009.[1] The second series also received federal funding, with Film Victoria contributing $294,048 and Screen Australia contributing $580,000.[14]

Cast

Main

CastRole
Adam ZwarAdam
Cindy WaddinghamSarah
Jason GannWilfred
Kym GyngellJack Underwood
Angus SampsonCyros
Damian Walshe-HowlingKeith
Kate JenkinsonCaddy
Kestie MorassiKat
Josh LawsonSpencer
David FieldArthur

Guests

CastRole
Samuel Johnson
Jessica Gower

Crew

CrewJob
Adam ZwarWriter/Creator
Jason GannWriter/Creator
Tony RogersDirector/Producer
Jenny LivingstonProducer
Joe ConnorExecutive Producer
Sam MalletMusic
David StevensCinematographer
Richard HamerFilm Editor
Rob HornbuckleProduction Sound Mixer
Helen McGrathBoom Operator
Mike CowapProject Manager
Paul Di CintioLocation Manager

Characters

Wilfred

Wilfred, Sarah's dog, is nine years old and 1/16th dingo (the rest is a mix of German Shepherd and Labrador).[16][17][18] He is protective of his owner, and insecure and manipulative towards her boyfriends. He smokes cigarettes and marijuana, drinks beer, eats junk food, and is prone to foul language, malapropisms, and sexual urges. While Adam (and the viewer) sees Wilfred as a man in a dog suit, to everyone else he is just a normal dog. He has been described as "extremely smart for a dog, but pretty dumb for a human."[19]

Little is revealed about Wilfred's past in the first series. It is implied that Sarah is not Wilfred's first owner, and that he served numerous stints at the pound before being adopted by her.[20]

In the second series, this backstory was changed. It is revealed that Wilfred in fact grew up with Sarah and her parents in Nambour. His grumpy father Arthur still lives there, but his mother left when Wilfred was a pup. Wilfred was the runt of the litter; his only brother, Walter, became an army dog and was killed in the Iraq War. Arthur thinks his only surviving son is a disappointment and blames him for his mother leaving them. Wilfred has been estranged from his father since Sarah first moved to Melbourne.[21]

Adam

Adam Douglas is an ordinary bloke from Ripponlea in Melbourne, Victoria.[22] He works occasionally as a media monitor,[23] but clients are scarce and he remains pretty much unemployed for the entire two seasons. He does not cause any trouble and trouble rarely comes his way – that is, until he meets Wilfred. His ability to talk to Wilfred at first leaves him nonplussed, but he soon accepts this as normal, and sometimes has trouble remembering that others do not see Wilfred the same way he does.

When Adam hooks up with Sarah, he is eager to please and to make their relationship work, but he has a love-hate relationship with Wilfred. Adam tries to be friends with Wilfred but usually – and ultimately – ends up being a victim of Wilfred's plots to sabotage his relationship with Sarah. Along the way, he always tries to do the right thing, but occasionally shows that he is capable of great evil.[19]

Adam's parents were key witnesses in a murder trial when Adam was still at school; they were taken into a witness protection scheme. After some years of living with relatives and in foster care, Adam returned to the family home and brought up his younger brother Spencer on his own.[24]

The character's last name was changed from Zavont to Douglas for the second series. This was done to incorporate a backstory that Adam was once caught masturbating at school, leading to the catchphrase "Tugga-dugga-dugga".[25]

Sarah

Sarah Pickford is Wilfred's loving owner, an attractive yet foul-mouthed young woman with some kind of undisclosed day job; she has been called the "straight man" of the series.[19][26] From Sarah's point of view, Wilfred is an actual dog, rather than a man in a dog suit. She believes that Wilfred likes Adam and naturally doesn't suspect her dog of the manipulative behaviour experienced by Adam. Sarah becomes increasingly financially supportive of Adam as the storyline progresses, bringing the house, car and most of the money to their relationship.[17]

Sarah grew up in Nambour, Queensland with her nudist parents. Her previous boyfriend, Mark, died in an accident, and most of the first series takes place in his house as Sarah and Wilfred continue to live there. At the end of the first season, Mark's will is contested and Sarah and Wilfred are forced to move out of the house.[16]

Overview

Series 1

The first series comprised eight episodes running from 19 March to 7 May 2007, broadcast on SBS One in the Monday 10:00pm timeslot.[27] Each episode follows the story about a girl named Sarah, her dog Wilfred, and her boyfriend, Adam. After their first date, Adam goes home with Sarah and meets her scruffy pet dog Wilfred, but Adam (as well as the audience) sees the latter as a human dressed in an unconvincing dog costume. The dog develops a grudge against his owner's new boyfriend and tests him to see if he is capable of being his new "daddy". At the same time, Wilfred sees Adam as a potential companion. It is the tension between these two competing desires that sets up much of the conflict of the series. According to Zwar, Wilfred is a story of Australian mateship: "...it's a story about two blokes; just one happens to be a dog".[4]

Series 2

Filming for the second series of Wilfred occurred in the second half of 2009.[28] The series comprised eight episodes, also each Monday from 8 March to 26 April 2010, but in an earlier 9:00pm timeslot.[27] The first episode finds the trio moving into a new house at 22 Dalziel St, Richmond.[29] While the series begins with the familiar domestic dynamic that characterised the first series, the story quickly branches out to explore new settings, characters and tensions. When Adam decides to ask Sarah to marry him in the first episode, the impending wedding drives the story arc between one episode and the next in a manner quite different to the first series. It also explores themes of maturity that accompany marriage (such as meeting the parents, family holidays, being supportive, parenthood and financial trouble).[29] The guest cast features many stars of Australian film, who enter the story in the form of "guest creatures" (also people in animal suits).[30]

Critical reception

Domestic

Wilfred received generally positive reviews, and surprised critics by winning the 2007 AFI Award for Best Comedy over The Chaser's War on Everything, despite achieving only a tenth of The Chaser's audience. Adam Zwar also won the award for Best Performance in a TV Comedy for his portrayal of Adam.[31]

The series was widely praised for its original premise. Melinda Houston, writing in The Age, called Wilfred "a magnificent creation, magnificently realised", and that "operating from a deeply non-PC premise, Wilfred manages to be both broad and subtle, hilarious and creepy, utterly obvious and way-way-way left-field".[19] Phillipa Hawker, also in The Age, called Wilfred "An entertaining mixture of character-based comedy and quiet absurdity".[32] Natalie Craig from the Sydney Morning Herald compared the show favourably with another successful suburban comedy, saying "while Kath & Kim was straightforward suburban satire, Wilfred is a more complex beast that deserves a tasty snack for effort and originality".[33]

Conversely, Jim Schembri of the Sydney Morning Herald called the concept "muddled", criticising the show for everything from its character development and humour to its 16:9 aspect ratio, and wondering "how a show as lame as this ever got on the air".[34] Paul Kalina, writing in The Age, dismissed Wilfred as a "bogan show", saying of the decision to discontinue it after the second season "There's only so far the conceit can stretch and one senses that Gann and Zwar know this".[35]

The show was criticised in March 2010 when the Herald Sun reported that up to A$1.5M of government money had been allocated to the production of a series "peppered with profanity, full-frontal nudity and jokes about rape". Family First Party Senator Steve Fielding accused the show of displaying "acts of bestiality". SBS responded to the criticism by stating that "The money that has been invested(...) is in no way outlandish. Wilfred would cost far less to make than your average drama."[14]

International

Critical attention from international reviewers was rare until after the international release of the DVD box-set in mid-2012, well into the American version's second season. Many reviewers commented that it was surprisingly different to the American version, despite the near-identical premise and even the same lead actor. Reviews generally compared the show favourably to its American counterpart, noting its darker, edgier tone, and with most finding it funnier than the "toned-down" American version. Paul Mavis of DVD Talk (USA) praised the show's minimal exploration of the mental health themes so prominent in the US version: "The laughs are unfettered by some falsely reassuring framework of whether or not it's all real."[36] However, Manny Lozano (VeryAware, USA) found that the lack of any explanation for Adam's apparent psychosis made the show less credible.[37]

A particular point of difference with Australian reviewers was a recognition of the quality of all three, deeply flawed main characters. Kelly O'Neill (Rhythm Circus UK) called Wilfred "almost documentary-like in its ability to capture human and animal behaviour... The American version cannot hope to master [the original] if it places light comedy and attractive main stars over character development and the concept of dark comedy.[38] Nick Aldwinckle of Cult Box (UK) similarly stated "Wilfred's real strength isn’t in its carefully unpredictable tone; it actually lies in the perfect characterisation of the three leads," and compared Wilfred to several much-loved British classics: "Ending after a mere 16 episodes, this is one of those rare sitcoms that join the likes of Fawlty Towers, I'm Alan Partridge and The Office in that esteemed 'two series of perfection' category."[39]

Awards

YearResultAwardCategoryRecipient(s)
2007WonAFI AwardBest Television Comedy SeriesJenny Livingston[40]
2007WonAFI AwardBest Performance in Television ComedyAdam Zwar[40]
2007NominatedAFI AwardBest Performance in Television ComedyJason Gann[40]
2007NominatedAFI AwardBest Direction in TelevisionTony Rogers for "Dogs of War"[40]
2008NominatedAWGIE AwardComedy – Situation or NarrativeAdam Zwar and Jason Gann for "Dog Eat Dog"[41]
2008NominatedLogieMost Outstanding Comedy Program[42]
2010WonAFI AwardBest Screenplay in TelevisionAdam Zwar and Jason Gann for "Dog Star"[43]
2010NominatedAFI AwardBest Television Comedy SeriesAdam Zwar, Jason Gann, Tony Rogers and Jenny Livingston[43]
2010NominatedLogieMost Outstanding Light Entertainment Program[44]
2011NominatedSilver LogieMost Outstanding ActorJason Gann[45]

International broadcasts

The broadcast rights to the original two seasons of Wilfred were purchased by IFC in 2010.

U.S. version

In March 2010, Adam Zwar announced that the second series of Wilfred would be his last, as he was going off to work on the multi-award-winning Australian comedy series Lowdown. It was also revealed that the rights had been sold to the American production company Prospect Park,[46] and that Jason Gann was in Los Angeles working on an American version of the series.[6] In June 2010, cable channel FX announced that an American version of the series would air in June 2011.[3] While FX indicated that there could be some changes to the scenarios and dialogue, producer Jenny Livingston offered the assurance that it would "still be our Wilfred".[47]

The American series, produced by David Zuckerman (Family Guy, American Dad!) along with Gann (who also reprises his role as Wilfred), stars Elijah Wood as Ryan, a young man trying to find his way in the world. His suicide attempt at the beginning of the first episode is thwarted when his neighbour Jenna (Fiona Gubelmann) asks him to look after her dog. In contrast to the original series, the American version is more of a buddy comedy, and also delves into the question of whether Wilfred is real or just a figment of Ryan's imagination. Wilfred acts as a life mentor to Ryan, representing his unrepressed animalistic side; he has been described as "Brad Pitt to Ryan's Ed Norton".[48]

The reception of the US version mirrored that in Australia, with the new show gaining a cult following. In October 2013, Wilfred was signed for a fourth and final season, the most of any international adaptation of an Australian series.[49][50]

Russian version

In April 2012, Renegade Films signed a deal with Ukraine-based studio Star Media Group to adapt Wilfred for Russian and CIS television. The deal was finalised in October 2013 and production started in the same month, with the new show to be retitled Charlie.[50][51][52] Star Media's plot synopsis indicates the 12-episode series will revolve around a young man named Nikita attempting to woo a woman who owns a dog named Charlie, but unfortunately Nikita and Charlie take an instant dislike to one another (suggesting the Russian version will be more similar to the original series than the American remake). The show will star Maksim Stetskov as Nikita, and Maksim Averin as Charlie.[53]

Home Media

Wilfred was distributed on DVD in Australia by SBS and Madman Entertainment. Series 1 was released in April 2007, and Series 2 on 19 April 2010, both on 2-disc sets.[29][54] A box-set of both series was released on 2 November 2011, under the title Wilfred: Dog Box.[55]

In the UK, Fabulous Films released seasons 1 and 2 separately on DVD on 12 March 2012.[56] They later released a 4-disc set under the title Wilfred: The Complete Original Australian Series on 20 August 2012. Both versions carried an 18 certificate.[57]

In North America, Shout! Factory released the series on a 4-disc DVD set under the title Wilfred: The Complete Original Series on 4 June 2013.[58]

See also

References

  1. "The return of Wilfred" (PDF). In Camera : Focus on Film. Kodak. 5 January 2010. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  2. Wilfred Company credits. IMDb.
  3. Ausiello, Michael (29 June 2010). "Scoop: FX snags Elijah Wood for new comedy 'Wilfred'". Entertainment Weekly, Inside TV. Retrieved 13 October 2013.
  4. McManus, Bridget (15 March 2007). "A tale of two blokes who play the wag". The Age. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  5. HBA Insurance: "Get three months extras free". YouTube.
  6. Molitorisz, Sacha (8 March 2010). "Dog's days are over". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  7. Curt Wagner (22 June 2011). "Dog days for Jason Gann in 'Wilfred'". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved 8 July 2011.
  8. Michael Bodey (17 May 2010). "Wilfred gets ready to take a bow-wow on American TV". The Australian. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
  9. "Fast Forward". The Sydney Morning Herald. 19 February 2003. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  10. Taffel, Jacqui (19 March 2003). "My life as a dog". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  11. "US Wilfred premieres tonight; Renegade Films interview". 28 June 2011. Archived from the original on 1 July 2011. Retrieved 7 July 2011.
  12. Wilfred Series 1 DVD – Extras – Crew Montage 1
  13. Television Production Reports, Encore Magazine, 1 February 2006, archived from the original on 11 October 2012, retrieved 29 June 2011
  14. Duck, Siobhan (20 March 2010). "Plenty of bong for your buck". Herald Sun.
  15. David Knox (8 April 2009). "Wilfred barks again". TV Tonight. Retrieved 29 June 2011.
  16. Series 1, Episode 8 – This Dog's Life"
  17. Series 2, Episode 1 – "Kiss Me Kat"
  18. Australian Series 2, Episode 7 – Dog Star"
  19. Houston, Melinda (18 March 2007). "Manic Monday". The Age. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  20. Series 1, Episode 7 – "Barking Behind Bars"
  21. Series 2, Episode 2 – "Dog Of A Town"
  22. Adam's driver's license is shown after the credits in Season 1 Episode 2 – it lists his name as Adam D Zavont and his address as Glen Eira Road, Ripponlea
  23. Series 2, Episode 5 – "The Ice Dog Cometh"
  24. Series 2, Episode 4 – "Honey, You're Killing The Dog"
  25. Series 2 DVD Extras – "The Making Of"
  26. Knox, David (3 March 2010). "An impossible act ignoring Wilfred". TV.com. Retrieved 15 June 2011.
  27. David Knox (20 August 2009). "Wilfred: Old dog, new tricks". TV Tonight. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  28. Seinor, Blythe (14 August 2009). "Doggy can do". Sunshine Coast Daily. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  29. Ward, Sarah (21 May 2010). "Wilfred: The Second Series". DVD Bits. Retrieved 21 June 2011.
  30. Knox, David (February 2010). "Wilfred let off the chain again". Citysearch.com. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  31. Maddox, Garry (6 December 2007). "Wilfred the underdog wins war on awards". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  32. Hawker, Phillipa (23 May 2007). "Wilfred – DVD review". The Age. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  33. Craig, Natalie (26 March 2007). "Wilfred – TV review". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 17 June 2011.
  34. Schembri, Jim (9 April 2007). "TV Review – Wilfred". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  35. Kalina, Paul (15 March 2010). "Entertainment – Monday, March 15". The Age. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
  36. Paul Mavis (23 July 2013). "Wilfred: The Complete Original Series". DVD Talk. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  37. Manny Lozano (6 June 2013). "DVD Review – WILFRED: THE COMPLETE ORIGINAL SERIES". VeryAware. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  38. Kelly O'Neill (10 March 2012). "Wilfred". Rhythm Circus. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  39. Nick Aldwinckle (11 April 2012). "'Wilfred': Season 1 & 2 DVD review". Cult Box. Retrieved 11 November 2013.
  40. 2007 AFI Awards. Australian Television Information Archive.
  41. AWG Victoria Members' Night – The Lowdown on Lowdown. awg.com.
  42. 50th Annual Logie Awards. Australian Television Information Archive.
  43. 2010 Samsung Mobile AFI Awards Nominees & Winners. AFI.org.
  44. Knox, David (29 March 2010). "TV Week Logie Awards Nominees". TV Tonight. Retrieved 20 June 2011.
  45. 2011 Logie Awards. Australian Television Information Archive.
  46. Natalie Craig (26 August 2012). "Rags to stitches". The Age. Retrieved 4 September 2012.
  47. "FX commissions US Wilfred pilot". Encore Magazine. 14 May 2010. Retrieved 19 June 2011.
  48. Margaret Lyons (24 June 2011). "Compare Wilfred to the Australian Original". Vulture. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  49. AJ Marechal (2 October 2013). "FX's Wilfred to end after fourth season". Variety. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  50. David Knox (12 October 2013). "Meet the Russian Wilfred". TV Tonight. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  51. Michael Idato (11 October 2013). "Wilfred producers seal Russian deal". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2 November 2013.
  52. Vlad Riashyn (18 April 2012). "Star Media Plans Filming "Wilfred"". Star Media Group. Retrieved 3 November 2013.
  53. "Charlie". www.starmediafilm.com.
  54. Madman Entertainment. "Wilfred – Series 2". Madman home page. Madman Entertainment.
  55. Wilfred – Box-Set (Madman Entertainment)
  56. "Wilfred - The Original Australian Season One". 12 March 2012 via Amazon.
  57. "Wilfred - The Complete Original Australian Series". 20 August 2012 via Amazon.
  58. "Wilfred: The Complete Original Series - DVD - Shout! Factory". www.shoutfactory.com.
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