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The L.A. Complex

Canadian drama television series From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The L.A. Complex
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The L.A. Complex (originally Highland Gardens) is a Canadian drama television series that premiered on CTV on January 10, 2012, subsequently airing on MuchMusic. It also began airing in the United States on April 24, 2012, on The CW.[1] The series stars Cassie Steele as Abby Vargas, an aspiring actress who moves to Los Angeles with nothing but her Maple Leafs hockey bag and dreams of being a famous actress. As described in CTV publicity materials, "The L.A. Complex follows the lives of twenty year olds living in the same apartment complex in L.A. trying to make it as actors, dancers, producers and comedians. Relationships begin and end, the need to succeed is tested and all characters are pushed to their breaking points."[2][3]

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On December 3, 2012, it was announced that The L.A. Complex was not renewed for a third season by Much and Bell Media, but with a possibility that the series could be picked up by another network.[4] On December 20, 2012, The CW announced that the series would not be picked up, making it officially canceled.[5]

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Cast and characters

Main

  • Jonathan Patrick Moore as Connor Lake, a good-looking and successful actor from Australia who suffers from depression and self-harming
  • Joe Dinicol as Nick Wagner, a geeky, socially awkward stand-up comedian originally from Calgary
  • Andra Fuller as Kaldrick King,[a] real name Sean Dougan, a successful but troubled rapper originally from Oakland, California, who is secretly gay
  • Chelan Simmons as Alicia Lowe,[b] an aspiring dancer from Regina who will "do whatever it takes" to make ends meet
  • Cassie Steele as Abby Vargas, an accident-prone aspiring actress from Toronto and illegal immigrant
  • Benjamin Charles Watson as Tariq Muhammad,[b] an aspiring hip-hop music producer originally from Montreal who works as an intern for Kaldrick King, and eventually becomes his lover
  • Jewel Staite as Raquel Westbrook, a 30-year-old cynical, once successful actress from Halifax who fears her career is now over
  • Dayle McLeod as Beth Pirelli (season 2), a headstrong teenager from Winnipeg who moves into The Lux with her younger brother Simon, after their father abandons them
  • Michael Levinson as Simon Pirelli (season 2), a child actor who moves into The Lux with his older sister Beth
  • Georgina Reilly as Sabrina Reynolds (season 2; guest star season 1), a ruthless, LA-born comedian, who shares a rivalry with Nick

Recurring

  • Ennis Esmer as Eddie Demir, the landlord and manager of The Lux Motel
  • Paul F. Tompkins as himself, a straight-talking comedian
  • Dayo Ade as DyNasty, Kaldrick King's primary music producer, who helps cover up his homosexual affairs
  • Kristopher Turner and Jordan Johnson-Hinds as Cam Logan and Kevin Rainer, aspiring filmmakers who reside at the Lux and begin a collaboration with Raquel
  • Aaron Abrams as Ricky Lloyd, a once successful child actor and recovering drug addict, who makes a sex tape with Alicia to try and revitalise his career
  • Ryan Belleville as Scott Cray (season 2), Nick and Sabrina's lecherous, drug-addicted boss
  • Brett Dier and Megan Hutchings as Brandon Kelly and Laura Knight (season 2), actors on the Christian show Saving Grace, who engage in a three-way relationship with Abby
  • William Stewart as Rook (season 2), Kal's loyal friend, who shoots and kills his rival, Infinite Jest, in the series finale
  • Krista Allen as Jennifer Bell (season 2), a successful actress who starts a "show-mance" with Connor to remain relevant in the acting business
  • Eugene Clark as Walter Dougan (season 2), Kal's estranged father who runs a halfway house in Downtown Los Angeles for paroled ex-convicts and homeless teenage runaways
  • Stephan James as Infinite Jest (season 2), Kaldrick's rapper rival
  • Jarod Joseph as Christopher Taylor (season 2), Kaldrick King's openly gay lawyer boyfriend
  • Louis Ferreira as Dean Pirelli (season 2), Beth and Simon's estranged father
  • Steve Byers as Gray Sanders (season 2), Abby's serviceman boyfriend
  • Tori Anderson as Charlotte Lake (season 2), Connor's estranged sister
  • Matt Murray as Manny (season 2), Raquel's co-worker at the restaurant, who runs a credit card scam
Cast notes
  1. Fuller is added to the main cast from episode two.
  2. In season two, Simmons and Watson are credited with the main cast only when they appear. Simmons appears in two episodes, Watson in three episodes.
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Episodes

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Season 1 (2012)

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Season 2 (2012)

Production on the second and final season began in mid-April, and the season premiered in Canada on July 17, 2012.[18] The 13-episode second and final season was simulcast by The CW.[19] Alan Thicke joined the cast as Donald Gallagher, a hot-headed actor-director-producer.[19] Also guest-starring is Louis Ferreira as Beth and Simon's father Dean Pirelli.

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Development and production

CTV's parent company, Bell Media, ordered six episodes of the series in August 2011. Shooting and production of the series began in mid-2011, with both Toronto and Los Angeles as primary locations.[33]

Several hours prior to the series premiere, Bell Media announced that The L.A. Complex had been picked up by The CW to air in the United States later in the spring.[33] On March 22, 2012, Bell Media ordered a further 13 episodes to be produced for the first season.[34]

The CW picked up the second season of the show for the network's summer schedule, to begin airing on Tuesday, July 17, 2012.[35] Later, starting on August 27, 2012, the series moved to Mondays 8/7c as a lead-in for repeats of the new season of America's Next Top Model.

Reception

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Critical response

The L.A. Complex received mostly positive reviews from critics. On Rotten Tomatoes, the first season has a fresh rating of 100% based on 11 reviews, with a weighted average of 7.22/10. The site's critics consensus reads, "The L.A. Complex appeals with natural, humorous dialogue, and a focus on the real struggles of characters in the entertainment business."[36] On Metacritic, it has a score of 70 out of 100 based on 13 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[37]

Rob Owen of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette gave the show a positive review stating, "For the type of show it sets out to be, this Complex is surprisingly, well, complex."[38] Alan Sepinwall of HitFix also gave the show a positive review, describing the show as "a primetime soap, but one that's genuinely more interested in what the characters want to do for a living than in who they're sleeping with."[39]

The TVLine team said of The L.A. Complex, "It's like everything you'd want from a CW soap, and it delivers", and added that it contains "TV's most interesting, unexpected romance."[40] Entertainment Weekly gave the show an A− and declared that it was "summer's hidden gem", stating that it was "unexpectedly smart", and that the bad decisions of the characters made it "far more interesting, relatable, and likable than the glambots we normally see on L.A.-set dramas".[41]

In an unfavorable review, Tom Gliatto of People Weekly described the show as a "blah drama about kids living in an LA apartment complex while hustling for big breaks."

Ratings

  • The L.A. Complex premiered on January 10, 2012, in Canada. It was previewed on CTV drawing 351,000 viewers as well as 60,000 on its regular channel MuchMusic.[42]
  • Episode 2 aired January 17, 2012, on MuchMusic drawing 87,000 viewers.[43]
  • Episode 3 aired January 24, 2012, on MuchMusic drawing 40,000 viewers.[44]
  • Episode 4 aired January 31, 2012, on MuchMusic drawing 44,000 viewers.[45]
  • Episode 5 aired February 7, 2012, on MuchMusic drawing 16,000 viewers.[46]
  • Episode 6 (season finale) aired February 14, 2012, on MuchMusic drawing 22,000 viewers.[47]

However, after its initial airing in the United States, the series received the lowest-ever ratings for a broadcast drama series premiere, despite its generally favorable reviews.

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Home media

On August 13, 2015, Echo Bridge Entertainment released The L.A. Complex: The Complete Series on DVD in Region 1.

Reboot

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On October 3, 2018, it was announced that a reboot of the series was in the works at The CW with original creator Martin Gero and writer Brendan Gall set to executive produce. The "sequel" project, hailing from Gero's production company Quinn's House in association with Warner Bros. Television, is based on the original series, but follows "a new crop of tenants who move into the Luxe hotel in the heart of Hollywood—a ragtag commune of twentysomethings all hustling to make it as actors, dancers, producers or comedians. Relationships rise and fall, beliefs and values are tested, as the drive to succeed pushes all characters to their breaking points."[48] On February 8, 2019, The CW passed on picking up the script to pilot, reportedly due to a "numbers game" between Warner Bros. Television and The CW's other production studio CBS Television Studios. Because The CW is a joint effort between CBS and Warner Bros., the network orders an equal number of pilot episodes from each studio. However, The CW decided to keep the project in the works for the following development cycle.[49] After Gero inked a new development deal with Universal Television in May 2020, moving away from Warner Bros. Television,[50] he confirmed the following month on Instagram that the reboot would not happen.[51]

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References

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