The second season of Step Dave, created by Nothing Trivial and Go Girls' Kate McDermott, premiered last night, stepping into the spotlight as a much-coveted and exceptionally rare difficult second season for a locally made production.
I once spoke to James Griffin, New Zealand television writing royalty, who told me he had never imagined that Outrageous Fortune would be renewed for another season, let alone six. So has Step Dave stepped up?
The premiere of season two opens with Dave and Cara's eight-month anniversary. It's the first of many reminders of their gaping age chasm - this is the longest relationship young Davey boy has ever had. Cara looks on at him like he's a puppy who has just learnt to do "paw" for the first time. He's so cute! So naive! But at least he's learning. These reminders come thick and fast, perhaps because on-screen the much alluded to age gap is almost imperceptible.
Jono Kenyon as the titular Step Dave plays the boy-playing-a-man role particularly well, soothed and slowed by the calm charisma of Sia Trokenheim as Cara. They are a convincing couple, and I'm glad that there was a resistance to dressing Cara in Ezibuy tunics and dusting talcum powder in her hair to age her beyond her years. It gives the premise, which could easily slip into some awful Cougar Town caricature, the right amount of realism and respect it requires. "I always thought having a relationship was about having a regular shag," Dave muses, eyes wide, "but it's so much more than that".