“No, oh my god, is there more?” says Eva Hansteen (Lena Edit) a piece of into season two of thrillerserien “Acquitted”, and it is only to agree.
Category
TV series on the TV 2, eight episodes
Director
Actors
actors Nicolai Cleve Borch, Lena Change, Ingar Helge Gimle, Tobias Santelmann, Amrita Acharia, m.fl.
Premieredato
27. October 2016
Age limit
Orginaltittel
” “
It’s a little scary to turn on the tv for a new season of this series, which was one of the most exciting Norwegian drama had to offer in the last year.
the Drop is so great! The first season was a solid thriller that ended with a bang, literally. The end was satisfactory – good and bad. It seemed as if every stone was turned over in search of what really happened with Karine Hansteen, the fatal sommernatta 20 years ago. How manusforfatterne Anna Bache-Wiig and Siv Rajendram Eliassen, should further the story, without going and drøvtygge on the same, seemed unclear. Also, the tv world is full of examples of suksessserier that has been kept artificially alive for much longer than they should have been allowed to.
A confession?
So it turns out that all the rocks not turned over yet. And many of them can be fine turned both one and two and three times, before the whole truth has arrived for the day.
Or can they?
The first two episodes tynges of many turnaround: He said – no, now he pulled it back – but then she says that – or no, she regretted them. We start where last season ended: William Hansteen (Ingar Helge Gimle) has shot himself, apparently after having confessed that he killed his daughter Karine. Aksel Nilsen (Nicolai Cleve Broch), he believes is the year – finally! But William survives. Is “the rocks were slippery, it was not intended that she should fall” enough to get him drapsdømt? And was it really a confession?
do you Think this review may soon have to stop asking rhetorical questions, and just get to the point?
I thought about “Frikjent2″ also, to begin with. Despite the fact that the series is written and the clip to hold a high voltage level right from the start, it is as if we waltzes around in a quagmire. One-two-three-forward, one-two-three back. But when the drama is taken into the courtroom, loosening it. So to the degree that we wonder if the script is forbyttet with another TV 2-series. There is no way on who has done what with whom in the small village. Midway through the season, we are far into the såpelandskapet.
“Gone Girl” or “Hotel Caesar”?
the judicial process and the investigation is also full of ethical curiosities. Some give the series a little credibility problem, while others are there to show that there is a lot that doesn’t go by the book on the police and the municipal council in a small village. Here is also a lot of overstated symbolism, as when the Shaft literally the deuce his hands on the toilet outside of the trial, while he says the “It is not up to me”.
More than four episodes has this reviewer been allowed to see, but I hope the four next will take us closer to the “Gone Girl” than “Hotel Caesar”.
Probably is the ambition to show tv viewers that we even could have acted as citizens in Lifjord 20 years ago, when everyone was convinced that the Axle was the killer. For them he was a satisfactory solution to the drapsgåten, so the end of last season was it for the tv viewers. But perhaps the real solution is something completely different, something we would understand if we looked at a lot of the scenes with a different sight?
I think the “Innocent” has several major revelations on the sly, but it is impossible to be sure. “All families are the fucka, somehow”, ” says Erik Nilsen (Tobias Santelmann) at a time. But it is very, very few families that are equally fucka that Hansteens.
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