The Crow Girl
- Série de TV
- 2025–
- 50 min
A inspetora-chefe de polícia Jeanette Kilburn e a psicoterapeuta Sophia Craven unem forças para investigar o assassinato de jovens homens. A investigação as leva a um mundo perigoso de abuso... Ler tudoA inspetora-chefe de polícia Jeanette Kilburn e a psicoterapeuta Sophia Craven unem forças para investigar o assassinato de jovens homens. A investigação as leva a um mundo perigoso de abusos históricos e assassinatos.A inspetora-chefe de polícia Jeanette Kilburn e a psicoterapeuta Sophia Craven unem forças para investigar o assassinato de jovens homens. A investigação as leva a um mundo perigoso de abusos históricos e assassinatos.
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I truly do not want to give anything away here. Others have criticised The Crow Girl for having too many plot lines that don't all get wrapped up... but that is what season 2 is for? Weird thing to pick apart really, since this is not a standalone movie.
The first 2-3 episodes are a quite slow and challenging to watch, but it's all worth it for the plot twist towards the end. Usually I see things coming from a mile away but not this one. It's extraordinarily well done whilst at the same time you'll be kicking yourself for not figuring it out in the first place.
In other news: Eve Myles is bloody brilliant in this. Great actor.
The first 2-3 episodes are a quite slow and challenging to watch, but it's all worth it for the plot twist towards the end. Usually I see things coming from a mile away but not this one. It's extraordinarily well done whilst at the same time you'll be kicking yourself for not figuring it out in the first place.
In other news: Eve Myles is bloody brilliant in this. Great actor.
What do you get if you take Eve Myles's Faith from Keeping Faith and Dougray Scott's DI Ray Lennox from Crime and send them to Bristol? You get The Crow Girl!
Maybe I am too cynical these days and Police shows have to have the smart talking main character detective who plays fast and loose, they put their work above all else including their family, then there needs to be the incompetent police sidekicks who have to be told to do everything, and the stern boss who berates the main character but relents when they see that the unconventional methods are working, so if you're into that then take a peek at this.
To be fair the wife liked it, I found it frustrating in the first episode but then it did get quite creepy in terms of the subject matter.
Ultimately it's OK in the grand scheme, you could do worse, like watching a Harlan Coban adaptation.
Maybe I am too cynical these days and Police shows have to have the smart talking main character detective who plays fast and loose, they put their work above all else including their family, then there needs to be the incompetent police sidekicks who have to be told to do everything, and the stern boss who berates the main character but relents when they see that the unconventional methods are working, so if you're into that then take a peek at this.
To be fair the wife liked it, I found it frustrating in the first episode but then it did get quite creepy in terms of the subject matter.
Ultimately it's OK in the grand scheme, you could do worse, like watching a Harlan Coban adaptation.
I watched 2 episodes and that was enough for me. It moves at glacial speed and isn't focused. Like an American police drama you get a lot of family drama thrown in which is distracting and worthless plus a demanding boss. I really don't care about DCI Kilburn's home situation. Why is a detective inspector the bagman for a detective chief inspector, normally a DCI has a sergeant. It's what I always enjoyed about the series "Vera", she rarely brought in any family stuff and her bosses let her do her job.
This is from a novel by Erik Axl Sund which is the pen name of two Swedish writers. Some Scandinavian novels should be dramatized like "The Killing" and "The Bridge", but I would have left "The Crow Girl" on the shelf.
Nice that it's set in Bristol and not London. I hated Dougray Scott in "Crime", but he's good in this series. I liked Eve Myles in "Torchwood".
This is from a novel by Erik Axl Sund which is the pen name of two Swedish writers. Some Scandinavian novels should be dramatized like "The Killing" and "The Bridge", but I would have left "The Crow Girl" on the shelf.
Nice that it's set in Bristol and not London. I hated Dougray Scott in "Crime", but he's good in this series. I liked Eve Myles in "Torchwood".
I wasn't sure about this series after EP 1. But things got going after that and what a ride it was.
I thoroughly enjoyed the crow girl. It really held me.
The series has quite a few things going on at once. You've got misdirection and red herrings thrown in for good measure.
The leads are excellent. Support is very good too.
Maybe the most unconvincing is the doctor but there's a reason for that.
The series avoids getting bogged down in internal and family politics. Yes there's some in there but they never get intrusive.
I'm Really looking forward to the second season.
I originally thought it was a self contained one off series.
Thankfully it's not.
Can't wait for season 2.
I thoroughly enjoyed the crow girl. It really held me.
The series has quite a few things going on at once. You've got misdirection and red herrings thrown in for good measure.
The leads are excellent. Support is very good too.
Maybe the most unconvincing is the doctor but there's a reason for that.
The series avoids getting bogged down in internal and family politics. Yes there's some in there but they never get intrusive.
I'm Really looking forward to the second season.
I originally thought it was a self contained one off series.
Thankfully it's not.
Can't wait for season 2.
This one is an exception for me. Usually, if I see a show or movie, that starts in a way, that suggests that we should know something about what's already happening (no matter how small those things are) and does not start with some flashback like "You must be wondering how I got here", and it's not a sequel - I drop those. Intention is clear: they want to show a "busy world", but more often than not that's just covering up bad writing, since neither the world nor the characters get a natural introduction. It may work in extremely rare cases, I guess, but I can't think of a good one.
The Crow Girl does it right, though. It feels completely natural, as if we are walking in on the characters going on about their days. The interactions that we see also do introduce the characters to us properly and, again, naturally. The introductions do not feel forced, and they are meaningful, starting to explore the relationships right from the start. This generally keeps up through the whole season, too, although quality does drop somewhat sometimes, but still the feeling of "natural" is preserved for the most part, which is really important for a crime series, especially when it's trying to be psychological, as well.
Until the ending happens. I won't spoil it, but the plot twist was shown in a way, that is only possible with because it's a visual medium. It's just the camera showing us 1 thing, when in reality it was another one. It felt like I was lied to, even though the twist itself does kind of make sense. I really wonder how this was handled in a book (probably just omitting descriptions at certain points), and I can get it, that it might have been difficult to do certain shots differently, but in general just obscuring the view would have worked much better, than this. Because of this, I can't give it more than 6/10.
The Crow Girl does it right, though. It feels completely natural, as if we are walking in on the characters going on about their days. The interactions that we see also do introduce the characters to us properly and, again, naturally. The introductions do not feel forced, and they are meaningful, starting to explore the relationships right from the start. This generally keeps up through the whole season, too, although quality does drop somewhat sometimes, but still the feeling of "natural" is preserved for the most part, which is really important for a crime series, especially when it's trying to be psychological, as well.
Until the ending happens. I won't spoil it, but the plot twist was shown in a way, that is only possible with because it's a visual medium. It's just the camera showing us 1 thing, when in reality it was another one. It felt like I was lied to, even though the twist itself does kind of make sense. I really wonder how this was handled in a book (probably just omitting descriptions at certain points), and I can get it, that it might have been difficult to do certain shots differently, but in general just obscuring the view would have worked much better, than this. Because of this, I can't give it more than 6/10.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesBased on a Swedish crime novel, 'Kråkflickan' by Eriksson Aklander Sundquist, with setting transposed to the UK. In 'Coffee with Slash' on Ola Englund's Youtube Channel 'Ola Englund', May 3rd 2024, Slash mentions he obtained the rights to the novel, and then sold them on to Buccaneer, who are producing this show, with Slash stating he is now working on composing and performing the score.
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