Started my own thread on this with realising about this one
But I'd prefer Rolf as Wallander - he looks like a bloke you wouldn't want to **** with. I can't imagine the Krister version of Wallander kicking a hooker out of bed.:D
I was puzzled at first when I tuned in expecting a Krister Henriksson episode to find Boris Johnson had somehow got the lead role, but once I actually read the Radio Times and realised it was the film versions, I found it really good, a different take on the Wallander character and I thought probably closer to the books. Certainly it knocked Branagh's rather one dimensional version into the long, moodily atmospheric Swedish grass.
It’s called Jägarna (translated The Hunters) and is a film based on a true story about organised poaching in the north of Sweden
This is a film almost everyone in Sweden has seen, often more than once:D, and therefore it is also often, and easily, parodised.
We like big guys here and Lassgård certainly is one of those. I saw him in the Stockholm underground a couple of weeks ago and he seem to be even taller in real life.
BBC4 are broadcasting a programme next Monday all about "Nordic Noir" novels. Among the contributors are Henning Mankell and Krister Henriksson. The programme also covers novels from Norway and Iceland as well as those from Sweden.
The programme is shown just before part-two of Firewall.
This is the first Wallender where I've noticed that the external events were mirroring the internal life of Wallender himself. For example the car explodes (his relationship is in a precarious state). Plus you get these dream/fantasy sequences, and bits of voiceover. I guessed it would be closer to the novel and apparently this is the case. All rather more psychological.
The English version of the same story on the other hand is more Hollywood melodrama, plenty of emoting and everything resolved in the 'nick of time'.
Anyway I'm grateful for all these versions, nice that a television show has such depth of interpretation.
It's also nice to be able to watch a foreign production with subtitles, it's nice to be treated as a grown up capable of handling subtitles instead of being considered too stupid to watch and read in real time. That and a plot that doesn't sanitise or reduce things down to 30 second chunks for the Goldfish generation.
BBC4 are broadcasting a programme next Monday all about "Nordic Noir" novels. Among the contributors are Henning Mankell and Krister Henriksson. The programme also covers novels from Norway and Iceland as well as those from Sweden.
The programme is shown just before part-two of Firewall.
On the 27th they will be showing Italian Noir: The Story of Italian Crime Fiction followed by a repeat of one Inspector Montalbano episodes they showed last year
It's also nice to be able to watch a foreign production with subtitles, it's nice to be treated as a grown up capable of handling subtitles instead of being considered too stupid to watch and read in real time.
I posted this on the other Wallander thread but if you are tolerant of subtitles and are on Virgin Media, the channel cinemoi is presently on a free trial basis until the end of January. Lots of subtitled films there. Jonathan Ross is now advertising the channel (I think there was something recently about him having invested/taken a stake in it).
On a related note, I was listening to Front Row on Radio Four last night and there was mention of this:
"Rufus Sewell plays Michael Dibdin's Italian detective Aurelio Zen in a new TV adaptation. Crime writer NJ Cooper has been watching the series which begins on BBC One in the New Year."
The reviewer seemed broadly positive. I don't know anything of the books but since Wallander (in the multiple incarnations) has given me a taste for foreign detectives, I intend to give it a try.
I posted this on the other Wallander thread but if you are tolerant of subtitles and are on Virgin Media, the channel cinemoi is presently on a free trial basis until the end of January. Lots of subtitled films there. Jonathan Ross is now advertising the channel (I think there was something recently about him having invested/taken a stake in it).
Liked the extra length (said the actress....) as it felt more immersive but OTOH it allowed time for one too many shag scenes during which it was hard to know whose tits to look at! The man is just ludicrously oversized. Krister’s Krown is still safe.
Will definitely watch the next two-parter all in one go on the repeat to get the full benefit of 3 hours plus of immersion.
Liked the extra length (said the actress....) as it felt more immersive but OTOH it allowed time for one too many shag scenes during which it was hard to know whose tits to look at! The man is just ludicrously oversized. Krister’s Krown is still safe.
Will definitely watch the next two-parter all in one go on the repeat to get the full benefit of 3 hours plus of immersion.
alt-a = å on my laptop.
Did find this episode too long and compared with the Henriksson series there were a lot of "commercial break" moments, where something would happen and then it would fade to black. Did both versions run on the same channel in Sweden?
One other difference was that in the books Mankell writes about the beautiful countryside in Skåne and The Man Who Smiled had some atmospheric shots of the landscape, whereas the Henriksson Wallanders had their signature shot of Kurt strolling on the beach.
Did find this episode too long and compared with the Henriksson series there were a lot of "commercial break" moments, where something would happen and then it would fade to black. .
Had some sh*gging though.
So what's the chronological order here: was it filmed before and after the long series? (the crimes seemed to be 2000-2002).
I liked Wallander, Maja and Lisa plus the two main suspects. Other characters like Linda were a bit flimsy. Perhaps they have more substantial roles in other episodes.
I liked Wallander, Maja and Lisa plus the two main suspects. Other characters like Linda were a bit flimsy. Perhaps they have more substantial roles in other episodes.
It's in the Radio Times! Anyway the investigation of his murder is one of the two main plots of the episode. Without his death, you wouldn't have a story.
Comments
But I'd prefer Rolf as Wallander - he looks like a bloke you wouldn't want to **** with. I can't imagine the Krister version of Wallander kicking a hooker out of bed.:D
Looking forward to seeing more.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9mNIz1qHJ3Y
It’s called Jägarna (translated The Hunters) and is a film based on a true story about organised poaching in the north of Sweden
This is a film almost everyone in Sweden has seen, often more than once:D, and therefore it is also often, and easily, parodised.
We like big guys here and Lassgård certainly is one of those. I saw him in the Stockholm underground a couple of weeks ago and he seem to be even taller in real life.
The programme is shown just before part-two of Firewall.
I enjoyed the episode but prefer Krister in the role.
The English version of the same story on the other hand is more Hollywood melodrama, plenty of emoting and everything resolved in the 'nick of time'.
Anyway I'm grateful for all these versions, nice that a television show has such depth of interpretation.
Thank God for BBC4.
On the 27th they will be showing Italian Noir: The Story of Italian Crime Fiction followed by a repeat of one Inspector Montalbano episodes they showed last year
I posted this on the other Wallander thread but if you are tolerant of subtitles and are on Virgin Media, the channel cinemoi is presently on a free trial basis until the end of January. Lots of subtitled films there. Jonathan Ross is now advertising the channel (I think there was something recently about him having invested/taken a stake in it).
Here be the link.
On a related note, I was listening to Front Row on Radio Four last night and there was mention of this:
"Rufus Sewell plays Michael Dibdin's Italian detective Aurelio Zen in a new TV adaptation. Crime writer NJ Cooper has been watching the series which begins on BBC One in the New Year."
The reviewer seemed broadly positive. I don't know anything of the books but since Wallander (in the multiple incarnations) has given me a taste for foreign detectives, I intend to give it a try.
They have also shown Japanese horror films such as the Death Note and Ju-On series as well as the animated films of Studio Ghibli
Both Radio Times and the BBC4 websites don't really give any clue.
-rapido
It's a repeat of last Saturday's episode.(The Man Who Smiled) . That's a complete film.
There is a two-parter next Saturday and Monday.(Firewal).
Many thanks, most appreciated.
-rapido
Will definitely watch the next two-parter all in one go on the repeat to get the full benefit of 3 hours plus of immersion.
alt-a = å on my laptop.
Did find this episode too long and compared with the Henriksson series there were a lot of "commercial break" moments, where something would happen and then it would fade to black. Did both versions run on the same channel in Sweden?
One other difference was that in the books Mankell writes about the beautiful countryside in Skåne and The Man Who Smiled had some atmospheric shots of the landscape, whereas the Henriksson Wallanders had their signature shot of Kurt strolling on the beach.
Had some sh*gging though.
So what's the chronological order here: was it filmed before and after the long series? (the crimes seemed to be 2000-2002).
No I don't think so either.
Gave it five minutes and called it a day.
Apart from the last three all these "new" Wallanders were made before the Krister Henrikkson ones
Link is here.
I thought Svedberg was good as well
The poor man gets murdered in the next-but-one episode.
Oh, thanks.:(
In the Mousetrap, the butler did it
Anyone notice that Mr Dyson was the villain ?
http://www.bme.eu.com/media/media-news/news-thumb/091014/dyson.jpg
It's in the Radio Times! Anyway the investigation of his murder is one of the two main plots of the episode. Without his death, you wouldn't have a story.