Got something to say or just want fewer pesky ads? Join us... 😊

The Bridge BBC4







Pudos

Active member
Aug 18, 2015
136
Will watch this after I have finished Wastelands.

Best Walter Presents was Professor T, brilliant series

Loved Wastelands, grim at times but seeing peoples lives (even though its a drama) was fascinating. Will look the Prof T up
 






Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
72,388
Living In a Box
Currently watching All The Sins season 2, very dark
 






Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
72,388
Living In a Box
Just finished both seasons of that . Really impressed- but I thought they should have started with season 2 first


Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

Too right it seems to go backwards.

Very much enjoying Spiral as well, about to start Season 5
 






Shooting Star

Well-known member
Apr 29, 2011
2,885
Suffolk
Trapped on Prime is very, very good if you like the Bridge. Slightly slower pace, but very atmospheric. Icelandic.
 




Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
72,388
Living In a Box
Watching a Danish Noir called Deliver Us on All4, very good
 




Beach Hut

Brighton Bhuna Boy
Jul 5, 2003
72,388
Living In a Box
For those that like their foreign TV The Young Montalbano Series 2 starts this Saturday on BBC Four
 


Is it PotG?

Thrifty non-licker
Feb 20, 2017
25,745
Sussex by the Sea
The Bridge remains one of, if not THE finest pieces of work ever to grace our screens.

Swedish series Fallen has reunited two The Bridge alumni for a psychological noir that proves beyond a doubt that their chemistry extends beyond the popular, multi-season series that spawned several international imitations. As befits a Nordic drama, there’s red herrings aplenty to keep the twists coming in the criminal case, but there’s much more to Fallen than a murder mystery.
Star Sofia Helin is Iris Broman, a longtime cop who witnesses her husband’s brutal murder after the killers fail to hit their intended target: her. In a state of shock, grief and guilt, she leaves Stockholm for her half-sister’s holiday home in Ystad. Kattis (Hedda Stiernstedt, whose other work includes Börje, (also streaming on SBS On Demand) has made her main home in Paris and her two children are bilingual in Swedish and French. The sister’s similarities and differences result in a dance of familiarity and dissonance, a plotline that also has roots in Ahlgren’s personal experience.

The seaside town is intended to provide a balm for the emotionally wrought Iris, but 20 years of finely tuned observation, crime solving, and justice has hardwired her for criminal investigations. And she is far from retired. She has been strategically reassigned to lead the cold case team in Malmo, ‘Kalla Fall’, distracting her from interfering in her husband’s murder case.
When the body of an unidentified boy is discovered, it is seemingly linked to a crime that occurred over a decade earlier, and Iris becomes immersed in discovering who the victim is, why he was killed, and how the case went unsolved for so long. Did someone in authority have a vested interest in hiding the killer’s identity?
Before you put two and two together (The Bridge writer Camilla Ahlgren + lead actress Sofia Helin + crime drama = The Bridge 2.0), this is a different beast. There are inescapable similarities, which only strengthen the series. Helin is phenomenal at carrying the weight of her emotional darkness in the smallest gestures: a wince, a glance, the curl of her lip. As Iris, she is a loner to a degree - it’s the nature of her work - but she is seeking closeness and solace in her sister, Kattis, and she can empathise fiercely with the family seeking answers about their dead son.

As the iconic Saga Norén in The Bridge, Helin portrayed an autistic, traumatised woman who focused on the most finicky elements of criminal cases as a form of control over a life that was overwhelming and fearsome. There’s a softness to Iris that feels new and compelling, showcasing Helin’s versatility and Ahlgren’s capacity to sculpt a story and script that is sensitive to women’s complicated relationships with their sisters, their work, and the jarring expectations of women in professional and personal spheres. Interestingly, Ahlgren told Variety that she had not written the script with Helin in mind for the role of Iris. Years after an unsuccessful pitch, she tried again with a different channel and when they suggested attaching an established actor to the show, Helin’s name inevitably arose. It is impossible to envision anyone else as Iris once you witness Helin’s wholehearted, affecting depiction of a woman in tumult.
 


Weststander

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Aug 25, 2011
69,916
Withdean area
The Bridge remains one of, if not THE finest pieces of work ever to grace our screens.

Swedish series Fallen has reunited two The Bridge alumni for a psychological noir that proves beyond a doubt that their chemistry extends beyond the popular, multi-season series that spawned several international imitations. As befits a Nordic drama, there’s red herrings aplenty to keep the twists coming in the criminal case, but there’s much more to Fallen than a murder mystery.
Star Sofia Helin is Iris Broman, a longtime cop who witnesses her husband’s brutal murder after the killers fail to hit their intended target: her. In a state of shock, grief and guilt, she leaves Stockholm for her half-sister’s holiday home in Ystad. Kattis (Hedda Stiernstedt, whose other work includes Börje, (also streaming on SBS On Demand) has made her main home in Paris and her two children are bilingual in Swedish and French. The sister’s similarities and differences result in a dance of familiarity and dissonance, a plotline that also has roots in Ahlgren’s personal experience.

The seaside town is intended to provide a balm for the emotionally wrought Iris, but 20 years of finely tuned observation, crime solving, and justice has hardwired her for criminal investigations. And she is far from retired. She has been strategically reassigned to lead the cold case team in Malmo, ‘Kalla Fall’, distracting her from interfering in her husband’s murder case.
When the body of an unidentified boy is discovered, it is seemingly linked to a crime that occurred over a decade earlier, and Iris becomes immersed in discovering who the victim is, why he was killed, and how the case went unsolved for so long. Did someone in authority have a vested interest in hiding the killer’s identity?
Before you put two and two together (The Bridge writer Camilla Ahlgren + lead actress Sofia Helin + crime drama = The Bridge 2.0), this is a different beast. There are inescapable similarities, which only strengthen the series. Helin is phenomenal at carrying the weight of her emotional darkness in the smallest gestures: a wince, a glance, the curl of her lip. As Iris, she is a loner to a degree - it’s the nature of her work - but she is seeking closeness and solace in her sister, Kattis, and she can empathise fiercely with the family seeking answers about their dead son.

As the iconic Saga Norén in The Bridge, Helin portrayed an autistic, traumatised woman who focused on the most finicky elements of criminal cases as a form of control over a life that was overwhelming and fearsome. There’s a softness to Iris that feels new and compelling, showcasing Helin’s versatility and Ahlgren’s capacity to sculpt a story and script that is sensitive to women’s complicated relationships with their sisters, their work, and the jarring expectations of women in professional and personal spheres. Interestingly, Ahlgren told Variety that she had not written the script with Helin in mind for the role of Iris. Years after an unsuccessful pitch, she tried again with a different channel and when they suggested attaching an established actor to the show, Helin’s name inevitably arose. It is impossible to envision anyone else as Iris once you witness Helin’s wholehearted, affecting depiction of a woman in tumult.

Thanks.

And The Killing. Spellbinding at the time, wish I hadn’t seen it yet. Borgen was also special.
 






Is it PotG?

Thrifty non-licker
Feb 20, 2017
25,745
Sussex by the Sea
Is Fallen on in the UK yet?
Sadly no news yet.

Banijay Rights has scored a first batch of sales on “Fallen,” a crime drama reuniting “The Bridge” showrunner Camilla Ahlgren and star Sofia Helin. The series is produced by Banijay-owned Filmlance, a leading Scandinavian outfit.

Unveiled at the Goteborg Film Festival‘s TV Drama Vision conference, deals on “Fallen” include Canal+’s channel Polar+ in France, MHz Choice in the U.S., NPO in the Netherlands, SBS in Australia, ERT in Greece and Syn Hf in Iceland.

Early days!
 




Machiavelli

Well-known member
Oct 11, 2013
17,928
Fiveways
I'm sure it's been done on the iPlayer thread, but we've just finished Prisoner with Sofie Grabol (from The Killing) and, if you like your Nordic noir, suspect you'll get on with this.
 






portlock seagull

Well-known member
Jul 28, 2003
17,931
I have to mention that Sidse Babett Knudsen was lovely :blush:
Ha ha. It’s funny, Denmark is such a small place that when I was chatting to my Danish mate about Borgen being on our screens and what a great series it was, he said about one of the stars of the show “oh, my sister in laws in that” and pulled out his phone to show me pics of her looking after their son whilst we were having dinner in Copenhagen with him and his wife.
 


Albion and Premier League latest from Sky Sports


Top
Link Here