Young FBI agent Audrey Parker (Emily Rose) is sent to Maine on a mission to capture an escaped convict. However, the convict is already dead when she gets there, and despite the sheriff’s determination that it is an accident, he reluctantly lends her deputy chief/his son Nathan (Lucas Bryant).
Almost as soon as they start searching for clues, Audrey realizes that something isn’t quite right about the residents. Some of them have supernatural powers, such as mood swings affecting the weather or the ability to shove you a couple of feet with one little push. Oh, and her new friend Nathan can’t feel pain. Or anything else for that matter…
When the mystery is solved, another mystery-possibly one that can unlock Audrey’s past surfaces. She asks a couple of weeks from her boss, who lets her all too willingly to stay.
Then there is Duke (Eric Balfour), the charming, and not-always law-abiding guy who Nathan isn’t fond of.
The sheriff is impressed by case-solving skills, so Audrey joins Nathan in his office. They become good friends, with implications that maybe we might expect more in the future.
But our main concern in Haven is not if Nathan and Audrey will get together. We want to know about Lucy Ripley, who looks exactly like Lucy- and looks to be the same age as Lucy. Yet she was here when Nathan and Duke were just kids and they don’t remember anything about the day (the day The Colorado Kid was murdered)….
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Loosely based on Stephen King’s The Colorado Kid, Haven has found a nice balance between the micro events we deal with each episode and the clues as we try to solve who Audrey is, and also learn that maybe things about Nathan and Luke aren’t so straightforward either. The effects could have been better, but the drama/mystery /relationships are well balanced. Some episodes are better than others, but overall it is great for anyone who loves his supernatural without the horror or extreme romances.
As much as I love my vampires and werewolves, it is refreshing and fun where the supernatural come from humans who are just “troubled”. We are curious to see why it started, and how it is all related to Lucy.
Favorite Episodes
– Season 2, Episode 6- Audrey Parker’s Day Off offers the appropriate reference to Bill Murray’s Groundhog Day, it had the right amount of comedy, mystery and drama
Fun Facts about the Show and the Cast
– Haven is set in Maine, USA but shot in Canada.
– Emily Rose (Audrey) and Eric Balfour (Duke) are American and Lucas Bryant is Canadian.
– Broadcasted on the same network as (the North American version of) Being Human.
– Original Beverly Hills 90210 (1990-2000)’s Brandon Jason Priestly appears in 4 episodes, serving both as a “troubled” guy and a love interest for Audrey.
– Wrestler Adam Copeland is a frequent co-star.