Skilled 15-year-old outdoorsman Billy Williams and friend Pete Gawa face thrilling adventures in Ontario's Rainbow Country, foiling villains like thieves and kidnappers while enjoying diving... Read allSkilled 15-year-old outdoorsman Billy Williams and friend Pete Gawa face thrilling adventures in Ontario's Rainbow Country, foiling villains like thieves and kidnappers while enjoying diving, climbing, and canoeing.Skilled 15-year-old outdoorsman Billy Williams and friend Pete Gawa face thrilling adventures in Ontario's Rainbow Country, foiling villains like thieves and kidnappers while enjoying diving, climbing, and canoeing.
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I caught one episode and watched it with interest since as a Canadian it is rare to find old Canadian shows since they rarely make it to vhs tape and DVD. (Still trying to find the first 3 or 4 seasons of the Beachcomers.) This show is supposed to be set in Canada, but aside from Lois Maxwell who does have a real Canadian accent here, my jaw dropped as the young blond actor who played Billy came on the screen. He spoke with such a cockney British accent that I thought I was listening to Eliza Doolitle from 'My Fair Lady'. And then next comes the actor who played Roger, and I swear if you close your eyes you would think this guy sounds more like John Lennon speaking in an interview than John Lennon himself sounded! Just wow. Canadians don't sound like that. What on earth were the Canadian casting directors thinking back then?
Short-lived but good for its time.
The Beachcombers was the one set in B.C. and much more successful and enduring, staring the unforgettable Bruno Gerussi and Robert Clothier.
Easy to get these two shows confused, especially if you watched them as a child.
The Beachcombers was the one set in B.C. and much more successful and enduring, staring the unforgettable Bruno Gerussi and Robert Clothier.
Easy to get these two shows confused, especially if you watched them as a child.
After about 30 years I still remember some of the episodes and most of all the wonderful landscape of Ontario where it was filmed.
Maybe there are others like Dave Rowland, who know the contents better having it on tape, but I remember loving every single minute despite the fact it was low budget and possibly not an exiting story.
After 27 years of waiting to see al this I finally got into Whitefish Falls, and it feeled like the end of a long journey for me. This TV series founded a love for Canada I will surely not loose as long as I live!
Maybe there are others like Dave Rowland, who know the contents better having it on tape, but I remember loving every single minute despite the fact it was low budget and possibly not an exiting story.
After 27 years of waiting to see al this I finally got into Whitefish Falls, and it feeled like the end of a long journey for me. This TV series founded a love for Canada I will surely not loose as long as I live!
Just been through David Letterman and MAD TV, and expecting some crap like 'Whose Line Is It Anyway' to come on, and I get this bizarre offering from our Channel Nine. I wonder who was the programmer with the sense of humour.
Actually this show looks ahead of it's time - if I hadn't checked IMDb I would have placed it in the 70's - what with that big, ropey hair on those kids. I don't know what the hell is going on - I'm in no state to figure it out anyway, and I really don't think it would matter if I were.
Sheesh, the acting's bad - but that makes it all the funnier. But there's lots of flannel shirts, boots with tassels, canoes, Injuns, rapids, and some guy who looks like an uglier, TV answer to Robert Mitchum. Some guy gets rescued from some slightly dangerous looking rocks next to a raging river ... and now they're doing one of those cheesy rap-ups where everyone is gathered around discussing the episode's events, something supposedly profound is said, followed by a bad joke where everyone laughs to end it all on a light note, and the credits roll.
Heh - whatever.
Actually this show looks ahead of it's time - if I hadn't checked IMDb I would have placed it in the 70's - what with that big, ropey hair on those kids. I don't know what the hell is going on - I'm in no state to figure it out anyway, and I really don't think it would matter if I were.
Sheesh, the acting's bad - but that makes it all the funnier. But there's lots of flannel shirts, boots with tassels, canoes, Injuns, rapids, and some guy who looks like an uglier, TV answer to Robert Mitchum. Some guy gets rescued from some slightly dangerous looking rocks next to a raging river ... and now they're doing one of those cheesy rap-ups where everyone is gathered around discussing the episode's events, something supposedly profound is said, followed by a bad joke where everyone laughs to end it all on a light note, and the credits roll.
Heh - whatever.
10wn_ptrs
This series took place in our backyard. I distinctly remember Lois Maxwell as being a very respectful, distinguished, beautiful woman who brought a wonderful presence to the series. All of the cast and crew were very nice people. Today,First Nations people is the proper term to use when referring to 'Indian'; which is still the technical-governmental term. At the time of the shooting of this series, many of the First Nations people were from our little village, Birch Island (Whitefish River First Nation). I was in the series as a little girl in the 'Long, Tough Race. At a time in our struggle for better rights and literally, a 'long, tough race' for our own people, this series affected our little village in a positive way. We took great pride in being a part of 'Adventures in Rainbow Country'. Many good things were spun out of this series and still remain today ie. provincial tourism names this area Rainbow Country. Very often, older Canadians still remember the series. A search on the web should bring up the latest information on the series. I think it is a vital part of Canadian television history.
Did you know
- TriviaEven though it ran for only one season, it produced some of the highest ratings of any Canadian television program. Never actually cancelled by the CBC, the show's production company disbanded before more episodes could be ordered.
- How many seasons does Adventures in Rainbow Country have?Powered by Alexa
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