Arne Dahl: Misterioso (TV Mini Series 2011) Poster

User Reviews

Review this title
12 Reviews
Sort by:
Filter by Rating:
8/10
A television production worthy of the name of the great Swedish author.
DimitrisPassas-TapTheLine23 September 2018
This is a great Swedish series based on the ''A-Gruppen'' novel series by Jan Arnald (Arne Dahl is his nom de plume) which were one of the best products of the ''Nordic Noir'' genre. Unfortunately, due to the lack of English editions regarding the last novels of the series, I've only read the first six and I can honestly admit that it was a splendid and rewarding experience. The distinguishing mark of ''A-Gruppen'' books was that there were no main characters, but it was rather the team that consisted the protagonist of the series. Each novel focuses specifically on one or two members of the elite group of Swedish police, and we become familiar with their personal stories and problems, which always, as everything in Arne Dahl's novels, interconnects with the different parts of the main plot. The stories are usually perhaps a bit more complicated than absolutely needed but this doesn't spoil any of the fun. The adaptation of the novels to two one-and-a-half hour episodes allows a more or less faithful adaptation of the complex book plotlines and the final result is more than satisfying. The casting consists of a Swedish all-star group of actors such as Shanti Roney, Matias Varela, Malin Arvidsson, Claes Ljungmark and many others. ''Arne Dahl'' is a tv production worthy of the name of the great Swedish author.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Thelonious Monk plays Misterioso
jotix10019 June 2013
Warning: Spoilers
A botched bank robbery sets the pace for this Swedish mini series. Ultimately, this event will play largely in the thriller. Based on a novel by Arne Dahl, "Misterioso"' which we had read some time ago. The two part series is an adaptation of the book shown recently on cable. The creators of this police drama were probably capitalizing in the newly popular "black novel" genre.

At the center of the story is Paul Hjelm, a detective who decides to act on his instinct, rather than with the guide lines set by the department. Paul walked into a hostage situation wounding the desperate African immigrant who stands to be deported. Knowing his job in the police department is in jeopardy, Paul is surprised when he is recruited by Jenny Hultin to participate in the team she has put together to investigate the slaying of several prominent business executives by an unknown killer.

To make matters worse, Paul's own problems at home with his wife, get even more complicated by the long hours he has to work trying yo unravel the mystery behind the murders. The team zeroes in the Russian mafia, as the ones responsible for the crimes, which operate out of Talinn, Estonia, and is muscling their way into the distribution of adulterated liquor that finds its way to most drinking places. One of the detectives, Chavez, is responsible for identifying the tune being played at one of the murder scenes. It is a rare piece played by legendary jazz pianist Thelonious Monk. Paul gets lucky in correctly pinpointing the real culprit, going after the perpetrator.

Directed by Harald Hamrell, the series involves the viewer in surprising ways. The adaptation is credited to Cecilia and Rolf Borjlind, who expanded on the original Arne Dahl's text. The assembled cast does a credible job for director Hamrell. As an ensemble piece, everyone gets a chance to shine. Trolle Davidson, the cinematographer captures in excellent images the mood of the story.
10 out of 11 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
7/10
Dirty half-dozen
Lejink16 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
BBC4 it seems is flooding the UK market with every Scandinavian cop series going but if it means I have an alternative to "The Voice" and "Britain's Got Talent", you'll not find me complaining.

This Swedish-made production sees a handful of maverick cops put together by a sort of female George Cowley to capture a serial killer who is blowing away fat-cat financiers. Centring on one cop above the rest, who naturally has family issues (don't they all and always) and who loses control in a hostage situation, he gets reprieved from suspension by getting to join the team.

Spread over two ninety minute episodes, it's too long and shows its padding, especially the contrived participation of Russian gangs while some of the plot devices are just too esoteric and coincidental, key items of evidence include, for example a rare Thelonious Monk recording and individually crafted darts, while I found I didn't have much sympathy for our family-man hero after he bedded his female colleague the first chance he got.

Still, there are some good deaths and a gripping and exciting climax with a well-worked circularity which saw Viggo revisit his earlier hostage crisis and of course this time get it right. The acting by all concerned was excellent and the direction flowing and occasionally imaginative, while as ever the cinematography was of a high standard.

By the end of this episode, I felt quite comfortable with the different personalities of the group and wonder if they'll be brought back together for further cases in the rest of the series.
17 out of 21 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
6/10
Silly
howiekm22 February 2021
I gave up during the scene where the whole team gathered at the potential victim's house in anticipation that the killer would show up that night and ended up catching the former's son. This was worthy of the Keystone Kops.
1 out of 2 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
9/10
The Blinded Man
Tweekums13 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
Saturday night has become Euro-crime night thanks to BBC4's showing a string of subtitled continental dramas; many of these coming from Scandinavia; after 'Wallender', 'The Killing' and 'The Bridge' we get a series of dramas from the pen of Arne Dahl… the first being 'Misterioso'… retitled 'The Blinded Man' here.

Set in Sweden the story opens with two Russians heading out to commit a bank robbery; one of them enters the bank and when he doesn't come out the other goes in after him and finds him lying dead on the floor with a dart in one of his eyes. Around the same time a string of apparently unrelated murders starts to take place; somebody is killing financiers for reasons that aren't immediately obvious. A special team is put together to investigate this crime; they include the series' protagonist; Paul Hjelm who was about to be suspended for shooting a hostage taker when he'd been ordered to wait for the experts to arrive. The team are divided in their theories about the crime and about the abilities of each other. As the investigation gets closer to the killer they find themselves in real danger; this is particularly true for one member of the team who finds himself alone against the Russian mafia; far from home in Tallinn.

When shown in the UK this film was divided it to two parts which suited the story as there was a natural cliff-hanger at that point. Having enjoyed the previous Scandinavian murder mysteries aired here I had high expectations of this and wasn't disappointed. The story was gripping; there was a good cast of characters and plenty of action; more than once it looked as if a member of the team might die… in one case involving a crucifixion! Those attempting to solve the crime early on may be a little disappointed as the killer isn't introduced until the police have identified him. After this introduction to the team I look forward to watching further stories in the series.
10 out of 14 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
10/10
It was a nice movie
n-nielsen3 January 2012
Its worth 10 / 10

It was a very exciting movie, just the right amount of litigation, action - thriller - romantic, without being excessive.

Magnus S. did a brilliant effort, I think.

It did not feel like a repetition of all the other Swedish police films that we have received for many of, it was professional made ​​and action scenes what top-notch, I think. For example, if you compare to 'Beck', 'Wallander' and so on. where you at once and can easily see that there is a Swedish film.

I think the movie was very clever, it was not possible to directly rank out who was the murderer, but was consistent and entertaining.
17 out of 29 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
Tedious
paul2001sw-112 June 2013
Scandanavian crime thrillers have been spreading across the world in recent years: the superb 'The Killing', the stylish (though silly) 'The Bridge', or the various reconditionings of 'Wallander', fundamentally a Swedish version of 'Inspector Morse'. This dramatisation of a set of stories by crime write Arne Dahl about a specialist crime unit are the latest to make it to the UK; but sadly, they demonstrate that not everything is brilliant just because it's from the north. Although realist in tone, the plots of each two part episode feel immensely contrived and over-complex, while the background soap-opera, the private lives of its immensely ordinary protagonists, is both dull and obvious. And the whole thing is so slow: each three hour slug crawls forward, yet the details of the story seem hard to remember, with endless similar scenes and more blood than tension. Understated is one thing; but this is neither truly believable, nor (in any sense) fun.
17 out of 35 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
This one is hard to like
jneiberger-17 June 2021
Despite having a couple of decent characters, the writing is horrible and some of the acting isn't all that great, either. I don't know what the book is like, but hopefully it's not quite as dumb as this. This feels like a police drama written by someone who has no idea what police do or how they work. It's unusual. And Viggo, one of the detectives, is incompetent and honestly too unintelligent to be a detective.

I like some of the other more recent Arne Dahl shows, but this one is pretty rough.
1 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
1/10
The Downfall of Scando-Noir
badajoz-115 April 2013
Warning: Spoilers
After the glories of 'Wallander' and 'The Killing' followed by 'Borgen' the rubbish has started to appear from Scandinavia on Saturday nights on BBC4. First, we had the less than inspiring 'The Bridge' which is going to be remade all over the world. Apart from the main female character 'The Bridge' was tired, sloppy and unbelievable. A lot of stories seem to turn an ordinary person into a Moriarty-type genius serial killer overnight, and therefore the plot sucks and the climax totally unbelievable.

'The Blinded Man,' to give this two part TV movie its UK title, was almost totally unbelievable throughout. A group of six disparate detectives are brought together to catch a serial killer who is shooting very rich businessmen at the rate of one a night! Cue rich business people not having any private security protection anywhere in sight! They just go down bang bang as the tecs slouch about with different theories involving Russian Mafioso (not that one again!) getting precisely nowhere. Obvious violence, a few desultory car chases, some urgent dashing about, the heavy police killing mob surrounding suspects, and flaky back stories for the detectives owe more to crass Hollywood well below par police thrillers than Scando-noir! Yes, it is lazy, poorly written, very sloppily directed, and very underpowered in the acting stakes. For example, Roney as tec Paul Hjeim is such a poorly drawn character with such a poor performance given that one almost loses the will to watch. The way the action stops occasionally for characters to interact and fill in their backgrounds has all the interest of watching paint dry as well as being some of the clunkiest television I have seen for ages. Of course, the villain is not introduced until about twenty minutes from the end, so no hope of solving the case yourself! And my final blast goes to the absolute nonsense of seeing one of the group nailed to a wall, like a crucifixion, by Russian thugs, and yet he can walk about pulling his suitcase on a flight home within a few hours! Really!!!!!!!!!!!!! If the book is this bad, then the author ( a noted literary critic! ) should offer to stand down while his work receives a thorough good kicking. I will be looking elsewhere for the rest of this terrible series!
6 out of 22 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
3/10
Early and very poor type of Scandi Noir
qui_j20 July 2019
This series is about a group of very incompetent cops lead by a woman who is about 100 years old. The stories are overly complicated, tedious, and with so many red herrings that after a while, the viewer gives up caring and tunes out. The events defy credibility and the way the crime is solved really pretends that logic just does not exist. Things happen without any explanation or evidence for continuity. Overall, this is just s time filler for when you have nothing in your streaming queue and you just want the TV on to make a bit of background noise.
5 out of 18 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
5/10
I watched it
quadrophenia-6952423 May 2021
And it was okay switching from different accents was a bit hard at first from Swede to dutch then English but keep watching as your just get used to it.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink
4/10
Schizophrenic
atrickyone22 November 2021
The movie lurched from frantic action to torpor without any discernible reasons. The characters were uninspired and uninspiring. To have a police group on active duty with the persistent threat of imminent violence facing them means that the casting of three middle aged and out of shape officers on the job was absurd. The writers, better known for Beck, sleepwalked through this mess. Red herrings abounded, and they were all shotten herrings. The movie dragged itself over the finish line and it was a blessed relief.
0 out of 1 found this helpful. Was this review helpful? Sign in to vote.
Permalink

See also

Awards | FAQ | User Ratings | External Reviews | Metacritic Reviews


Recently Viewed