Transporter: The Series

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Transporter: The Series
250px
English logo
Genre Action/Adventure
Thriller
Based on Transporter
by Luc Besson
Robert Mark Kamen
Developed by Alexander Ruemelin
Directed by <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Starring <templatestyles src="Plainlist/styles.css"/>
Theme music composer Geddy Lee
Alex Lifeson
Opening theme "Working Man"
by Rush (cover)
Composer(s) Nathaniel Méchaly
Country of origin France
Canada
Germany
United States
Original language(s) English
No. of seasons 2
No. of episodes 24 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producer(s) Brad Turner
Fred Fuchs
Timothy J. Lea
Producer(s) Susan Murdoch
Klaus Zimmermann
Production location(s) France, Canada, Germany
Cinematography David Herrington
Stephen Reizes
Editor(s) Roslyn Kalloo
Stephen Lawrence
Eric Goddard
David B. Thompson
Don Cassidy
Camera setup Single-camera
Running time 44-45 minutes
Production company(s) Atlantique Productions
QVF Inc.
Release
Original network RTL (Germany)
M6 (France)
HBO Canada (Canada)
Super Écran 1 (Canada)
TNT (USA)
Spike (UK)
Picture format HDTV
Audio format Surround
First shown in Germany
Original release 11 October 2012 (2012-10-11) –
14 December 2014 (2014-12-14)
External links
Official Website (French)
Production website

Transporter: The Series (French: Le Transporteur - la série) is an English-language French-Canadian action television series, spun off from the Transporter film series created by Luc Besson and Robert Mark Kamen. It is co-produced by the French Atlantique Productions and the Canadian boutique entertainment company QVF, Inc., in association with broadcast partners M6, RTL Television, The Movie Network, and Movie Central. Originally, HBO/Cinemax was involved,[1] but they dropped out in 2013.[2]

The series follows the events and concept of the film trilogy, continuing adventures of Frank Martin, a professional freelance courier driver for hire who will deliver anything, anywhere for the right price, and lives by three "unbreakable" rules, which he frequently breaks. Chris Vance takes over the role of Frank from Jason Statham and was joined in Season 1 by Andrea Osvárt as his office manager Carla Valeri, Charly Hübner as mechanic Dieter Hausmann and François Berléand, the only returning actor from the film series, reprising his role as Inspector Tarconi.[3] The second season added Violante Placido as Caterina "Cat" Boldieu, his new booking agent. Unlike Carla, who did not make it to the second season, Cat usually joins Frank on his adventures.[4]

Twelve episodes were ordered in 2012 for season 1 with an overall budget of $40,000,000, or 30.000.000.[1] The show premiered that year on 11 October in Germany on RTL, and on 6 December in France on M6. The Canadian premiere was on 4 January 2013 on HBO Canada and Super Écran 1 (with the first episode available online from 18 December 2012).[5] The broadcast of season started in India on 25 January 2013 on Sony PIX, and premiered in the United States on TNT on 18 October 2014. Twelve more episodes were ordered for season 2, which began production in Morocco in February 2014.[6] Season 2 premiered in Canada on 5 October 2014 on The Movie Network and Movie Central,[7] and in the United States on TNT on 29 November 2014.[8]

On November 26, 2015, it was announced that the series was cancelled and will not be renewed for a third season.[9]

Cast

  • Chris Vance as Frank Martin, known as the Transporter: a professional highly skilled driver for hire. A former SAS and Special Forces operative, he offers his transporter services without asking any questions, to whomever is willing to pay his price. His code of conduct is very strict, his precision driving and his combat skills allow him to survive the most dangerous criminals throughout his missions. Very secretive, Frank trusts only a handful of people: his agent Carla, his mechanic Dieter, and a French police inspector named Tarconi. His circle of friends will grow with the arrival of Juliette, a mysterious sexy woman who's very interested in his work.
  • Andrea Osvárt as Carla Valeri (season 1): a former CIA agent and computer expert, she takes care of Frank's missions by negotiating with clients and providing him with all the information he needs, however urgent, from her office in Nice.
  • François Berléand as Inspector Tarconi (season 1; recurring in season 2): Frank's reluctant police officer friend. Stationed in Nice, Tarconi has in the past investigated Frank. Now friends, Tarconi takes care of his house in Cap Roux when Frank's on a mission. Frank turns to him when he needs an official police intervention, but always in a way that Tarconi can deny any involvement with the Transporter. He maintains his status as an officer of the law but allows Frank to bend the rules somewhat.
  • Delphine Chanéac as Juliette Dubois (season 1): a DCRI agent investigating the Transporter network, while posing as Frank's beautiful and romantic neighbor. She's an intelligent woman torn between her sense of duty and her growing attraction for Frank. Earlier on in the project, the character was a reporter named Olivia.[3]
  • Charly Hübner as Dieter Hausmann (season 1 & season 2 premiere): a technology expert who helps Frank with his car. He is Frank's confidant and an unparalleled mechanic who repairs and modifies his Audi at will. Whether Frank needs special tires, suspensions or fake plates, Dieter is always there when Frank needs him.[10] Dieter is killed in the premiere of season 2.
  • Violante Placido as Caterina "Cat" Boldieu (season 2): a former French intelligence officer who first met Frank when he rescued her from captivity in North Africa. Now two years later, Cat has come to work for Frank[4] as his new booking agent. Unlike Carla, Cat usually joins Frank on his adventures.
  • Mark Rendall as Jules Faroux (recurring in season 2): a computer expert working for a rival transporter that crosses paths with Frank in the second season episode "T2", Jules soon joins Frank's and Cat's team.
  • Dhaffer L'Abidine as Olivier Dassin (recurring in season 2): The cold-blooded Dassin is the second best transporter in the world and Frank's rival and old nemesis. Frank is forced to team up with him to carry out the job.

Cars

Season Manufacturer Model
1 Audi A8 TDI
1 Audi R8 (nicknamed Sofie)

Production

The pilot was directed by long-time Lost director Stephen Williams.[3] Other directors working on the show include Bruce McDonald (Degrassi: The Next Generation, Queer as Folk) and Andy Mikita, known for working on several shows including Stargate Universe and SyFy's Sanctuary. The only writer who has been confirmed so far is Carl Binder, also a Stargate Universe alumnus.

Originally Canadian TV veterans Joseph Mallozzi and Paul Mullie known for their work on Stargate Universe served as show runners, and co-wrote the pilot. According to The Hollywood Reporter they were replaced after two episodes by British director Steve Shill (Dexter, Law & Order: Criminal Intent, The Tudors) and Canadian veteran supervising producer Karen Wookey (Andromeda, Mutant X).[11] However, Shill left the project in January 2012 without an immediate successor in place.[12]

Shooting locations included Paris, Berlin, and Nice, however the majority of the filming was done in Toronto.[13] In October 2011, filming on the series was halted after Chris Vance was injured in an on-set accident. The remaining scenes were supposed to be shot in Toronto during the spring of 2012.[12] The show was shot with Arri Alexa, Canon C300 and GoPro cameras.[14]

On November 26, 2015, it was announced that the series was cancelled and won't be renewed for a third season.[9]

Broadcast

The series started airing out-of-order on RTL in Germany on 11 October 2012 at a pace of one weekly episode in prime time on Thursdays with a TV-12 rating.[15] The show's run in the country concluded on December 20, leaving two episodes unaired.

In France the show started on 6 December 2012 on M6, also in prime time on Thursdays, but with a TV-10 rating and at an initial pace of three episodes per night for two weeks, followed by a "two new episodes plus one rerun" per night pace after a week-long hiatus, and concluded on 10 January 2013. Viewers were given the choice between watching the show in dubbed French or in its original English with optional subtitles, thanks to M6's dual audio streams. Season #2 began airing in France on 1 January 2015.

The show started airing in Norway, 1 January 2013 on TV 2 Zebra.

Transporter: The Series started airing on HBO Canada and Super Écran 1 (in dubbed French) on 4 January 2013 with a special two-hour premiere comprising the episodes Trojan Horsepower and Payback, after which one episode was broadcast weekly, Fridays at 9 PM. Prior to that, the episode Trojan Horsepower was available to watch for free on HBO Canada's website and various Canadians streaming services starting 18 December 2012.[5] Season #1 concluded in Canada on 15 March 2013. Season #2 began airing in Canada on The Movie Network and Movie Central, with back-to-back episodes, on 5 October 2014.

In the Middle East the show started on 13 March 2013 on FX.

In Australia, it premiered on 20 March 2013 on FX.[16]

In Turkey the show started on 14 June 2013 on Atv

In Portugal, the show started on 11 September 2013 on MOV, broadcasting Trojan Horsepower (thus, using the Canadian order for the episodes).

In the Netherlands, RTL 5 started broadcasting the series on 2 January 2014.

In New Zealand, the show started on 13 June 2014 on The Box on SKY TV (New Zealand).

In Spain, the show started on 7 July 2014 on Antena 3.

In Indonesia, the show started on 17 September 2014 on RCTI

In UK, the show started on 12 July 2015 on Channel 5.

In the United States, TNT announced in January 2014 that it had picked up Transporter: The Series,[6] and began airing the show with back-to-back episodes on Saturday, 18 October 2014. TNT's sister network through Time Warner, Cinemax was previously due to air the series, but at the Television Critics Association 2013 Summer Press Tour confirmed that they would end their involvement with the series without showing it after all.[2] The premiere of season #2 aired on 29 November 2014 on TNT, which immediately followed the completion of the airing of season #1 the week before.

In Chile, the show started on March 2016 on UCV TV

Episode order and alternative versions

Confusingly—RTL in Germany, M6 in France and TNT in the U.S., have all aired the first season episodes in different orders, as compared to those shown by HBO/SE1 in Canada and Channel 5 in the UK, which have been shown sequentially, as detailed below:

Season 1 episode order
Episode Canada, Dutch,
Netflix, et al.
French German U.S. UK
"Trojan Horsepower" 1 2 7 1 1
"Payback" 2 12 5 6 2
"The General’s Daughter" 3 1 1 9 3
"Harvest" 4 3 2 7 4
"Dead Drop" 5 4 4 2 5
"Hot Ice" 6 9 8 3 6
"Give the Guy a Hand" 7 10 11 11 7
"Sharks" 8 5 6 4 8
"City of Love" 9 7 9 10 9
"The Switch" 10 8 3 8 10
"12 Hours" 11 6 12 5 11
"Cherchez la Femme" 12 11 10 12 12

It is unclear at this point what the "proper", intended order for the episodes is. Based on the chronology of events, the Canadian release most likely carries the correct order of episodes.[original research?] This is further supported by the fact that Flemish channel 2BE, Dutch channel RTL 5, and Netflix also air the episodes according to the Canadian order.[17] The German home video release presents the episodes as they were broadcast on RTL, adding the two unaired episodes ("Give the Guy a Hand" and "12 Hours") as episodes 11 and 12 respectively. It is unknown what order the forthcoming French and potential North American home video releases will reflect. It is however certain that unlike other shows, production order should not be followed, as "Trojan Horsepower" was the last episode to be shot yet features the first meeting between Frank and Juliette, two characters who interact in other episodes, and is also the episode where Frank first sees the red Audi R8 which appears in most later episodes. "Trojan Horsepower" served as the pilot episode in Canada and the United States, the second episode in France and the seventh in Germany; the latter two countries both aired "The General’s Daughter" as the pilot episode, which had in fact been announced in the media as the pilot when production started.[citation needed]

In addition, at least some episodes reportedly have three different edits depending on the country of broadcast.[18]

Episodes

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Season Episodes Originally aired DVD & Blu-ray release date
Region 2
Season premiere Season finale Germany France
1 12 11 October 2012 (2012-10-11) 3 January 2013 (2013-01-03) 21 December 2012 (2012-12-21) 23 January 2013 (2013-01-23)
2 12 5 October 2014 (2014-10-05) 14 December 2014 (2014-12-14)  ()  ()

DVD releases

On March 3, 2015, 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment released the complete first season on DVD in Region 1.[19] The complete second season was released on June 9, 2015.[20]

References

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  15. Transporter on fernsehserien.de
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  17. http://iwatch.be/tv/series/transporter
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  19. 'The Complete 1st Season' of the Series Spun-Off From the Film
  20. 'The Complete 2nd Season' DVDs: Street Date, Price and Packaging!

External links