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Detective Hole (2026)
Norwegian Nordic noir crime drama series adapting Jo Nesbø's novel 'The Devil's Star.' Troubled detective Harry Hole (Tobias Santelmann) investigates gruesome murders in Oslo while confronting corrupt colleague Tom Waaler (Joel Kinnaman). Ellen Helinder plays forensics expert Beate Lønn. Created and written by Nesbø, directed by Øystein Karlsen and Anna Zackrisson for Netflix.
Norwegian Nordic noir crime drama series adapting Jo Nesbø's novel 'The Devil's Star.' Troubled detective Harry Hole (Tobias Santelmann) investigates gruesome murders in Oslo while confronting corrupt colleague Tom Waaler (Joel Kinnaman). Ellen Helinder plays forensics expert Beate Lønn. Created and written by Nesbø, directed by Øystein Karlsen and Anna Zackrisson for Netflix.
The series centers on a detective's confrontation with institutional corruption and societal decay in Oslo, where the narrative's focus on individual moral struggles and systemic flaws remains ideologically balanced without promoting partisan solutions.
The series presents a mainly white Scandinavian ensemble in lead roles, complemented by ethnic diversity among supporting actors from Indian, Middle Eastern, and Indigenous Australian backgrounds. It incorporates LGBTQ representation through a bisexual antagonist's backstory involving a same-sex relationship, handled as character depth rather than a narrative focal point.
The series centers a bisexual antagonist whose queer past drives grief-fueled rivalry, yet frames his identity through self-hatred, gratuitous violence against a gay sex worker, and a brutal demise. Homoerotic elements highlight deviance over dignity, perpetuating harmful stereotypes in crime fiction.
The series portrays the detective protagonist's attempts to build a blended family with his girlfriend and her young son, emphasizing efforts to connect despite personal turmoil. This depiction treats non-traditional family dynamics as a backdrop to the central crime narrative, without clear endorsement of progressive or traditional values.
A priest wearing a clerical collar engages in a clandestine love affair in Prague, potentially involved in nefarious activities, which underscores hypocrisy among Christian clergy.
The series contains no transgender characters or themes. Willy Barli's androgynous presentation leads some to misinterpret him as trans, but he is confirmed male, and his story focuses on obsession and murder without addressing gender identity.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The series adapts Jo Nesbø's The Devil's Star with key characters Harry Hole, Tom Waaler, Beate Lønn, and Rakel Fauke portrayed by actors matching their canonical genders from the source novel.
Detective Hole adapts Jo Nesbø's Norwegian novel The Devil's Star, portraying the Scandinavian characters with actors of matching ethnic backgrounds, resulting in no race swaps.
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