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In Focus - The details are what makes Wapos Bay

Wapos Bay has been a favorite of the Yorkton Film Festival since the series began, since the pilot episode - There鈥檚 No I in Hockey, which is also what we鈥檙e looking at today - took home the award for Best Children鈥檚 Programming in 2006.
In Focus

Wapos Bay has been a favorite of the Yorkton Film Festival since the series began, since the pilot episode - There鈥檚 No I in Hockey, which is also what we鈥檙e looking at today - took home the award for Best Children鈥檚 Programming in 2006. The series went on to win the category in 2009 and 2010. Since it has won awards more than once from the festival, it鈥檚 a good reason to see what it was that made the series connect with the festival juries.

As a kid鈥檚 show, the broad strokes are pretty easy to guess, especially in this first episode. Here we have a set of plotlines that are nothing if not familiar to anyone who has sat down to watch a bit of kids TV. We learn the value of teamwork, with T-Bear (Taylor Cook) being a prima-donna with his hockey team and learning why he needs to rely on his teammates in a team sport. This gives the episode its title, and while it鈥檚 a typical plotline for a kids show, it鈥檚 handled well and the big moment at the end to show the lesson has been learned is effective. We learn the value of being considerate, as Raven (Raven Brass) is supposed to cook bannock with her Kohkum but instead mostly blows it off to hang out with her friends. Finally Talon (Eric Jackson) meets a girl he likes, a player for the opposing hockey team, though this storyline mostly just peters out.

None of these stories are new ground for a kid鈥檚 series, but then the broad strokes aren鈥檛 really the strength of the pilot of Wapos Bay. This is a show of details, and the most important detail is the location. Set on a reservation in northern Saskatchewan, it uses a winter festival to cement a sense of place. The events of the festival - hockey tournaments, bannock making competitions, dogsled races - are typical of the setting, and the entire cast is aboriginal. They鈥檙e also all dolls, being a stop-motion animated show, a style that means the animators have to concentrate heavily on the details. The style fits the creation, because it鈥檚 the details that make the show and set it apart from much of the other

The details make it, whether it鈥檚 the perfect re-creation of a small town arena or even an extremely subtle joke. Kohkum鈥檚 husband reacting to Raven saying 鈥淚鈥檝e never seen her this mad鈥 by merely saying 鈥淚 have鈥 in a perfect, tiny moment that defines a long-running marriage. A ref at a hockey game actually forgets his glasses, but the punchline is delivered quietly by his wife.

It can go a bit far with its Canadiana, by which I mean the character of 鈥淒on Red Cherry,鈥 which is a bit of an obvious pick when you鈥檙e putting hockey commentators in your Canadian children鈥檚 show, but in spite of getting a groan from me it鈥檚 going to play fairly well to much of the audience.

The details give the show character. It鈥檚 not doing anything new with the story of its first episode, I鈥檝e seen other kids shows tackle the exact same topics. But the details give it a firm sense of place, they give it a clear voice, and they give the northern kids watching a show that鈥檚 a lot like their home, with kids that look like they would if they were wooden dolls. You could get this story somewhere else, but you can鈥檛 get it in the same way, and the achievement of the show is how it takes a universal kid鈥檚 show template and uses the details and the setting to make it something very distinctive.

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