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Vancouver-shot Netflix series The Order mixes humour, horror and beer pong

Dennis Heaton learned a lot about secret societies when he was writingĀ The Order, but his favourite societies donā€™t have Wikipedia entries.

 Vancouver-based screenwriter and showrunner Dennis Heaton digs deep into the world of secret societies in the Netflix series The Order.Vancouver-based screenwriter and showrunner Dennis Heaton digs deep into the world of secret societies in the Netflix series The Order.

Dennis Heaton learned a lot about secret societies when he was writingĀ The Order, but his favourite societies donā€™t have Wikipedia entries or internet footprints.

ā€œWeā€™ll never know about the best secret societies,ā€ says the Vancouver-based screenwriter and showrunner whose lengthy list of credits includesĀ Motive,Call Me FitzĀ ²¹²Ō»åĢżGhost Wars. ā€œThe Skull and Bones and the Illuminati have percolated to the surface, but Iā€™m really curious about the ones that are out there that we havenā€™t heard about. Theyā€™re the ones that are winning the game at keeping it under wraps.ā€

Heatonā€™s latest project draws its inspiration from those unknown societies, and injects them with magic and werewolf lore.

 Jake Manley stars in The Order as a university freshman intent on infiltrating the secret society that destroyed his mother.Jake Manley stars in The Order as a university freshman intent on infiltrating the secret society that destroyed his mother.

The Order stars Jake Manley as Jack Morton, a university freshman intent on infiltrating the secret society that destroyed his mother ā€” but in the process, he ends up joining a rival secret society completely by accident. No spoilers, but both societies engage in magic, mischief and murder. And because theyā€™re populated by university students, theyā€™re also rife with texting and beer pong and clumsy hook-ups.

The locally shot Netflix series dropped its 10-episode first season on March 7. Its remarkable cast includes Sarah Grey, Adam DiMarco, Katharine Isabelle, Max Martini, Thomas Elms, Devery Jacobs and Louriza Tronco.

Jewel Staite plays a pair of deliciously nasty sisters who are wholly different from Kaylee, the sunny character she played onĀ Firefly,Ā ²¹²Ō»åĢżMax HeadroomĀ icon Matt Frewer portrays Jackā€™s vengeful granddad.

The OrderĀ is equal parts funny and terrifying.

ā€œIā€™ve always found horror and comedy to be two sides of the same coin when Iā€™m writing,ā€ says Heaton, noting that he drew inspiration from The Howling and An American Werewolf in London. ā€œFor me, they naturally go hand in hand. Itā€™s not like I set out and go, ā€˜OK, Iā€™m going to write a horror film and I need to make sure I get some jokes.ā€™ Thereā€™s just a natural balance between horror and comedy when Iā€™m writing something in the horror genre.ā€

Heaton and his Order writers were cognizant of the fact their viewers exist in a world that is already scary. ā€œ[With The Order], I think itā€™s less about trying to scare people in a scary world and more about trying to distract them so they can be entertained again for a while and have a little fun,ā€ says Heaton.

WhileThe Order is fun for viewers all over the world, itā€™s arguably more fun for Vancouverites, given that much of the action was filmed at the University of British Columbiaā€™s Point Grey campus. UBC provided the exterior shots for the fictional Belgrave University; the interiors were filmed at Riverview. The old hospital ā€œhas a whole educational building that had classrooms for training,ā€ says Heaton. ā€œFor that, it was one-stop shopping. I appreciated it.ā€

The Order was dreamt up and fleshed out in a writersā€™ room, which is industry jargon for the physical space in which the showrunner and screenwriters develop plots and generate scripts.

Heaton ā€” who is the president of the Writers Guild of Canada ā€” describes his writersā€™ rooms as ā€œa fusion between a confessional booth and An Evening at the Improv.ā€

ā€œAs a showrunner, itā€™s your responsibility to make sure youā€™re creating a space where writers feel safe to share their stories, because there really can be those days where youā€™re drilling down into stuff that you wouldnā€™t necessarily bring up in conversation with other people.ā€

In The Orderā€™s writersā€™ room, Heaton and co. spoke freely about fear.

ā€œWhen youā€™re dealing with stuff about what scares you, you end up telling each other a lot of nightmares and things that scare you and you lean into more primal fear stuff than you might if youā€™re doing a family relationship drama series,ā€ says Heaton.

When it came time to film The Order, Heaton was more delighted than scared.

ā€œI think I end up ruining more shots on my show than anybody else because Iā€™ll be sitting behind the monitor laughing out loud at stuff, and oftentimes itā€™s not the stuff thatā€™s supposed to be funny but itā€™s scary and Iā€™m laughing because itā€™s so creepy! It makes me happy.ā€