Fat Cow Motel

Australian comedy/drama television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Fat Cow Motel is an Australian comedy/drama television series, created by Nathan Mayfield and Tracey Robertson and starring Kate Atkinson and Brendan Cowell.[2] Described as an interactive drama[3] viewers could register online for access to the shows website and to sms and email messages sent onscreen during the show[4] Each episode ends in a mystery cliffhanger which can be solved with help from the interactive content.[5] Two final episodes were filmed and the audience could vote for their desired alternative.[6]

Genre
Created by
  • Tracey Robertson
  • Nathan Mayfield
Written by
  • Graeme Koetsveld
  • Marissa Cooke
  • Annette Moore
  • Andrew Kelly
Directed by
  • Robert Klenner
  • Daniel Nettheim
  • Nathan Mayfield
Quick facts Genre, Created by ...
Fat Cow Motel
Genre
Created by
  • Tracey Robertson
  • Nathan Mayfield
Written by
  • Graeme Koetsveld
  • Marissa Cooke
  • Annette Moore
  • Andrew Kelly
Directed by
  • Robert Klenner
  • Daniel Nettheim
  • Nathan Mayfield
Starring
ComposerCameron McKenzie
Country of originAustralia
Original languageEnglish
No. of series1
No. of episodes13
Production
Producers
  • Tracey Robertson
  • Nathan Mayfield
CinematographyRobert Humphreys
Running time25 minutes
Original release
NetworkABC
Release10 July (2003-07-10)[1] 
2 October 2003 (2003-10-02)
Close

The show was filmed in Harrisville, Queensland with the town's Royal Hotel standing in for the titular Fat Cow Motel.[7]

Synopsis

The owner of the Fat Cow Motel makes up a story that a famous rock star died in one of the rooms in her motel which attracts a journalist to town.[8]

Cast

Reception

Nicole Brady of The Age wrote: "It looks great on paper, but two weeks in and this Australian comedy-mystery series is feeling a little clunky."[9] In the Illawarra Mercury, Glen Humphries noted: "The two lead actors in this weekly whodunit are both very watchable and there's a certain charm here. Shame it's hampered by the show's over-emphasis on interactivity."[10]

Summing up the fate of Australian-made dramas, Greg Hassall of The Sydney Morning Herald wrote: "A comedy/drama set in a rural town, billed as our first interactive drama because viewers could follow clues on the show's website to solve a mystery each week. But the interactive angle felt gimmicky and the show lasted only one season."[11]

References

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