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The Åre Murders (2025)
A Stockholm detective under internal investigation heads to a ski resort to unwind, until a young girl's disappearance compels her back to work.
A Stockholm detective under internal investigation heads to a ski resort to unwind, until a young girl's disappearance compels her back to work.
The series centers on a detective investigating various criminal cases, including missing persons, human trafficking, and domestic abuse, within a ski resort town. The narrative focuses on crime and investigation, presenting themes without explicit political commentary or ideological messaging.
The cast features visible diversity with actors from various ethnic backgrounds. Information regarding the narrative's framing of traditional identities or explicit DEI themes is not available.
The character Daniel Lindskog, a Swedish police chief in the original novels, is portrayed by Kardo Razzazi. Razzazi is of Kurdish descent, a different racial background than the character's implied white Swedish ethnicity in the source material.
The narrative depicts the protagonist's isolation following a partnership's end and includes a significant storyline centered on domestic abuse within a family. This portrayal emphasizes the dysfunction and challenges present in family life.
The Åre Murders does not feature identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes within its narrative. The film's storyline and character arcs do not include any elements related to LGBTQ+ identities or experiences.
The Åre Murders does not feature transsexual characters or themes. The narrative centers on a detective investigating a missing girl in a ski resort, uncovering a plot involving scams and human trafficking. Character descriptions and plot summaries from various sources do not indicate any portrayal of transsexual identity or related storylines within the series.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The Åre Murders, an adaptation of Viveca Sten's murder mystery novels, maintains the established genders of its characters from the source material. No characters canonically established as one gender are portrayed as a different gender in the on-screen adaptation.
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