LOS ANGELES β βColin from Accountsβ started much like the Australian-based series.
Stars Patrick Brammall and Harriet Dyer, who are married, were dog-sitting while writing the comedyβs pilot.
βIt had a name that wasnβt resonating for us,β Brammall says of the dog, βand so we called him βColin from accounts.ββ
The scene landed in the seriesβ first episode. βThat ping-pong moment was kind of stolen from our life,β Dyer adds.
Patrick Brammall and Harriet Dyer star in "Colin from Accounts," a new comedy which they both write.
Other scenes have had similar origins. The two characters β Gordon and Ashley β are unlikely romantic partners. Heβs 12 years older. In real life, Brammall is, too.
But, βthey make each other laugh,β Brammall says.
Because the two write the showβs episodes, theyβve hit on a routine that works well for them. In the first season, one wrote the odd episodes, the other wrote the even.
βWhen our child is at daycare, we plot the whole thing,β Brammall says. βWe get ideas and snippets, we put it all down, plot the season and take individual episodes to write.β
As soon as an episode is written, the other polishes it. βThereβs a bit of kind of passing back and forth,β Dyer says.
Now airing on Paramount+, βColin from Accountsβ was a hit in Australia, then made the leap to the United States in November. βSome jokes donβt land because itβs different,β Dyer says.
But, Brammall adds, βyou get itβ¦you get the joke.β
Colin β the dog β comes into the charactersβ lives when Ashley (Dyerβs character) flashes Gordon (Brammallβs character) when sheβs walking across the street. He hits a stray dog and the two are so distraught they take it to a veterinarian and learn itβs going to cost $12,000 to save him. Because they donβt want to put down a dog thatβs not theirs, the two agree to pay the fees. When they take him in, both decide he needs a human name β like Colin from accounts.
In "Colin from Accounts," aΒ relationship blossoms when two strangers meet following an accident involving a dog.
The series then follows the beginning of their relationship, their search for the dogβs owner and the differences between them.
βTheyβre on the same frequency,β Brammall says. βThey make each other laugh.β
Still, they have other woes β including his brewpub and her career as a doctor.
The first pilot was written several years ago based on an idea the two had. βIt slowly gathered steam and when it started becoming obvious that it was going to become a show, we got serious about it,β Brammall says. βItβs really just the two of usβ¦we donβt have any other writers.β
Early on the couple realized they couldnβt keep an audience guessing about the viability of a relationship, so they put them together and thought revealing other aspects of their lives could fuel more episodes.
βWe havenβt met his family, we donβt know about skeletons in closets, stuff like that,β Dyer says. βSo, there was enough to kind of pace out the season.β
Before writing Season Two (which will hit Paramount+ this fall), Brammall made a list on his iPhone of material they didnβt use. Among the key elements: Sheβs more of an adult. βWeβre not really sure what happens with Season Three, but weβll do something,β Dyer says.
After moving in together, Ashley (Harriet Dyer) and Gordon (Patrick Brammall) try to make a family with Colin in "Colin from Accounts."
Australian-specific elements havenβt been a problem. βThere are some jokes that will go over some audiencesβ heads,β Brammall says. βBut it doesnβt matter because the more specific you can be, the more authentic it feels. We grew up watching a lot of American stuff and a lot of British stuff.β
Adds Dyer: βWe just grew up accepting that it was snowing on everyone elseβs Christmas. We didnβt question it.β
While Gordon and Ashley are riddled with problems, they mean well. βThey make bad decisions, but youβve kind of got to root for them if they are good in here,β Dyer says touching her heart.
And Colin? βHeβs a soulful guy,β Dyer says. βHeβs well trained; weβve literally never had to go again for the dog. He was such a good boy in one of the episodes of Season Two I had to ask the trainer to walk around behind the camera because he looked animatronic.β
For the record, Colin is named Zak and, yes, he remains in the show.
Even though thereβs a hunger for more episodes, Brammall and Dyer havenβt turned the writing over to others.
βIβve been in writing partnerships previously with people I havenβt been married to,β Brammall says, βand when you find your creative partner, you find them. It just happened to be my romantic partner and my life partner as well. Thereβs a lot of pros. The cons are you canβt leave your work at work because we work from home.β
The upside? βIf youβre trying to fix something and youβre watching TV or making dinner or bathing the kid, you can suddenly go, βOh, itβs going to be thisβ and you donβt have to drive to the office and explain it to the other person,β Dyer says. βItβs like our fourth family member.β
βColin from Accountsβ airs on Paramount+.
Movies in a minute with film critic Bruce Miller
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Movies in a Minute: "A Complete Unknown"
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Movies in a Minute: "Moana 2"
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UpdatedSioux City Journal entertainment critic Bruce Miller says that while the action in βThelmaβ may not be all that realistic, itβs highly entertaining and just the ticket for audiences tired of three-part dramas.
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UpdatedJournal Entertainment Editor Bruce Miller says:Β Without the learning curve of the first film, "Inside Out 2" is more understandable and ready for Riley, the 13-year-old owner of said emotions, to put them to the test.Β Itβs like playing a familiar game with more players.
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Movies in a Minute: "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes"
UpdatedMovie critic Bruce Miller says "Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes" includes the best motion capture performance weβve seen and, easily, the reason this film works so well. No matter how many βPlanet of the Apesβ films youβve seen, this is the one to embrace.
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Movies in a Minute: "Godzilla x Kong: The New Empire"
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