America's most famous youth hockey team couldn't return to the ice without Minnesota.
In "The Mighty Ducks: Game Changers," the first live-action TV series in the franchise's 29-year history, the coach of a new ragtag team favors University of Minnesota sweatshirts. A bar bears more than a passing resemblance to Nye's Polonaise Room. Paul Westerberg's "Runaway Wind" plays during a pivotal scene.
But unlike the three films that came before it, not a single scene in the 10-part dramedy, debuting Friday on Disney Plus, was shot in the state.
"Don't get me started," said Emilio Estevez, who returns as Gordon Bombay, his first high-profile acting role in 15 years. "It was a bummer we weren't there."
The actor has a long, fruitful relationship with Minnesota, dating back to 1985's "That Was Then ... This Is Now," for which he was both the star and the screenwriter.
"I remember sunrise, sitting on the steps of the St. Paul Cathedral, after a full night of shooting, probably with an illegal beverage," he said during a virtual interview from his home this month. "That Minnesota vibe, there's nothing like it."
Estevez, who also served as an executive producer, and Steven Brill, who came up with the original concept, cited a lack of tax rebates as the primary reason production was moved to Vancouver. Brill couldn't even persuade Disney to film exterior shots in the States, let alone scenes akin to the romantic walk through the St. Paul Winter Carnival in the 1992 original film, or skaters wreaking havoc at the Mall of America in the sequel.
"When we started planning the show, I hoped and prayed we'd shoot in Minnesota. I wrote it with that in mind," Brill said. "It just wasn't possible."