19-2
- Série de TV
- 2011–2015
- 1 h
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
8,6/10
1,8 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaConstable Nick Beroff isn't happy about being stuck with Ben Chartier, newly transferred from the OPP, as his partner, but he'll have to accept the fact that together they're now Station 19'... Ler tudoConstable Nick Beroff isn't happy about being stuck with Ben Chartier, newly transferred from the OPP, as his partner, but he'll have to accept the fact that together they're now Station 19's second patrol.Constable Nick Beroff isn't happy about being stuck with Ben Chartier, newly transferred from the OPP, as his partner, but he'll have to accept the fact that together they're now Station 19's second patrol.
- Prêmios
- 13 vitórias e 7 indicações no total
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Avaliações em destaque
Definitely one of the most gut-wrenching cop series out there. Every character is flawed, yet likable. The situations are almost always tense and the stress of being a police officer is very well expressed.
There was a one-year hiatus between season one and season two, due to a change in producers, but the quality of the series has not faltered one bit. The second season first episode (no spoilers here) will go down in history as being one the most frightening and shocking out there.
You can't help but like and relate to the lead characters, Benoît Chartier, played by Claude Legault, and Nick Beroff, played by Réal Bossé. Those of us familiar with Bossé have never seen him in such a dramatic role. One wonders where he channels all that angst from.
If you are fluent in French and looking for something that would be world famous if HBO produced it, look no further, 19-2 is it.
There was a one-year hiatus between season one and season two, due to a change in producers, but the quality of the series has not faltered one bit. The second season first episode (no spoilers here) will go down in history as being one the most frightening and shocking out there.
You can't help but like and relate to the lead characters, Benoît Chartier, played by Claude Legault, and Nick Beroff, played by Réal Bossé. Those of us familiar with Bossé have never seen him in such a dramatic role. One wonders where he channels all that angst from.
If you are fluent in French and looking for something that would be world famous if HBO produced it, look no further, 19-2 is it.
If you appreciate great writing, excellent acting and impeccable direction this is the series for you.
19-2 lures you in, grabs ahold of you and doesn't let you go until the end. You become engrossed in the day to day lives of these officers and their families and their stories.
And the acting is some of the best I've seen anywhere, truly superb!
While you travel with these officers on patrol, encountering some of the saddest, silliest, darkest, and scariest situations imaginable, you can't help but see and feel exactly what they are experiencing as they try to keep some semblance of order in such a messed up world. Their camaraderie as a team and as a family feels exquisitely real, and you can't help but feel it as well.
The storyline threading through all episodes of all 3 seasons is gripping and heartrending as it pulls and tears at the characters in life altering ways.
Just watch it - you'll see what I mean.
19-2 lures you in, grabs ahold of you and doesn't let you go until the end. You become engrossed in the day to day lives of these officers and their families and their stories.
And the acting is some of the best I've seen anywhere, truly superb!
While you travel with these officers on patrol, encountering some of the saddest, silliest, darkest, and scariest situations imaginable, you can't help but see and feel exactly what they are experiencing as they try to keep some semblance of order in such a messed up world. Their camaraderie as a team and as a family feels exquisitely real, and you can't help but feel it as well.
The storyline threading through all episodes of all 3 seasons is gripping and heartrending as it pulls and tears at the characters in life altering ways.
Just watch it - you'll see what I mean.
Unlike many I don't mind reading subtitles when the colloquialisms substitute for the French language as it evolved in Québec. This is a riveting and addictive series. The portrayal of the relationship between Berrof and his mother paints a classic picture of a dysfunctional middle class family of the region and one that seems to be repeated in old French-Canadian families right along the fur-trade route from Québec through Detroit and Sault St. Marie is much more common than one might suppose in kind if not in degree. The promiscuity between couples and open relationships is also more commonly visible in Montréal than elsewhere in Canada. The behaviour of the police in solving internal problems like the wife-abuser or the dealing with cops personal problems, alcoholism, and the tendency to sweep misdemeanors under the carpet is accurate. I am disappointed to have learned that it is being remade in English with a different cast. The language is one I am familiar with having spent some of my formative years in the city. Some of the local jargon I picked up during the show was quite funny and a lot of that nuance may be lost in translation in the "anglais" version, but I will try to keep an open mind. If it gets (typically) "sanitized" in order to appeal to the English Canadian audience, it will be a totally different series, and I may prefer to go on watching the Québec version if it was available.
10deeach
This is an extraordinary series,to say the least...it never stalls,stumbles,or runs dry....far from running out of material,it is as if the writers had to deal with having TOO MUCH material to fit in each episode....no sooner was one story told than it led to the next story with barely enough time for so much as a beat....all of the characters are complete,multi-dimensional human beings-capable of misunderstanding-and being misunderstood-and vice-versa......I could go on and on about :The Entire Cast,The Writing; The Imagery; The Direction,The Editing,The Cinematography,The Wardrobe-Makeup-Special Effects,The Music,etc.,etc.,etc.... I will just say that,in my opinion,this work is the sum of one million little things done with perfection-a masterpiece.....I cannot speak French,and I say to others who do not speak French: these actors are fluent in Body Language,and they convey the meaning of the scenes by speaking this Universal Language. Their words ( in my case,the English Subtitles) are merely icing on the cake; and simply add meaning to a meaning already conveyed.....I have tried to express my feelings about this series,but I implore anyone who reads this to view this series; and let this Work of Art speak for itself.
10lisamisc
This series is absolutely outstanding. I just watched the finale and it was excellent, so well done, I had goosebumps after it was over. The writing is amazing and the acting is superb. I plan to watch the English series next, but I don't expect that it can top the French series. Everything about this show was so incredibly well done. The writers were not afraid to deal with very difficult subjects. As another reviewer said, the characters are flawed, but very likeable regardless. As a former Montrealer, I started watching the series for nostalgia purposes, mostly. But I ended up binge watching this well written and highly entertaining show.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesSeasons 1 and 2 served as the models for the English adaptation of the series. The French season 3 has a story arc not followed by the English season 3.
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- How many seasons does 19-2 have?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idioma
- Locações de filme
- 1998 Rue du Chevreuil, Longueuil, Québec, Canadá(season 3: Commandant Gendron's house)
- Empresa de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
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