IMDb रेटिंग
8.1/10
1.4 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंCarl makes some dangerous allegations to some powerful men, while Rose takes a fresh angle to uncover more information about Sam Haig.Carl makes some dangerous allegations to some powerful men, while Rose takes a fresh angle to uncover more information about Sam Haig.Carl makes some dangerous allegations to some powerful men, while Rose takes a fresh angle to uncover more information about Sam Haig.
फ़ोटो
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
I'm always down for a British crime drama that I'd normally find on Britbox and not Netflix as in this case.
The character development is very impressive. We get many, many layers of the talented cast and writing, directing, etc.
I've got one particular criticism for this episode (7) that I found pretty laughable. I think I read someplace that this show was adapted from a book, but I could be wrong about that. No idea if the show tried to maintain the book story for this scene, but there is scene with Graham Finch and his pal finishing up a round of golf and just driving right over some very green grass. That's the first thing that caught my eye because would never have happened. Then they get out of the cart and pick up their own clubs and carry them all the way into a posh dining room area - again, would never happen. They instead would have left their clubs on the cart for some cart barn kid to clean their clubs for them. Rich guys don't carry their clubs anywhere and definitely NOT inside a nice restaurant. It's extremely awkward to see these actors attempt at carrying these clubs and loudly set them onto the wooden floor.
Ya, Goode takes one out of the bag and the guy yelps not to touch his expensive clubs. Again, if they were so expensive, why isn't someone cleaning them and safely storing them away in your car or in the locker rooms. They clank around in their golf shoes and this scene just sucks in an otherwise 10 out 10 show. I absolutely love this show, but clearly none of the makers play golf.
The character development is very impressive. We get many, many layers of the talented cast and writing, directing, etc.
I've got one particular criticism for this episode (7) that I found pretty laughable. I think I read someplace that this show was adapted from a book, but I could be wrong about that. No idea if the show tried to maintain the book story for this scene, but there is scene with Graham Finch and his pal finishing up a round of golf and just driving right over some very green grass. That's the first thing that caught my eye because would never have happened. Then they get out of the cart and pick up their own clubs and carry them all the way into a posh dining room area - again, would never happen. They instead would have left their clubs on the cart for some cart barn kid to clean their clubs for them. Rich guys don't carry their clubs anywhere and definitely NOT inside a nice restaurant. It's extremely awkward to see these actors attempt at carrying these clubs and loudly set them onto the wooden floor.
Ya, Goode takes one out of the bag and the guy yelps not to touch his expensive clubs. Again, if they were so expensive, why isn't someone cleaning them and safely storing them away in your car or in the locker rooms. They clank around in their golf shoes and this scene just sucks in an otherwise 10 out 10 show. I absolutely love this show, but clearly none of the makers play golf.
This episode offers a rare treat: the faintest whiff of heterosexual romance between Carl Mørck and the young psychiatrist Rachel. Just a hint - blink and you'll miss it - but it injects a touch of humanity into Carl's otherwise glacial demeanor, making the show feel slightly more relatable.
We also get a moment of tentative bonding in a man-to-man talk between Carl and his stepson, while Rose and Hardy follow the Sam Haigh trail, uncovering the unsettling truth behind that loaded glance exchanged between Haigh's best friend and his wife.
Elsewhere, Carl butts heads with Graham Finch - the wealthy sociopath who murdered his wife and skated away thanks to some good old-fashioned blackmail aimed at the DA. Their spat is brief but charged.
For once, the ending delivers a real jolt: a proper cliffhanger. Merritt, ever the schemer, executes a clever escape plan. She almost makes it out... but - well, you'll see.
We also get a moment of tentative bonding in a man-to-man talk between Carl and his stepson, while Rose and Hardy follow the Sam Haigh trail, uncovering the unsettling truth behind that loaded glance exchanged between Haigh's best friend and his wife.
Elsewhere, Carl butts heads with Graham Finch - the wealthy sociopath who murdered his wife and skated away thanks to some good old-fashioned blackmail aimed at the DA. Their spat is brief but charged.
For once, the ending delivers a real jolt: a proper cliffhanger. Merritt, ever the schemer, executes a clever escape plan. She almost makes it out... but - well, you'll see.
Ep 7 is where the slow burn officially ignites! If you've been patiently waiting for things to really move, your patience is about to pay off.
The Merritt Lynggaard case explodes with breakthroughs, revealing chilling connections you probably suspected but couldn't quite pinpoint. Matthew Goode's Carl Mørck is practically a man on fire, ditching some of his signature gloom for a focused intensity as the pieces of his own past, specifically that Leith shooting, start to fall into place with alarming clarity.
The team is firing on all cylinders. Alexej Manvelov's Akram Salim drops some serious bombshells with his quiet brilliance, while Leah Byrne's DC Rose Dickson is indispensable, pulling off crucial investigative feats. The synergy among this dysfunctional trio is finally undeniable, making their relentless pursuit of the truth genuinely thrilling.
This episode delivers the payoff we've been craving, transforming the methodical crawl into a gripping sprint towards a shocking conclusion. Get ready; things just got real.
The Merritt Lynggaard case explodes with breakthroughs, revealing chilling connections you probably suspected but couldn't quite pinpoint. Matthew Goode's Carl Mørck is practically a man on fire, ditching some of his signature gloom for a focused intensity as the pieces of his own past, specifically that Leith shooting, start to fall into place with alarming clarity.
The team is firing on all cylinders. Alexej Manvelov's Akram Salim drops some serious bombshells with his quiet brilliance, while Leah Byrne's DC Rose Dickson is indispensable, pulling off crucial investigative feats. The synergy among this dysfunctional trio is finally undeniable, making their relentless pursuit of the truth genuinely thrilling.
This episode delivers the payoff we've been craving, transforming the methodical crawl into a gripping sprint towards a shocking conclusion. Get ready; things just got real.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाKim Allan and Jamie Sives appeared in s1e3 of Annika.
टॉप पसंद
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विवरण
- चलने की अवधि51 मिनट
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