Sea Change



"''Full fathom five thy father lies;

Of his bones are coral made;

Those are pearls that were his eyes:

Nothing of him that doth fade

But doth suffer a sea-change

Into something rich and strange.''"

Sea Change is one of Australia's most iconic and critically acclaimed Dramedy shows. Named after a line from Shakespeare's The Tempest, the show is about transformation.

Sigrid Thornton (The Man from Snowy River) plays Laura Gibson, a competitive, neurotic and work-driven lawyer whose workaholic lifestyle has distanced her from her husband, Jack, and children Miranda and Rupert so much that the only thing they have in common anymore is that they live in the same house.

That is, until the day when her life collapsed.

It started when her alarm clock broke and she overslept. Which led to her jumping out of bed onto the cat. Which led to a $400+ vet visit. And that was before the day got bad.

By the end of the day, Rupert has been expelled from school, the partnership Laura was seeking at her law firm went to a younger, more people-friendly colleague, Jack has been arrested for real estate fraud, and Laura finds out he was having an affair... with her sister.

After a mental-breakdown of the home movies, pajamas and chocolate biscuit variety, Laura decides she is going to take the kids and start afresh as the in the last place where she can remember being happy. A small coastal town where they once went on holiday when the kids were little; Pearl Bay. Without hesitation she buys the holiday house in which they had stayed and takes the job as town magistrate.

Unfortunately, paradise isn't quite as Laura remembers. The old holiday house is dilapidated and in the middle of a caravan park, her first case is to pass judgment on the previous magistrate, who is also the likable town drunk, and the town seems to be firmly in the grip of one Bob Jelly, who is the town mayor and real estate agent. That's not to mention the town politics and the snail-like pace of life.

Luckily (or maybe unluckily) for Laura, there is a colourful group of locals who are ready to help in their very own laconic and easygoing way. Their leader is the laid-back and enigmatic "Diver" Dan Della Bosca, played by David Wenham (Lord of the Rings, 300), who seems to have chemistry with Laura.

Even though it only lasted three years, the show was supposedly responsible for a rise in the level of people moving from cities and suburban areas to lead a coastal life.

This TV series contains examples of:

 * Abusive Parents: Diver Dan's father, repeatedly hinted at (though no actual info was given).
 * All Girls Want Bad Boys: Miranda and Felix in season 2 (played with in that he's not really bad, Laura doesn't approve because he's a nomadic Pyromaniac fire fetishist- but, he's not a criminal).
 * Code Silver: Well... sort of...
 * Cloudcuckoolander: Heather, Carmen
 * Corrupt Corporate Executive: Bob Jelly is probably the only one of these without an actual corporation behind him.
 * Deadpan Snarker: Miranda, Max
 * End-of-Episode Silliness: Each Episode ends with Kevin talking to his son Trevor, often having a random and amusing conversation that just barely relates to the events that took place in the episode.
 * Estrogen Brigade Bait: Diver Dan
 * Expository Theme Tune: Bizarrely, at the end of the episode during the credits.
 * Faux Yay: Craig Jelly in one episode tries to convince Miranda he's gay to get close to her... Logic was never one of his strong points.
 * The Ghost: Bucket
 * Incest Is Relative: OK, so  wasn't actually   but when everyone thought it was, there was a memorable scene where Rupert asked something like, "Will   baby be our cousin?" and Laura replied, "No. Half-brother... or sister." and then they realise that it would be both.
 * It's All About Me: Bob Jelly's daughter Jules.
 * Jerk with a Heart of Gold: Max
 * Leitmotif: "Down By The Riverbed" by the Backsliders for Diver Dan.
 * Literal Minded: Diver Dan tends to do this to irritate people.
 * Luke, I Am Your Father: The long lost daughter of Meredith and Harold turns out to be another major character.
 * Photographic Memory: Meredith remembers everything.
 * Put on a Bus:
 * Pyromaniac: Felix, Miranda's almost boyfriend in season 2.
 * Real Estate Scam: Bob Jelly fakes an auction over the phone in order to increase the price of the house Laura wants to buy.
 * Romantic False Lead:
 * Status Quo Is God: Justified- there's some kind of supernatural force at work in Pearl Bay that has kept the town alive despite not having a great economy, with a fairly stable population, and pretty much disables all attempts to connect it to the outside world (there's another road leading in and out, but all attempts to fix the bridge or build an alternative are doomed, as are Bob's attempts to change the town).
 * Stigmatic Pregnancy Euphemism: There was some "trouble" originating from Meredith and Harold's relationship. The "trouble" was given away.
 * Stuff Blowing Up: The toilets in season 1, and the community hall in season 2.
 * Suspiciously Similar Substitute:
 * Tall, Dark and Snarky: Max.
 * Tsundere: Laura, Karen
 * Wham! Line: "Would you excuse me? "
 * White and Grey Morality: A huge part of the show was the ongoing battle of ideas- for instance, the small-town mentality of Pearl Bay versus Laura's outsider mentality. The majority of Pearl Bay residents believe that character should determine the outcome of court cases, and while the law doesn't always deliver the outcomes people think are right, the town would probably end up letting people off when they've done things that endanger the town- like Reg, who drove a car off the bridge that nearly killed him and could have made the school ferry crash- and they would be overlooking people who desperately need help but aren't getting it. Laura, on the other hand, doesn't have that mentality and is determined to do her job despite endangering her relationships with the people in the town.
 * In addition, Bob Jelly versus the rest of the town. He wants to expand the town and modernise it, which isn't actively a malicious goal except for the fact that he refuses to take into account that the rest of the town doesn't want to expand and they don't need to.
 * In addition, Bob Jelly versus the rest of the town. He wants to expand the town and modernise it, which isn't actively a malicious goal except for the fact that he refuses to take into account that the rest of the town doesn't want to expand and they don't need to.