East West 101
Created & produced by Steve Knapman & Kris Wyld
Directed by Peter Andrikidis
Starring Don Hany, Susie Porter & Matt Nable
Wednesdays, 8.30pm, SBSONE
www.sbs.com.au/shows/eastwest101
The makers of critically acclaimed Australian crime series East West 101 say the third season, now airing Wednesday nights on SBS, is about the devastation wars in the Middle East have on Muslim and non-Muslim people in Australia.
It is a bold aim untouched by any other Australian network.
鈥淪ome of us feel untouched by war,鈥 Kris Wyld, who created and produced the show with collaborator Steve Knapman, tells 91自拍论坛 Weekly. 鈥淲e hope East West 101 makes the audience feel the impact for themselves.鈥
Knapman and Wyld made the acclaimed police dramas Wildside (ABC 1997-99) and White Collar Blue (Network Ten 2002-03). They have blazed a path for engaging and realistic crime drama, with gritty subject matter and shocking truths about society.
The realism of East West 101 is especially pronounced in hand-held camera work and choppy editing. It is a show that demands an engaged and thinking audience.
It is a truly high standard of crime drama. The scripts are multi-layered and each series鈥 story arc tackles a long-term case with broad ramifications.
Each episode carries stories exploring complex cases that reach across the world and deep into a diversity of Australian communities.
In season three, the fallout of the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are explored through violence in Australia.
But the impacts of conflicts in Somalia, Palestine/Israel, Bosnia and tensions in Maori communities are also explored.
Knapman says that throughout all three seasons, the first of which aired in December 2007, they 鈥渟earched for the international connection鈥.
鈥淭his notion that Australia is cut off from the world, we resisted that.
鈥淪o the beginning of the show was set just after 9/11 and everybody was in a very strong climate of fear in this country, which was traded on by politicians and papers.
鈥淲e thought, the consequences of 9/11 were one thing, but also just who are these Muslim people? What do people know about them, how much do we understand Muslims living in Australia?鈥
This question is answered by the main character, detective Zane Malik (Don Hany), a Muslim cop in a major crime unit based in Sydney鈥檚 western suburbs.
Malik is devout, progressive and heavily conflicted. He has strong convictions, but also flaws.
He tries to negotiate the two worlds he is committed to 鈥 the police force and the Arab community of Sydney鈥檚 western suburbs, which more often stand opposed to each other than united.
The series鈥 multi-award winning director Peter Andrikidis has said the insights of a Muslim cop are unique in contemporary crime drama.
鈥淗is strength of purpose is very important鈥, Andrikidis says. 鈥淢alik鈥檚 journey is the audience鈥檚 journey 鈥 The audience will be seeing Australia through his Islamic eyes.鈥
Andrikidis lives in western Sydney, where much of the show is set 鈥 in suburbs such as Auburn, Lakemba and Cabramatta.
鈥淚 always try to present a Sydney that is more about its inner workings, rather than the harbour bridge glamour shots,鈥 he tells GLW.
鈥淭he extras on the street are real people living there, and so we put the actors in real spaces. We create that look by being in Auburn.
鈥淧eople tell us they see themselves on the screen, and a lot of police officers tell us they have lived this, they know Malik.
鈥淵ou鈥檙e presenting role models for a whole community, people have seen it and said that鈥檚 what made them feel Australian.
鈥淲e鈥檙e the only ones doing that, really.鈥
The rest of Malik鈥檚 crime unit is ethnically and politically diverse, making it distinctive in contemporary Australian crime drama.
His partner is Maori Islander Sonny Koa (Aaron Fa鈥橝oso). His fellow officers 鈥 detective Helen Callas and constable Jung Lim 鈥 are hardly stereotypical white-bread Australians.
There are only two Caucasians in the lead cast. The squad commander is the ambitious superintendent Patricia Wright (Susie Porter). New squad member Neil Travis (Matt Nable), an affected Iraq war veteran, brings the violence of the Middle East conflicts to the fore of the show.
鈥淭he actual makeup of the squad is reflective of reality,鈥 Wyld says. 鈥淢ulticultural Australia is the reality. It did not try to create something that doesn鈥檛 exist.鈥
Knapman and Wyld explain that the show and most of its characters were inspired and developed by actual detectives in a crime unit in Sydney鈥檚 west.
鈥淭rue stories can be more unusual than what you can invent,鈥 Knapman says.
The show's inception was a two-year creative process of research and development. This included meeting and working with actual police and detectives who were the backbone of the show's inspiration.
Some of them held consultant positions on the show, such as detective Ali Rafik. Knapman says Rafik, an Egyptian and devout Muslim, 鈥渨orked in a crime squad with a Samoan, a Lebanese Christian, and an Aussie bloke鈥.
鈥淭hey became the inspiration for the show. We found them first, and then the show emerged.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the key thing. It was very grounded in real people.鈥
Wyld says of Rafik: 鈥淣ot only did he bring authenticity from his work into our storytelling, but also from his cultural background into the character [of Malik]. He is also a brilliant creative mind.
鈥淗is whole family is very inspiring 鈥 and they give enormously to their community and to our community.鈥
Also unique and enriching is the Malik family, whose home the audience sees into with a depth and honesty not previously ventured into by other shows.
The shades of faith and practice of Islam is shown without a trace of tokenism, from general home life, to regular prayer and a heartbreaking Islamic funeral.
鈥淚t鈥檚 too easy to paint people in simplistic terms, to paint them as 鈥榯he other鈥,鈥 Wyld says.
Knapman says that commercial media in Australia reproduces dangerous stereotypes with little conscience.
鈥淲e tend to try and work from research and reading, and speaking to real people 鈥 and not sit around and try to please networks by coming up with stereotypes that make them feel comfortable, which is the way most other stuff is made.
鈥淭he whole notion of stereotyping people was part of what we railed against. But also we try to get the balance and the contradictions 鈥 our characters say conflicting things all the time.鈥
In the new season鈥檚 first episode, Malik walks in on the team watching footage of a violent $36 million robbery, the investigation of which will span the season.
鈥淭he theory is that robbery was committed to fund terrorist operations,鈥 Knapman says.
In the show, Travis comments offhand: 鈥淭his is why we need to stay in Afghanistan until the job's done.鈥
But Malik cuts in: 鈥淪taying in Afghanistan is not going to stop this 鈥 there鈥檚 just too many innocent people being killed.鈥
Wyld says East West 101 was about finding the story they felt was worth telling: 鈥淲hat story are we passionate about? Why do we want to tell the story? Is there an injustice that we think needs to be examined?
鈥East West 101 shows real Australia 鈥 and it鈥檚 a positive thing. Because some networks present a very narrow view of what Australia is, and they think that鈥檚 what the audience wants.鈥
Knapman wants the show to expand people鈥檚 understanding of what Australia is made of. 鈥淭here鈥檚 the tremendous amount of ignorance about the wars, refugees and Muslim Australians.
鈥淏ut the show is not designed to be a didactic teaching device to convince you of any view. It鈥檚 dramatic, exciting and mysterious, intriguing, all of these things.
鈥淭he idea is to entertain you while, maybe, the status quo position gets challenged through the different characters鈥 points of view on all these things.鈥