Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion

This article is about the CBC television miniseries. For the book, see Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion and the Road to Recovery.
Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion
Directed by Bruce Pittman
Produced by Heather Haldane
Jenipher Ritchie
Written by Keith Ross Leckie
Starring Vincent Walsh
Shauna MacDonald
Music by Christopher Dedrick
Cinematography Rene Ohashi
Edited by Ralph Brunjes
Stewart Dowds
Production
company
Distributed by Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC)
Release dates
26 October 2003 (Canada)
Running time
Canada: 240 min (including commercials)
Country Canada
Language English

Shattered City: The Halifax Explosion is a two-part miniseries produced in 2003 by CBC Television. It presents a fictionalized version of the Halifax Explosion, a 1917 catastrophe that destroyed much of the city of Halifax. It was directed by Bruce Pittman and written by Keith Ross Leckie. The Film Stars Vincent Walsh, Tamara Hope, Clare Stone, Zachary Bennett, Shauna MacDonald and Ted Dykstra.

The series was expensive by Canadian television standards with a budget of $10.4 million. It was heavily promoted by the CBC and paired with a number of non-fiction documentaries. The broadcast drew a sizable Canadian audience of 1.5 million viewers. It drew some praise for the adept use of special effects to show the destruction of the explosion. However the miniseries was poorly received critically. One critic at the Globe and Mail described it as "execrably written and acted"[1] while another strained to find positive elements, "At times, there is a plodding workmanlike quality to Shattered City."[2] The miniseries won some technical awards at the Canadian television Gemini Awards in 2004 (photography, special effects, costume and sound) but was passed over for any direction or writing awards and won only a single supporting acting award for Ted Dykstra.[3]

Serious concerns were raised over the depiction of history in the miniseries. Descendants of explosion victims[4] and professional historians[5] objected to the historical distortions and numerous liberties with historical truth. Significant deviations include:[6]

Cast

References

  1. Russell Smith "Virtual Culture" Globe and Mail, Feb. 19, 2004, page R1
  2. John Doyle "Halifax Miniseries Meanders till the Sparks Fly", Globe and Mail, Oct. 24, 2003, page R2.
  3. ACCT - Canadian Awards History Search
  4. Steve Garrity, "Shattered City Missed the Mark", Halifax Chronicle Herald, Nov. 2, 2004, page B4.
  5. David Rodenizer, "Shattered City Disappoints Historians", Daily News, Oct. 29, 2003, page 7
  6. Conlin, Dan. "Historical Distortions and Errors in the Film Shattered City". Retrieved 2006-12-15.
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