Danish well-known – 10. nov. 2019 – at. 06:13 Ulrich Thomsen about the ‘daughter’ of death: – A completely absurd thought
Ulrich Thomsen, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Trine Dyrholm, Lars Mikkelsen, Søren Malling and David Dencik and Lars Ranthe – plus it solve. Yes, it is something of an a-chain, Viaplay has gathered for their new self-produced mini-series ‘the Interrogation’. Instruction is handled by Christoffer Boe, who recently has had great success with the TV2 series ‘the Warrior’ as well as Jussi Adler-Olsen-filming ‘Journal 64’ after a somewhat narrower start of his career.
Ulrich Thomsen is sovereign as knudemanden Bear, who tries to solve his daughter’s death. Photo: Henrik Ohsten/Viaplay
the Manuscript is written by the Boe in cooperation with the Jacob Weis, who made his debut as the author of the wonderful Paprika Steen-comedy ‘that time of The year’, as the soon to be current again. In other words, we in the capable hands here.
Film, tv & radio – 15. oct. 2019 – at. 11:41 See the dates: New ‘Department Q’-movie on the way
Great names make, you know, not alone. It makes a good idea either, but combine the two things, you are pretty good on the road. ‘The interrogation’ is the genre of a crime novel or a politiserie, however, certainly not a usual one with lots of skuddueller, action and car chases. Almost on the contrary. The series is in the degree dialogbåret and that is cut completely to the bone.
It is of course to keep the budget down, but it works now also, that there is a deeper thought behind it. The story is that the policeman Bear (Ulrich Thomsen), daughter Christina (played by Alma Ekehed Thomsen – yes, they are also father/daughter in real life) being found dead in an expensive københavnerlejlighed and her finally being quickly brushed aside as suicide.
It refuses the not quite balanced Bear, however, to believe in, so he throws himself immediately in the elucidation of the crime, which he believes is behind it. How it ends, you must see for yourself.
See also: Committed the blunder at the children’s school
the Entire action takes place in under a day and each of the eight relatively short sections (20-25 minutes) takes place on a single location – the forensic institute, the possible crime scene, a brothel, a car etc. – where the Bear confronts one of the suspects. A sleight of hand, that works quite persuasive and where the focus is more on the internal than the external voltage.
There are actually eight psychological chamber play and the kind of course requires that the actors delivers the goods. They do all together here, but the key is Ulrich Thomsen, who is in almost every scene. He delivers a formidable action as a Bear that is already well out to fucking at the series ‘ start, but certainly not become more stable along the way, while the skeletons (not just his own) tumbles out of the cabinets. Perhaps ‘the Interrogation’ is not a crime, but a family drama?
movie Reviews – 30. oct. 2019 – at. 22:45 New German films: Involuntarily comical
Certain key parts of the story are allowed to be by the suggestion, which certainly does not do anything, if you ask me. There are very few things that wins by to be cut out in cardboard. Great to Viaplay – as you also so, with svindlerkomedien ‘Freedom’ – leaning against the other unadulterated commercial players like Netflix and HBO by daring to bet on the originality and substance. On top of that Danish produced. Maybe it turns out that it can ultimately pay off to bet on the quality. It would be wonderful.
Medv.: Ulrich Thomsen, Trine Dyrholm, Nikolaj Lie Kaas, Lars Mikkelsen m.fl.