Mirren Mack stars as the (maybe villainous, threatening) Kaya in TVNZ on Demand’s new family drama The Nest. (Photo: TVNZ)
Mirren Mack stars as the (maybe villainous, threatening) Kaya in TVNZ on Demand’s new family drama The Nest. (Photo: TVNZ)

Pop CultureJune 18, 2020

Home sweet home: The rise of the dark family drama

Mirren Mack stars as the (maybe villainous, threatening) Kaya in TVNZ on Demand’s new family drama The Nest. (Photo: TVNZ)
Mirren Mack stars as the (maybe villainous, threatening) Kaya in TVNZ on Demand’s new family drama The Nest. (Photo: TVNZ)

You can’t choose your family, but you can choose your drama. Tara Ward rounds up the five best family dramas on TVNZ OnDemand.

However weird your own family might be, there’s a strange comfort in knowing there’s always one on TV that’s much, much worse. Whether it’s a grieving wife discovering her husband has three secret wives on Mrs Wilson, an insecure son realising his father is a manipulative bully in Mother Father Son, or a family trying to hide a troubled marriage in Deadwater Fell, the endless trials and tribulations of domestic life make for gripping television drama.

That’s certainly the case in TVNZ OnDemand’s new show The Nest, an emotional thriller about one couple’s attempts to create a family and their relationship with the troubled young surrogate they invite into their lives. Family is central to everything in The Nest, and this dark, layered drama asks how far someone will go to get the perfect life, while also questioning the ethics and morals of buying a baby from a stranger. 

Dan (Martin Compson, Line of Duty) and Emily (Sophie Rundle, every good British drama you’ve ever seen) Docherty are a wealthy husband and wife who have struggled with infertility for years. Businessman Dan owns “half of Glasgow” and Emily is a successful music teacher, and together they have every comfort money can buy. They live in a stunning home by the sea, build football stadiums, and attend black-tie dinners. But they can’t buy the one thing they really want: a baby.  

Or can they? 

Martin Compson, Sophie Rundle and Mirren Mack in TVNZ on Demand’s The Nest. (Photo: TVNZ)

When teenager Kaya (Mirren Mack) stumbles into their lives, Dan and Emily are presented with an opportunity they can’t refuse. Kaya offers to carry a baby for the Docherty’s in return for a hefty payment because the Glasgow Kaya lives in is the opposite to Dan and Emily’s. Having just turned 18, Kaya was released from state care to live alone in a council estate, and with no family and little support she hopes Dan and Emily’s cash will buy her a new beginning.

On paper, it’s the perfect solution. Dan and Emily get their longed-for baby while Kaya strikes it rich. The Docherty’s have one embryo left, and their future rests with a stranger that Emily accidentally hit with her Range Rover one night. Was meeting Kaya serendipitous, or just an opportunistic teenager chancing her luck with a desperate couple?

The Nest is a compelling drama spun on a web of secrets and lies, but it’s not alone. Here are some other dark dramas that take the twists and turns of dysfunctional family life and turn them into captivating television.  

Cush Jumbo and David Tennant in Deadwater Fell. (Photo: TVNZ)

Deadwater Fell

Deadwater Fell has definite Scottish Broadchurch vibes, being set in a sleepy rural community turned upside down by tragedy and starring David Tennant. Tennant plays Dr Tom Kendrick, a well-respected village GP and sole survivor of a mysterious event that kills his family. As an investigation into the murders begins, nothing in the community is as it seems while the Kendricks have more secrets than you can shake a hot haggis at.

The Secrets She Keeps 

A random meeting in a supermarket kickstarts this Australian psychological thriller about the unlikely friendship between two pregnant women. Meghan is an Instagram star with beautiful children and a perfect home, while loner Agatha hopes a baby will give her the life she dreams of. Agatha wants everything Meghan has, but how will she get it? The Secrets She Keeps is a dark thriller about obsession and jealousy, and reminds us that you never really know the truth about someone’s life

Ruth Wilson as Mrs. Wilson in Mrs. Wilson (Photo: TVNZ)

Mrs Wilson

Imagine your husband dies suddenly and after his death, you discover he was secretly married to three other women. Mind. Blown. But this is exactly what happens in Mrs Wilson when Alison (Ruth Wilson) learns her beloved husband Alec (Iain Glen) was actually a lying dirtbag with several other Mrs Wilsons stashed throughout England. Even more shocking is that Mrs Wilson is inspired by true events with Ruth Wilson playing her own grandmother in the title role.

The Split

The Split is a sleek and sharp-witted drama that follows the lives of the Defoe women in all their messy, complicated glory. High profile divorce lawyer Hannah (Nicola Walker) annoys her entire family when she ditches the family firm to join a rival company and then meets her estranged father who deserted the family 30 years earlier. The Defoes might be experts at sorting out their client’s lives, but their own lives are a hot mess. 

MotherFatherSon

Richard Gere returns to the small screen to play Max Finch, a ruthless media mogul who pulls all the strings in British politics. His son Caden is set to take over the family business, but when Caden suffers a breakdown, Max must reunite with ex-wife Kathryn (Helen McCrory) to protect his son. Caden knows all of Max’s secrets, Kathryn has a major grudge against her ex, and Max is desperate to prevent his empire from falling apart. Basically, they’ve all got a lot on their plate, and the crap’s about to hit the fan.

This content was created in paid partnership with TVNZ. Learn more about our partnerships here.


Go to TVNZ OnDemand, where you’ll find a ton of other great shows (…way beyond just what’s played on TV)

Keep going!
The men from 2nd Chance Charlie, looking for their second punt at a professional rugby career. (Photo: Mediaworks)
The men from 2nd Chance Charlie, looking for their second punt at a professional rugby career. (Photo: Mediaworks)

Pop CultureJune 17, 2020

Review: 2nd Chance Charlie lays bare some glaring issues in NZ rugby

The men from 2nd Chance Charlie, looking for their second punt at a professional rugby career. (Photo: Mediaworks)
The men from 2nd Chance Charlie, looking for their second punt at a professional rugby career. (Photo: Mediaworks)

Jamie Wall reviews 2nd Chance Charlie, where lower grade rugby players compete to have another go at rugby stardom and success.

Here’s a show for all the battlers: one of the oldest male traditions in New Zealand, the “had it not been for [insert reason here] I would’ve been an All Black” story, has been made into a series called 2nd Chance Charlie. Over eight weeks, it will follow five lower grade rugby players as they compete for a 12-week intensive training programme with a Super Rugby team and $10,000 cash prize, ostensibly giving them a chance to crack the career they feel like they deserved.

With episodes only five minutes long, on the surface it’s a pretty fun little story to follow of attempted redemption. However, if you dig a little deeper 2nd Chance Charlie inadvertently lays bare a couple of glaring issues with rugby at the moment, as well as the realities of what these guys are actually after. Pro rugby players these days should really be called pro gym goers, as lifting weights and cardio is what the vast majority of their time is spent doing; passing and kicking a ball around being a distant second. The series is more of a fitness and weight loss challenge than anything else, even then it’s pretty hard to know how they’ll determine a winner given the wildly differing physical states of the contestants.

The men selected for the show represent the Super Rugby regions that they’re based in, all with varying stories of why they’re slogging it out on club fields on Saturday afternoons rather than in front of thousands in stadiums around the world.

The cast fit perfectly into character tropes that anyone who has spent a bit of time involved in the game can identify readily; firefighter James is a cuddly front rower who seems impossible not to like but has weight and fitness issues. Tai is a perfect physical specimen of a human, who has been plagued by injuries that stalled his career and probably played a big part in him becoming a mental health advocate. Dan, a halfback from the Navy, has all the tools and just needs a bit of self belief.

However, the two most interesting characters couldn’t be more further apart. Nili is a Salvation Army driver and father of an autistic child, the soft-spoken giant who transforms into a brutal hit machine whenever he takes the park. The 28-year-old genuinely was on the path to stardom in his late teens – playing alongside a number of guys who are now All Blacks and gaining selection for the New Zealand under 20s, before giving it all up to go on a religious mission for two years. Although other devout athletes have managed to return from such a long break and make it, Nili wasn’t so lucky. It’s pretty poignant watching him having to stand up in front of the Chiefs team he will be embedded with, wearing a t-shirt that clearly marks himself as the odd one out and almost tearfully re-introducing himself to a bunch of far more chiseled old friends that are enjoying the career he missed.

Dave, maybe the one unlikeable contestant on 2nd Chance Charlie. (Photo: Mediaworks)

Then there’s Dave, the full-of-himself pretty boy whose past team mates have clearly only tolerated because he’s presumably either an excellent goal kicker, gets some hot girls coming to the clubrooms or can score pingas on the reg. The personal trainer has fashioned himself into one of modern society’s most loathsome figures, a preachy Instagram wellness influencer wannabe, and his insufferable nature makes him immediately stand out – a must for any reality TV show, made especially clear when his reason for not making it big is simply that he was too busy getting pissed and chasing girls before rehabilitating himself through “eastern mysticism”. It’s pretty hard to not think the guy is just playing it up for the camera, however Dave’s schtick does kind of make you want him to win just so he can get his head taken off by Scott Barrett as part of his “prize”.

The premise itself is somewhat of an antidote to the much-covered rugby “pathway”, whereby these days if you haven’t been identified as a potential All Black by the time you finish school, it’s going to be a massive uphill battle to make a career out of playing the game. This sort of thinking has seen talent being concentrated mainly into private or traditionally strong boys colleges that regularly pilfer promising players out of lower socioeconomic areas, taking away the chance for those communities to have a home grown success story that inspires the kids at the schools they inevitably leave. With upwards of six figures a season of school money reportedly spent on some first XV programmes though, it’s no wonder the powers-that-be are more than happy for this situation to continue, as it essentially churns out developed players for Super Rugby teams without them having to do anything.

This in turn leaves players like the 2nd Chance Charlie men with only club pride and a pat on the back to play for every weekend, even though they’re putting their bodies through the same rigours as the pros but without the costly system in place to make sure they’re in the best possible shape for the next one.

2nd Chance Charlie also shows, even though its run time is annoyingly brief, that rugby players have personalities that can be explored to market the game through individualism. Within a few minutes, you know these guys and their motivations. Tellingly, three of the men are fathers with a desire to simply be providing a better life for their families. All too often, all we know about the All Blacks is their commitment and relentless attitude to do the jersey proud. While that’s a laudable part of the team’s mythos, it’s also a barrier for potential new fans that simply see them often as interchangeable robots. For a sport that is desperately struggling to recapture the almost religious engagement of the past, very little of what could be described as “unique” has really been done lately to broaden its appeal.

However, the clock is ticking on the stoic, team-first, bore-the-media-into-submission attitude that NZ Rugby so steadfastly holds itself to, and shows like this can hopefully guide it to a newer vision of how it presents itself. Let’s just hope the irony of that happening off the efforts of a bunch of club rugby battlers isn’t lost on them. 

2nd Chance Charlie airs after The Project on Wednesdays and Thursday on Three.