De dag
- टीवी सीरीज़
- 2018
- 1 घं
IMDb रेटिंग
8.3/10
4.8 हज़ार
आपकी रेटिंग
अपनी भाषा में प्लॉट जोड़ेंA team of negotiators and special forces respond to a hostage situation in a small bank, with the events unfolding through the eyes of the criminals and their victims.A team of negotiators and special forces respond to a hostage situation in a small bank, with the events unfolding through the eyes of the criminals and their victims.A team of negotiators and special forces respond to a hostage situation in a small bank, with the events unfolding through the eyes of the criminals and their victims.
- पुरस्कार
- 5 जीत और कुल 5 नामांकन
एपिसोड ब्राउज़ करें
फ़ीचर्ड समीक्षाएं
Another example of wonderfully smart European production, simple, strapped from unnecessary characters and scenes, sauté as-is. Intelligent puzzle and binge worthy show!
That is one smart, well-written and addictive series... Much better than Casa de Papel, because a lot more realistic, to begin with... And also it doesn't try and picture thiefs like they fight for a noble cause, like Casa does.
It's full of unexpected twists, (almost) no idle time. In a nutshell, I wish there more like these.
De Dag is a 12-episode bank heist mystery drama (that unfolds over 24 hours, hence The Day) in which all odd episodes have the story from the police's perspective and the even ones from the criminal/hostage's perspective. To get everything that happened in a given time period, you'll have to watch two episodes. This format is used throughout the show and has been done so cleverly.
The acting was great. In a lot of scenes, the acting is done "off camera" and you only hear phone conversations, which can usually get boring, but they did a good job of making it sound interesting. The cinematography was really good. Great editing! Great music and sound effects as well.
While I really liked the method of storytelling, the writing faltered a bit, but I was okay with that because I wanted to know what was going on. Things unfolded on slowly, but I was okay with the pacing also. It's okay because it'll seem more realistic, unlike something outrageous that you're forced to believe and play along. There's nothing over the top and it feels like real-world police work.
This show is worth searching for the availability in your region, I wasn't let down at all, and I hope you won't be either.
The acting was great. In a lot of scenes, the acting is done "off camera" and you only hear phone conversations, which can usually get boring, but they did a good job of making it sound interesting. The cinematography was really good. Great editing! Great music and sound effects as well.
While I really liked the method of storytelling, the writing faltered a bit, but I was okay with that because I wanted to know what was going on. Things unfolded on slowly, but I was okay with the pacing also. It's okay because it'll seem more realistic, unlike something outrageous that you're forced to believe and play along. There's nothing over the top and it feels like real-world police work.
This show is worth searching for the availability in your region, I wasn't let down at all, and I hope you won't be either.
There are so many TV-series being made in Flanders, Belgium, but I think I have been watching the absolute BEST and the absolute WORST series in parallel during the past weeks. A few days ago, I submitted a review for "Open Water", and as much as I respect many of its cast and crew members, it's really the most idiotic, overly pretentious and substantially void series ever to appear on television in Belgium. During the same period, but on a different channel, they aired "De Dag", and this series is more than just "good". It is, hands down, the most intelligent, original, suspenseful and exhilarating TV-format ever conceived in this small country. After literally every episode of "Over Water", my wife and I felt furious and frustrated because it was tedious and uneventful, whereas every episode of "De Dag" was 60 minutes of adrenalin-rushing tension, plot twists, cliffhangers, stupendous dialogues and phenomenal performances.
"De Dag" is a brilliant concept thought up by Jonas Geirnaert and Julie Mahieu. The former, I have been following for almost 15 years. He's usually a comical genius and created the terrific animated short "Flatlife" (look it up on YouTube!) and the downright hilarious cartoon-series of a hostile and violent gnome named Wesley. With a few equally gifted friends, like Lieven Scheire and Jelle De Beule, Geirnaert formed a collective named Neveneffecten ("Side Effects"), and they made unique documentary-style protests everyday shenanigans, like corporate call centers and nightly betting games on TV. "De Dag" is Jonas' first venture into fiction, together with his wife Julie Mahieu, and again he's very successful. The story deals with a seemingly old-fashioned bank heist and hostage situation, but really nothing is what it seems. The innovative aspect of "De Dag" lies in the narrative structure. Every episode is told twice, once from the "outside", with a massive police operation being set up to interact with the gangsters and resolve the hostage taking. There are negotiators, special intervention squads, bomb experts and hectic media circuses. The next episode always covers the same time span but seen from the "inside" via the hostage takers, the prisoners and their petrified families. The concept would normally lead to many continuity errors and repetitive sequences, but "De Dag" is so fantastically written that every cliffhanger or plot twists is followed by yet another and even more ingenious twist.
The series benefits from great performances from the all-star ensemble cast (all-star in Flanders, that is) and solid direction, but the truly praiseworthy quality of "De Dag" definitely remains the screenplay. The writing is near-flawless, with sublime tension building and character development. Not all plot twists are equally plausible, but there's nothing that a little bit suspension of disbelief can't solve. Marvelous series, not just mandatory viewing for all Belgians, but also highly recommended to seekers of superiors thriller/actions series from all over the world!
"De Dag" is a brilliant concept thought up by Jonas Geirnaert and Julie Mahieu. The former, I have been following for almost 15 years. He's usually a comical genius and created the terrific animated short "Flatlife" (look it up on YouTube!) and the downright hilarious cartoon-series of a hostile and violent gnome named Wesley. With a few equally gifted friends, like Lieven Scheire and Jelle De Beule, Geirnaert formed a collective named Neveneffecten ("Side Effects"), and they made unique documentary-style protests everyday shenanigans, like corporate call centers and nightly betting games on TV. "De Dag" is Jonas' first venture into fiction, together with his wife Julie Mahieu, and again he's very successful. The story deals with a seemingly old-fashioned bank heist and hostage situation, but really nothing is what it seems. The innovative aspect of "De Dag" lies in the narrative structure. Every episode is told twice, once from the "outside", with a massive police operation being set up to interact with the gangsters and resolve the hostage taking. There are negotiators, special intervention squads, bomb experts and hectic media circuses. The next episode always covers the same time span but seen from the "inside" via the hostage takers, the prisoners and their petrified families. The concept would normally lead to many continuity errors and repetitive sequences, but "De Dag" is so fantastically written that every cliffhanger or plot twists is followed by yet another and even more ingenious twist.
The series benefits from great performances from the all-star ensemble cast (all-star in Flanders, that is) and solid direction, but the truly praiseworthy quality of "De Dag" definitely remains the screenplay. The writing is near-flawless, with sublime tension building and character development. Not all plot twists are equally plausible, but there's nothing that a little bit suspension of disbelief can't solve. Marvelous series, not just mandatory viewing for all Belgians, but also highly recommended to seekers of superiors thriller/actions series from all over the world!
Kudos to this Belgian Crime series for its brilliant script and crazy screenplay. I love the way how it unfolds its mystery gradually through such intriguing drama.
क्या आपको पता है
- ट्रिवियाThe episodes come in pairs. The odd episodes focus on the police's perspective, while the following even episode tells the same time span from the standpoint of the victims and hostage takers. The odd episodes were written by Jonas Geirnaert and directed by Gilles Coulier, the even ones written by Julie Mahieu and directed by Dries Vos.
टॉप पसंद
रेटिंग देने के लिए साइन-इन करें और वैयक्तिकृत सुझावों के लिए वॉचलिस्ट करें
- How many seasons does De Dag have?Alexa द्वारा संचालित
विवरण
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किसी बदलाव का सुझाव दें या अनुपलब्ध कॉन्टेंट जोड़ें