Le hockey est la dernière lueur d'espoir à Beartown et en être responsable est un lourd fardeau. Le jour du match de demi-finale est aussi le catalyseur d'un acte violent qui laissera une je... Tout lireLe hockey est la dernière lueur d'espoir à Beartown et en être responsable est un lourd fardeau. Le jour du match de demi-finale est aussi le catalyseur d'un acte violent qui laissera une jeune fille traumatisée et une ville en ébullition.Le hockey est la dernière lueur d'espoir à Beartown et en être responsable est un lourd fardeau. Le jour du match de demi-finale est aussi le catalyseur d'un acte violent qui laissera une jeune fille traumatisée et une ville en ébullition.
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- 3 nominations au total
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After two episodes one can tell that this is a great piece of swedish tv-drama.
Former NHL-player and his family comes back to his old home town in the north of Sweden and makes an immediate impact on former friends and enemies.
And there is this feeling of something bad and disturbing lurking around the corner from the beginning of the first episode, which also gets you hooked at once.
Great cast where the actors actually act and talk like normal people (not very common in swedish productions) and the adaption from the critically acclaimed book by Fredrik Backman seems to be very successfull.
Can't wait for the rest of season 1.
As episode 1 of "Beartown" (original Swedish title: "Björnstad; 2020 release; 5 episodes of about 55 min. each) opens, Peter, an ex-NHL player, and his family (wife and two teenage kids Maya and Leo) arrive in Björnstad (a small town in northern Sweden), where Peter grew up and whose hockey team has seen better days. Peter's task is to turn the hockey team's fortunes around. One of the stars on the hockey team is Kevin, and Maya and Kevin are drawn to each other, even as Peter and Kevin's dad (same age as Peter) can't stand each other... At this point we are 15 min. into the opening episode of this mini-series, but to tell you more of the plot would spoil your viewing experience, you'll just have to see for yourself how it all plays out.
Couple of comments: this is the TV adaptation of the Swedish best-selling book of the same name. I haven't read the book so I can't comment on how closely the TV series sticks to the book. Regardless, after seeing Episode 1, the best way to sum up what we have here is that it is a Swedish small town hockey soap, pure and simple. There is so much plot in just Episode 1, I'd need pages and pages to describe all of it (which of course I wouldn't do in any event so as not to spoil your viewing experience). So let me just say that by the end of Episode 1, we have been familiarized with the primary characters, and it's only a matter before we get get some explosive plot twists (if you've seen the trailer airing on HBO, you know exactly what I mean). The winter scenery in norther Sweden is pure eye-candy from start to finish. Makes you want to go check it out for yourself.
Episode 1 of "Beartown" premiered on HBO this week, and is now available on HBO On Demand and other streaming platforms. New episodes air Monday evening at 9 pm Eastern. Can't wait to see how it will all unfold! If you have any interest in a good ol' fashioned soap opera, albeit with a Swedish twist, I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is the TV adaptation of the Swedish best-selling book of the same name. I haven't read the book so I can't comment on how closely the TV series sticks to the book. Regardless, after seeing Episode 1, the best way to sum up what we have here is that it is a Swedish small town hockey soap, pure and simple. There is so much plot in just Episode 1, I'd need pages and pages to describe all of it (which of course I wouldn't do in any event so as not to spoil your viewing experience). So let me just say that by the end of Episode 1, we have been familiarized with the primary characters, and it's only a matter before we get get some explosive plot twists (if you've seen the trailer airing on HBO, you know exactly what I mean). The winter scenery in norther Sweden is pure eye-candy from start to finish. Makes you want to go check it out for yourself.
Episode 1 of "Beartown" premiered on HBO this week, and is now available on HBO On Demand and other streaming platforms. New episodes air Monday evening at 9 pm Eastern. Can't wait to see how it will all unfold! If you have any interest in a good ol' fashioned soap opera, albeit with a Swedish twist, I'd readily suggest you check this out and draw your own conclusion.
The series very powerfully captures how toxic masculinity can permeate through a small town and destroy lives, but is an absolute travesty to the characters that populated the pages of Backman's original novel.
Characters like Anna, Amat and Benji get so little development I do wonder why they were included at all. The life-long frienship and deep caring between Anna and Maja, one of the most heartwarming parts of the novel, is turned into the two characters just meeting on the first episode of the tv-series, and Anna turns into a complete accessory of Maja, loosing her storyline from the book and any sense of being an independent character. The racism that Amat has felt his entire life is reduced to just a few lines here and there and is addressed just superficially.
As for the adult cast, I have no clue why they decided to turn Peter, who was soft-spoken, loved hockey but loved his family even more, to a hyper-masculine, always yelling, travesty of the original character. I also didn't understand why they decided to make him coach of the B-Team, instead of General Manager of all the teams, as this greatly reduced the roles of Sune and David. The changes to David were the most insulting to me, since he went from a good coach who understoood his team, had trained them since they were little, and loved them as if they were his own children, to an incompetent young-man who was always whining and minging and jealous of Peter.
In essence, while this may be a great series (and it is), it really reduces Bjornstad to its main storyline of Maja and Kevin, without adressing all the other topics (racism, homophobia, conformity, etc) that were such an integral part of the novel. I do think its a great standalone series, that completely captures the essence and raw emotion of the Maja storyline, has beautiful cinematography, and an amazing cast, but, I do think it'll be a bit disapointing for fans of the book.
Characters like Anna, Amat and Benji get so little development I do wonder why they were included at all. The life-long frienship and deep caring between Anna and Maja, one of the most heartwarming parts of the novel, is turned into the two characters just meeting on the first episode of the tv-series, and Anna turns into a complete accessory of Maja, loosing her storyline from the book and any sense of being an independent character. The racism that Amat has felt his entire life is reduced to just a few lines here and there and is addressed just superficially.
As for the adult cast, I have no clue why they decided to turn Peter, who was soft-spoken, loved hockey but loved his family even more, to a hyper-masculine, always yelling, travesty of the original character. I also didn't understand why they decided to make him coach of the B-Team, instead of General Manager of all the teams, as this greatly reduced the roles of Sune and David. The changes to David were the most insulting to me, since he went from a good coach who understoood his team, had trained them since they were little, and loved them as if they were his own children, to an incompetent young-man who was always whining and minging and jealous of Peter.
In essence, while this may be a great series (and it is), it really reduces Bjornstad to its main storyline of Maja and Kevin, without adressing all the other topics (racism, homophobia, conformity, etc) that were such an integral part of the novel. I do think its a great standalone series, that completely captures the essence and raw emotion of the Maja storyline, has beautiful cinematography, and an amazing cast, but, I do think it'll be a bit disapointing for fans of the book.
The acting is really good from everyone in this serie.
Often when I see a show from Sweden there use to be at least one actor that you can't stand.
I think this serie show that we have learned alot lately from making good shows and that we are getting better and better at it.
To make this serie a 10/10 show we need to bring back Ludwig Göransson from US to make the background music :p
Having read through the previous reviews here the main gripe i find people having with this show seems to be how it isn't an accurate portrayal of it's source material. So having not read the book i'll judge it purely on it's own merit.
Now i pretty much boycott every production that springs from Sweden. What made me give this one a go was mainly how it was an HBO production, a company i associate with quality tv. As i suspected the production was very good with nice cinematography and sets etc. But the best thing was the story and the actors who kept me glued to the screen all the way through. I do however have a few gripes about this show, and the reasons to why i'm not rating this any higher than an eight.
First of i think that the delivery of certain lines from the younger cast felt a bit stiff even if the written dialouge itself was very good and believable. This didn't happen often and the cast was overall very good. My main gripe however was that i felt the show was a bit too short. The build up to the main conflict was great, with the show doing a good job at introducing us to a large amount of interesting characters. The pacing was also really good at first but i thought the second half of the show was a bit rushed. Character motivations started to change too quickly and i felt some more screen time should have been handed to some of the side characters to flesh out the story more and cover more topics. But all in all it was a great show, well made and exciting from start to finish whilst also raising some important questions.
Now i pretty much boycott every production that springs from Sweden. What made me give this one a go was mainly how it was an HBO production, a company i associate with quality tv. As i suspected the production was very good with nice cinematography and sets etc. But the best thing was the story and the actors who kept me glued to the screen all the way through. I do however have a few gripes about this show, and the reasons to why i'm not rating this any higher than an eight.
First of i think that the delivery of certain lines from the younger cast felt a bit stiff even if the written dialouge itself was very good and believable. This didn't happen often and the cast was overall very good. My main gripe however was that i felt the show was a bit too short. The build up to the main conflict was great, with the show doing a good job at introducing us to a large amount of interesting characters. The pacing was also really good at first but i thought the second half of the show was a bit rushed. Character motivations started to change too quickly and i felt some more screen time should have been handed to some of the side characters to flesh out the story more and cover more topics. But all in all it was a great show, well made and exciting from start to finish whilst also raising some important questions.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe town of Björnstad (Beartown) is not a real town. But judging by dialects, settings and climates being presented in the series it is rather multiple small towns in northern Sweden.
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