Friday, February 14, 2025

"Fox Orders ‘Murder In A Small Town’ Drama Series Starring Rossif Sutherland & Kristin Kreuk Under New International Content Strategy"/ "Murder In A Small Town Season 2: Will It Happen? Everything We Know"

Dec. 14, 2023 "Fox Orders ‘Murder In A Small Town’ Drama Series Starring Rossif Sutherland & Kristin Kreuk Under New International Content Strategy": Today I found this article by Nellie Andreeva on Deadline: 


EXCLUSIVEFox has picked up psychological crime drama Murder in a Small Town, starring Rossif Sutherland (The Handmaid’s Tale) and Kristin Kreuk (Smallville), for the 2024-25 season. 

The network has acquired U.S. rights to the series, based on the “Karl Alberg” books by L.R. Wright,,

which hails from head writer Ian Weir (Edgemont), 

director Milan Cheylov (The Cleaning Lady) 

and Canada’s Sepia Films in association with Fox Entertainment and Future Shack Entertainment, the company of former USA Network President Jeff Wachtel.

This marks Fox’s first green light to a scripted series co-produced with an international studio.

Murder In a Small Town illustrates our ongoing strategy

 to identify 

and commission impactful global content 

in a smart and effective manner with proven creative partners,” 

said Michael Thorn, Fox Entertainment’s President, Scripted Programming.

Looking abroad is a natural extension to Fox’s current development model, put in motion in 2020, which foregoes pilots in favor of more cost-efficient straight-to-series orders. 

(On the comedy side, Fox occasionally does presentations as part of the development process.)

In drama, Fox has been using a script-to-series template, 

commissioning two scripts 

and a series format for most projects 

and writers rooms to produce 3-4 scripts 

and a bible for the more densely serialized ones.

Being independent, 

with no vertically integrated studio 

or sibling SVOD platform, 

Fox has instituted a disciplined approach, 

capping drama budgets at $3M-$4M an episode, sources said. 

While that was considered a bit of an anomaly early on, more networks and platforms are starting to target similar price ranges amid a Hollywood belt tightening, making Fox an early adopter of a new industry standard.

Working within that framework has not been limiting, according to Thorn. It has allowed the network’s executives to “turn off the noise of the marketplace” by not

pursuing pitches built around packages stacked with pricey above-the-line talent, 

high-end fantasy/sci-fi concepts 

or expensive IP

and instead identifying the right creatives to sign pacts with, including direct deals like the one with Dan Harmon that led to Krapopolis.

“If you build it from the ground up 

and are very transparent with the creatives about the business,

 most people say yes,” 

Thorn said, noting that Fox has been able to land dramas from top producers such as Howard Gordon, John Wells, Hank Steinberg, 

Barbie Kligman, and has been partnering with independent studios such as Warner Bros. TV, Lionsgate TV and Sony TV under the new model.

“We believe we can have a shared win, which is good for everybody,” 

he said about working with co-producing partners.

That now includes international studios which, in addition to being able 

to deliver series at an attractive price point, 

can also handle physical production.

“Even though we are growing our in-house studio capabilities, we don’t have a vertically integrated infrastructure like some of our competitors,” Thorn said, referring to Fox Entertainment handling production for its fully-owned comedy series Animal Control alongside the company’s animated house Bento Box and alternative studio. 

(While Fox doesn’t currently have a fully owned drama series after the network’s first foray with the short-lived Monarch, 

“we are absolutely working on Fox owned drama and we have several in development,” Thorn said.)

But above all, “our goal is to find signature voices and great partners to make premium content with,” Thorn said about the expansion into international content production.

“There are so many great writers and talent outside the U.S.”

Many American networks and streamers leaned on international series during the double Hollywood strikes, which shut down U.S. production. 

Fox’s efforts started well before that, Thorn said, starting with an outreach in Canada and the UK.

In October, after months of conversations, Fox announced pacts with 

Canada’s Bell Media 

and UK’s Eagle Eye 

and Clapperboard. 

A British development slate is already in the pipeline and discussions with potential Australian partners are underway. “It’s only the beginning,” Thorn said.

Murder In a Small Town originated with Canadian studio Sepia Films which had developed the project internally, commissioning Weir to write four scripts.

Wachtel — who launched Future Shack Entertainment last year with the goal of developing and co-financing shows for global audiences and an initial focus on Canadian projects — put the drama on Fox’s radar.

“It’s a joy to be doing this wonderful show with my old friends at Fox,” Wachtel said. “Ian, Milan, Rossif and Kristin form the core of a world-class creative team that will bring this unique detective show to life.”

Common issue for international series airing in the U.S. is relatability. Fox’s goal is “to find characters and concepts that will speak to the Fox audience,” Thorn said, noting that Murder In a Small Town fits that bill.

“It’s a wonderful, great aspirational series which will feel very specific to our audience, with the promise of a signature Fox character in Karl Alberg,” Thorn said.

Based on the Edgar Award-winning, nine-book “Karl Alberg” series by the late Canadian author L.R. Wright, 

Murder in a Small Town follows Karl Alberg (Sutherland), who moves to a quiet coastal town to soothe a psyche that has been battered by big-city police work. 

But this gentle paradise has more than its share of secrets, and Karl will need to call upon all the skills that made him a world-class detective in solving the murders that, even in this seemingly idyllic setting, continue to wash up on his shore. 

Kreuk stars as Cassandra, a local librarian who becomes Alberg’s muse, foil and romantic interest.

“Ian has done a masterful job bringing L.R. Wright’s seminal detective Karl Alberg to life, finding his perfect alter ego, Rossif Sutherland, to star on screen alongside Kristin Kreuk,” Thorn said.

Imported scripted series are often being relegated to summer runs in the U.S. but Murder In a Small Town is targeted for the regular 2024-25 season where it would launch alongside high-profile new drama series Doc and the Wells-produced Rescue: Hi-Surf, which were pushed from midseason 2024 due to strike-related production delays, along with returning drama 9-1-1: Lone Star.

“We believe that these series can run side-by-side” with U.S.-produced shows, Thorn said of the international projects.

Production on Murder in a Small Town is slated to begin in January in British Columbia, with Cheylov executive producing and directing multiple episodes. Also executive producing are Weir, Nick Orchard (Soapbox Productions), Morris Ruskin and Sharon Wisnia (Mojo Global Arts) and Jon Cotton.

“We are thrilled to be collaborating with Fox Entertainment and Future Shack on an innovative production model that will bring the internationally acclaimed Karl Alberg mystery novels by Edgar Award-winning novelist L.R. Wright to the screen,” said Tina Pehme and Kim Roberts, Co-CEOs/Producers of Sepia Films.

Vancouver-born Sutherland, son of Donald Sutherland and half-brother of Kiefer Sutherland, recently wrapped feature Shadowless Horse, opposite Tatiana Malany, and Season 2 of Apple+’s Canadian series Plan B. He was recently seen in TV movie Bad Romance: The Vicky White Story, in William Brent Bell’s feature Orphan: First Kill and in Darlene Naponse’s Stellar, which premiered at TIFF in 2022. He is repped by Jennifer Goldhar at Characters Talent Agency and manager Perry Zimel.

Fellow Vancouver native Kreuk is known for her series starring roles in the CW’s Smallville, CBC’s Edgemont, the CW’s Beauty & The Beast and CBS/the CW’s Burden of Truth, which she also executive produced. Most recently, Kreuk was seen in Season 1 of Amazon’s series Reacher. She is repped by Gersh and Pacific Artists Management.

During his tenure as President of USA, Wachtel oversaw the network during its “blue sky” era of hits such as Monk, Burn Notice, Suits and White Collar. He also founded and was president of NBCU’s cable studio, UCP and subsequently served as President of NBCU’s international television studio, based in London.

https://deadline.com/2023/12/murder-in-a-small-town-series-rossif-sutherland-kristin-kreuk-international-content-strategy-1235662906/


Dec. 3, 2024 "Murder In A Small Town Season 2: Will It Happen? Everything We Know": Today I found this article by Dalton Norman on Screenrant:


The Canadian murder mystery series Murder in a Small Town thrilled during its first season in late 2024, but will the show get renewed for season 2? 

Based on the Alberg and Cassandra Mysteries by L.R. Wright, Murder in a Small Town concerns a former big city detective who is drawn into a murder investigations as the Chief of Police of a small coastal city. 

Checking all the boxes of a cozy murder mystery series, Murder in a Small Town is hardly a revolutionary program, but its beautiful environs and chemistry between the leads help it crackle with life.

An unusual addition to Fox's 2024 fall lineup, Murder in a Small Town season 1 was not the most well-received freshman program of the year. Though it mustered a respectable 70% score on Rotten Tomatoes (with an equally middling 73% audience score), 

it didn't have all the hallmarks of a network TV procedural. 

Nevertheless, the compelling weekly stories and the conclusion of season 1, episode 8, make the show's future seem even brighter. While season 2 hasn't been renewed yet, there's always a chance that Alberg and Cassandra could return for more intriguing cases soon.

Murder In A Small Town Season 2 Latest News

The EP Discusses Season 2's Chances

Even as the show awaits its fate on Fox, the latest news finds the executive producer of Murder in a Small Town discussing season 2. Jeff Wachtel is in charge of overseeing the cozy procedural, and has spoken candidly about where the show's story will go if it is renewed for a sophomore outing. Emphasizing the lives of the characters as the ongoing focus, Wachtel also let slip that an overarching narrative would be told without having to resort to a serial killer storyline.

Read Wachtel's full comments below:

[Karl] Alberg’s purview will expand. It’s natural. He’s very competent and ought to get more responsibility. In the next season, he has a much broader purview, but there’s new staff, there are new people and other ambitions that come up.

By the end of the season, we had kind of earned [the serial killer arc], but it’s not a place that I want to go back to a whole lot. There is going to be a season-long mystery in Season 2, which will involve more than one killing. It won’t be episode-specific, but both Karl and Cassandra will be kind of tracking it from different angles. There is going to be a little bit of a, ‘Wait, this one and this one, which are unsolved over the last 10 years, kind of tie together,’ and it’s a bit of a surprise who the baddie is.

[Karl and Cassandra are] not married, and they are both carrying some damage… so they definitely get deeper and more committed. She’s running for councilwoman. I don’t want to do spoiler alerts about that, but if she were to win that election, that might put her professionally at odds with her boyfriend. 

We’re going to introduce a new character who’s a bit of an antagonist, who’s a mayor in the town, who’s a bit of a stir-upper of things. So they’re both highly opinionated people and very committed to their vision of betterment of the world, which is going to bring them up against each other. But most of the issues I think that we’re going to be looking at in Season 2 are not, ‘Do I love you?’ issues, but more, ‘This is how I see the world.'

Murder In A Small Town Season 2 Is Not Confirmed

Fox Hasn't Renewed Murder In A Small Town Yet

Even though the show's producer has a plan for where the sophomore season will go, Fox hasn't renewed Murder in a Small Town season 2 quite yet

The extremely short 8-episode first season was something of a test run, and the network's foray into cozy mysteries has been a mixed bag. While critical reception has been cool-yet-positive, it is unclear how well the show did in terms of viewership. 

Procedurals are often big hits for networks, but Murder in a Small Town is not the typical procedural police program.

Since the show is a co-production with Global Television Network in Canada, it's unclear exactly how the show's future will play out. 

Airing simultaneously in two different countries could mean the show is a hit in one nation and a flop in another. 

While that might not necessarily doom the show, it could mean that one or the other networks could scale back their involvement with future seasons. 

If Murder in a Small Town didn't move the needle on Fox, it's highly unlikely that the network will make space for it in future seasons.

Murder in a Small Town season 1 concluded on November 26, 2024.

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