HeadLand

headLand

Title screen
Format Drama
Created by Bevan Lee
Starring See Cast
Country of origin Australia
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 58
Production
Running time Approx. 42 minutes per episode (plus commercials)
Broadcast
Original channel Seven Network
Original run 15 November 2005 – 21 January 2006
Chronology
Related shows Home and Away

headLand is an Australian drama television series produced by the Seven Network which ran from 15 November 2005 to 21 January 2006. The Seven Network filmed 52 episodes in the first series. Production on the second series had begun before any episodes were aired.

Set in a university, headLand premiered in Australia on Tuesday, 15 November 2005 at 7.30pm. On 23 January 2006, the Seven Network officially announced that the series has been cancelled.[1] The show aired on weekdays at 7.30pm in the United Kingdom on E4, re-formatted as half-hour episodes. E4 eventually dropped the show but episodes continued to be broadcast on Channel 4 at 12:30pm, this time in the original hour-long format.

Contents

Cast

Development

In 2002, Seven Network's script executive Bevan Lee was asked to create a Home and Away spin-off with the hope of attracting the UK broadcaster Five as a co-producer. He created a show called Away From Home that told the story of Home and Away characters at the Yabbie Creek University. Five were not interested for various reasons, and a big reworking of the original concept was undertaken and the show was renamed Campus, and later Ten Degrees South — a title eventually rejected due to a possible confusion with UK series 55 Degrees North.

In early 2005, the show's title was finalised as headLand and filming began with the series earmarked for a July premiere. However, with the pilot reportedly failing initial audience test screenings,[2] some major changes were made and the pilot was reshot. This and other minor production delays pushed the airdate to much later that year.

Filming locations

The show's exterior scenes were filmed on location in Austinmer, New South Wales. A disused psychiatric hospital at the Sydney College of Arts, Rozelle and the University of Wollongong, doubled as the fictional South Coast University. Studio scenes are filmed at White Bay Studios in Sydney, making it the first Seven Network Sydney drama not to be filmed at the ATN-7 studios in Epping.

Australian broadcast

HeadLand was originally scheduled to screen at 7:30pm on Tuesday and Thursday nights throughout the summer, continuing into 2006. However, after a strong debut, the show quickly suffered a large slump in the ratings. With Home and Away on summer hiatus, the show was shifted to the earlier 7pm slot and broadcast on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in hope of building up more interest in the show during the non-ratings period. However, ratings failed to pick up and the show even suffered its lowest viewership during the period.

Because of this, on 1 December 2005, Seven announced to industry insiders that headLand would be removed from the schedule after Thursday, 22 December 2005. A day later they reversed their decision, but a little over a week later rumours started surfacing that headLand would be removed from prime time as early as Monday, 12 December 2005. This was confirmed to be just a rumour, as Seven announced headLand would remain in its current timeslot until 12 January 2006. Beginning 16 January 2006, headLand was removed from its Monday-Thursday 7.00 pm slot due to the return of Home and Away and the airing of the Australian Open Tennis Tournament. Further episodes of headLand were aired in a Saturday timeslot until the start of the 2006 ratings season.

The remaining episodes that have not been broadcast on the Seven Network are currently being aired on its digital channel 7Two at 11am weekdays. The series ended with Grace and Luc getting engaged, but many other storylines were left up in the air at the end.

References

  1. ^ Michael Idato (2006-01-24)"Seven's axe fells new TV drama". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 2011-08-29.
  2. ^ "Axe for Blue Heelers | The Daily Telegraph". DailyTelegraph.News.com.au. Retrieved 2011-08-29.

External links