Going Home (TV series)
Appearance
Going Home | |
---|---|
Genre | Drama |
Written by | Christopher Wheeler (head writer) Daphne Paris Michael O'Rourke George Merryman Ro Hume Dave Warner |
Directed by | Alan Coleman, Andrew Lewis |
Starring | Camilla Ah Kin Arthur Angel David Callan Jason Chong Rhonda Doyle John Gibson Brian Meegan Lyn Pierse Khristina Totos |
Country of origin | Australia |
Original language | English |
No. of series | 2 |
No. of episodes | 130 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Hal McElroy & Di McElroy |
Producer | Gillian Arnold |
Original release | |
Network | SBS |
Release | 22 May 2000 24 August 2001 | –
Related | |
Train 48 |
Going Home was a drama television series produced by the SBS network in Australia that aired from 2000 to 2001.[1][2]
Scripted, filmed, edited and broadcast on the same day,[3] Going Home was set in a nightly inter-urban commuter train. A group of regular train travelers are featured on their daily commute in a blend of up-to-the-minute commentary on the news and events of the day, together with the unfolding dramas in their lives.[4] Viewer feedback was encouraged,[5] including plot and character suggestions that were regularly incorporated into subsequent episodes.
The concept has been used later in other countries: in Canada (Train 48), in France (Le train, "The Train") and in Italy (Andata e Ritorno, "Round Trip").
Cast
[edit]- Camilla Ah Kin as Najette Malek
- Arthur Angel as Stefano Pappadopoulos
- David Callan as Noel Johnston
- Jason Chong as Kwan "David" Lee
- Rhonda Doyle as Tiffany Parker
- John Gibson as Mike Cortez
- Brian Meegan as Colin Thompson
- Lyn Pierse as Pam Coughlan
- Khristina Totos as Poppy Savvas
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Hassall, Greg (4 December 2011), "Forgotten gems ... Remembering Going Home", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Krauth, Kirsten (June–July 2000), "Commuter TV: SBS' Going Home", Realtime
- ^ Oliver, Robin (22 May 2000), "Show of the week", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Oliver, Robin (28 May 2001), "Commuter games", The Sydney Morning Herald
- ^ Idato, Michael (29 May 2000), "Help SBS find the plot", The Sydney Morning Herald