Snöänglar
- TV Series
- 2021
IMDb RATING
6.9/10
1.9K
YOUR RATING
Two days before Christmas, while Sweden is paralyzed by a heavy snowstorm, the five-week-old baby Lucas inexplicably disappears from his home. The experienced police officer Alice thinks tha... Read allTwo days before Christmas, while Sweden is paralyzed by a heavy snowstorm, the five-week-old baby Lucas inexplicably disappears from his home. The experienced police officer Alice thinks that something is not right in parents' stories.Two days before Christmas, while Sweden is paralyzed by a heavy snowstorm, the five-week-old baby Lucas inexplicably disappears from his home. The experienced police officer Alice thinks that something is not right in parents' stories.
- Awards
- 1 nomination total
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This is one of the few Scandinavian series when viewers can see that so-called native local people can also live in poverty and misery (usually this is visible when depicting post-1990 immigrants). The situations are both tragic and somber, and intertwining 3 cases and multiple characters provides additional value to the series. True, the potential wrongdoer as to the baby is somewhat revealed too soon (in spite of somewhat artificial distractions), but the real circumstances remain mystery up to the end. All the scenes are accentuated by harsh weather conditions and gray winter sky = climate is a strong supporting cast here.
The performances are also okay, with many faces not visible in every Swedish-Danish series :) Well, Eva Melander is a kind of star in Scandinavia, but Maria Rossing was a pleasant surprise, previously unknown to me.
Thus, Snöanglar is a solid series, yet not Innan vi dör or Bron/Broen, and with certain triviality in depicting police officers, particularly headstrong ones...
The performances are also okay, with many faces not visible in every Swedish-Danish series :) Well, Eva Melander is a kind of star in Scandinavia, but Maria Rossing was a pleasant surprise, previously unknown to me.
Thus, Snöanglar is a solid series, yet not Innan vi dör or Bron/Broen, and with certain triviality in depicting police officers, particularly headstrong ones...
I am surprised that this excellent series hasn't received better reviews.
At the heart of it is a troubled family: Jenni, a borderline addict not recovering well from a difficult pregnancy and having to deal with an unsettled baby (Lucas) and mothering a young, deaf daughter, Nicole. Nicole, herself, is shattered by her parents' distraction with the baby and Jenni's inability to take adequate care of her. And then there's Salle, a recovered addict, struggling in the grey economy of low-paid part-time jobs in an effort to provide adequately for his family while having to care for Nicole when Jenni can't. Jenni's mother is somewhat sympathetic but critical of Jenni and reluctant to help with care.
Beyond the family is Alice, an experienced police officer caring for a husband who's recovering slowly from a stroke, and managing some tense relationships at work. Maria is a middle-aged paediatric nurse, unable to have children of her own and constantly frustrated by the failures of the medical and social work systems to provide adequate care and nurturance for vulnerable children. Finally, there's Emma, a pregnant teenage runaway who seeks sanctuary with Maria.
At the heart of the story is the question of parenthood, primarily motherhood--those who cannot have children (Maria), those who decide not to have them (Alice), those having them by accident (Emma), those who choose or feel obliged to have them (Jenni) and those whose children have grown up, leaving the question of one's ongoing obligation, and those dealing with inadequate parents.
When Lucas disappears in a horrific snowstorm on Christmas Eve, his disappearance is initially put down to Salle's and Jenni's irresponsibility by an indifferent police force and it's only when Alice hears of it that the tension begins to build.
Over the course of 6 episodes, the question of who took Lucas remains a tense question, but I found myself increasingly drawn into the question of what would happen to all of these people. Without any trace of sentimentality or excuse making, the awfulness of personal lives, the consequences of mistakes made at key moments and the flaws of everyone involved mean a doubled mystery and tension.
From early on, the one who dunnit is reasonably obvious, with only one or two possibilities. But that doesn't matter. We are not asure till episode 5 (episode 6 adds its own tense uncertainties) who it was and by then the momentum carries you to the last frame.
The series starts slowly and is never rushed--one obvious reason for the limited reviews. But the pace of this slow-cooked mystery enriches it, allowing depth and comprehension that would be lacking without the time. It's worth patient viewing, paying attention to characters as well as crime.
The cast are great. Nicole, played by Nikole Bartnas, as the confused kid, loved but neglected; and Maria, played by Maria Rossing, who progressively reveals her sadness and need to love others, are stand-outs. But it's Ardalan Esmaili, as Salle, floundering, doing his best to juggle unmanagable responsibilities, and driven to desperation by his grindingly unfixable situation, stricken by tragedy and others' behaviour, who really makes this series .
It's possible there could be a second series about which I feel ambivalent--hard to imagine that they could top this.
At the heart of it is a troubled family: Jenni, a borderline addict not recovering well from a difficult pregnancy and having to deal with an unsettled baby (Lucas) and mothering a young, deaf daughter, Nicole. Nicole, herself, is shattered by her parents' distraction with the baby and Jenni's inability to take adequate care of her. And then there's Salle, a recovered addict, struggling in the grey economy of low-paid part-time jobs in an effort to provide adequately for his family while having to care for Nicole when Jenni can't. Jenni's mother is somewhat sympathetic but critical of Jenni and reluctant to help with care.
Beyond the family is Alice, an experienced police officer caring for a husband who's recovering slowly from a stroke, and managing some tense relationships at work. Maria is a middle-aged paediatric nurse, unable to have children of her own and constantly frustrated by the failures of the medical and social work systems to provide adequate care and nurturance for vulnerable children. Finally, there's Emma, a pregnant teenage runaway who seeks sanctuary with Maria.
At the heart of the story is the question of parenthood, primarily motherhood--those who cannot have children (Maria), those who decide not to have them (Alice), those having them by accident (Emma), those who choose or feel obliged to have them (Jenni) and those whose children have grown up, leaving the question of one's ongoing obligation, and those dealing with inadequate parents.
When Lucas disappears in a horrific snowstorm on Christmas Eve, his disappearance is initially put down to Salle's and Jenni's irresponsibility by an indifferent police force and it's only when Alice hears of it that the tension begins to build.
Over the course of 6 episodes, the question of who took Lucas remains a tense question, but I found myself increasingly drawn into the question of what would happen to all of these people. Without any trace of sentimentality or excuse making, the awfulness of personal lives, the consequences of mistakes made at key moments and the flaws of everyone involved mean a doubled mystery and tension.
From early on, the one who dunnit is reasonably obvious, with only one or two possibilities. But that doesn't matter. We are not asure till episode 5 (episode 6 adds its own tense uncertainties) who it was and by then the momentum carries you to the last frame.
The series starts slowly and is never rushed--one obvious reason for the limited reviews. But the pace of this slow-cooked mystery enriches it, allowing depth and comprehension that would be lacking without the time. It's worth patient viewing, paying attention to characters as well as crime.
The cast are great. Nicole, played by Nikole Bartnas, as the confused kid, loved but neglected; and Maria, played by Maria Rossing, who progressively reveals her sadness and need to love others, are stand-outs. But it's Ardalan Esmaili, as Salle, floundering, doing his best to juggle unmanagable responsibilities, and driven to desperation by his grindingly unfixable situation, stricken by tragedy and others' behaviour, who really makes this series .
It's possible there could be a second series about which I feel ambivalent--hard to imagine that they could top this.
One of the best tv shows I've seen in years, Snow Angels (on UK's All-4 streaming service) is the 6-art account of the disappearance of an infant child and the sympathetic scrutiny of his shocking family life. A drug-addicted mother and a reformed addict father, who is heroically loyal to her, struggle to cope with the arrival of a second child into their hand-to-mouth existence. Meanwhile we follow the trials of a maternity care nurse whose job it is to make evaluations of the ability of new parents to cope. How will these two harrowing narratives intersect?
Snow Angels is a difficult but compelling watch, tender and sad, shocking and utterly involving. A series that goes where most others, for all their shock and gore and posturing, would fear to tread.
Highly recommended.
Snow Angels is a difficult but compelling watch, tender and sad, shocking and utterly involving. A series that goes where most others, for all their shock and gore and posturing, would fear to tread.
Highly recommended.
There have been many series about children who are missed, which is also the main event here. We follow a young couple with many challenges in everyday life who experience all parents' nightmares, their baby disappears. The series is good at unraveling both incidents in advance and the investigation that is launched. I get a little frustrated that some episodes were largely about prehistory after we are introduced to the disappearance. Maybe the series could have been shortened somewhat, and instead concentrated only on the disappearance? On the other hand, it is also about the difficult social conditions the main characters have, and other characters are also carefully presented. This provides a rich gallery of characters, and gives us viewers more hints about what may have happened. This makes the series exciting to follow. After watching this series, I think the creators have succeeded in creating an exciting series, with a dark backdrop that provides an insight into a gloomy everyday life and dysfunctional environments in which the main characters live their lives. The revelation about what happened is well made and in my opinion surprisingly good.
It's quite realistic in the sense that so many families are struggling like this. Poor, drug abuse, mental health issues, etc. The one I feel most sorry for is Nicole!
None of the characters are very likeable but I think that's on purpose. Good acting and interesting story, even if a little predictable.
None of the characters are very likeable but I think that's on purpose. Good acting and interesting story, even if a little predictable.
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- Snow Angels
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- Stockholm, Sweden(location)
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