98°F
weather icon Clear
TV

‘Blood & Treasure’ charts a course for adventure

CBS’ new summer drama “Blood & Treasure” feels cinematic in scope, like “National Treasure,” “Mission: Impossible” and a Disneyland ride all wrapped up in one.

The 13-episode series begins Tuesday and follows the adventures of a treasure-seeking duo — played by Matt Barr (“Valor”) and Sofia Pernas (“The Brave”) — as they race around the world chasing down blood antiquities while trying to navigate their troubled romance.

“It’s a fun romp of a heist/treasure hunt show with stakes in real-world politics,” executive producer Taylor Elmore says. “It’s an entertaining-for-the-whole-family kind of show.”

Executive producer Stephen Scaia adds: “It’s a big, fun, explosive action-adventure — everything you want from a treasure-hunter show. There’s flashbacks to Nazis and bars of gold and pirates.

“But then there’s also a really great modern story that’s with our characters. As the season goes on, we collect more and more people until, by the end of the season, we’ve got kind of a treasure squad of characters that are all helping to solve the final mystery of the show.”

The series was inspired by the “Indiana Jones” films and “Romancing the Stone” — the sort of movies you don’t see being made today, let alone adapted into a TV series.

“Blood & Treasure” takes place all over the globe, but filming was able to keep the locations to just the essentials — Montreal (which doubles for much of Europe), Italy and Morocco (for Africa, Spain, Cuba and the Caribbean).

“We literally did three continents all over the world and came back, and it really shows. It’s all on the screen,” Elmore says. “It’s so fun to watch. ‘Oh, my God, that’s the Colosseum. They’re playing baseball in front of it.’ That was really exciting.”

But viewers shouldn’t expect the show to take itself too seriously, Elmore adds. “Just when things start to get too intense, it gets funny again and gives you a chance to breathe.”

THE LATEST
‘General Hospital’ actor shot dead in Los Angeles robbery

Actor Johnny Wactor, known for playing Brando Corbin on “General Hospital,” was shot dead during a robbery attempt in Los Angeles, family members and his agent said Sunday.

New ‘The Office’ spinoff takes place at a Midwestern newspaper

“The Office,” a mockumentary that detailed the endearing mundanity of life at Dunder Mifflin, ran from 2005 to 2013. It’s one of those comfort-food series some fans revisit again and again. In 2024 it seems like a time capsule, the last days of 9-to-5 culture before work-from-home upended it all.