
Recommended for: Viewers who can't wait for winter.ĥ. What's he doing in Fortitude? Are the people more or less dangerous than the polar bears? And what's up with the mammoth carcass? The scenery is spectacular, the storytelling stomach-churning. In the first season, Stanley Tucci ( The Hunger Games) plays a London police inspector whose arrival coincides with the discovery of a murder. British-made, filmed in Iceland, and set in a fictional community in Arctic Norway called Fortitude, this eerie mystery runs hot and very, very cold. Recommended for: News junkies, anyone who loved the reporters in Spotlight.Ĥ. Hjejle's Dicte channels many great reporters, the kind who drive their editors - and the people they cover - crazy, and without whom we'd know far less about the world we live in. But the pressure to do more, more, more, with less, less, less?

No one's more critical of shows about journalism than journalists, but this Danish show about a newspaper crime reporter named Dicte Svendsen ( Iben Hjejle) gets a lot right.ĭicte, a divorced single mother, is more Nancy Drew than most news people I know. Henrik Mestad stars as Prime Minister Jesper Berg, whose plan to fight climate change by abandoning oil production in favor of an alternative form of energy meets with major pushback, triggering a coercive but ostensibly peaceful occupation as Russia moves to keep the oil flowing.ģ. This taut drama from Norway, which turns on a takeover of that nation by neighboring Russia in a near-future scenario involving oil, may be speculative fiction (the idea's credited to novelist Jo Nesbø), but it's hardly sci-fi.
#The killing danish or american better tv#
When TV depicts an invasion of the U.S., it's usually by extraterrestrials ( Falling Skies, Colony). Where to find it: Apple iTunes (first episode is free), DVD.Ģ. Sidse Babett Knudsen ( A Hologram for the King) stars as Birgitte Nyborg Christensen, who becomes the fictional first female prime minister of Denmark after an election in which refugees are a pivotal issue.ĭon't worry: Borgen, which premiered in Denmark in 2010, isn't remotely like the real-life drama playing here now.īorgen, whose title comes from the nickname for the palace that houses Denmark's government, chronicles a public figure's loss of innocence and some soap-worthy private shenanigans while offering a college-level course in parliamentary politics.
#The killing danish or american better series#
That's one thing I learned from Borgen, a Danish series that became a craze among American TV critics when only KCET, a non-PBS public station in Los Angeles, and the satellite network Link TV were carrying it in the U.S.Īfter catching a few episodes that streamed on Link TV's website and some more on screeners it sent to critics, I bought the rest on DVD, something I almost never do. Looking for something from a cooler climate to help you through the latest heat wave? Here are 10 shows to consider:ġ. Even armchair travel makes me see the world from another angle. What we don't get in a remake are the differences in the way societies view everything from marriage to murder.


remake of Forbrydelsen, which here became AMC's The Killing, only to be told the Danish original was better. It's not just fear of missing out, although I hated waiting for the U.S. With more than 400 scripted shows a year to watch in the U.S., I'm goofing off every time I click on a series with subtitles and Nordic accents.
