Huss
- TV Series
- 2021–
- 1h 30m
IMDb RATING
6.7/10
1.2K
YOUR RATING
New police officer Katarina Huss must manage the tough life in Gothenburg and suspicious colleagues, and she is soon tangled in corruption and betrayal.New police officer Katarina Huss must manage the tough life in Gothenburg and suspicious colleagues, and she is soon tangled in corruption and betrayal.New police officer Katarina Huss must manage the tough life in Gothenburg and suspicious colleagues, and she is soon tangled in corruption and betrayal.
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The title of the review sounds like a contradiction in terms. The explanation? It's ridiculous that recruits still on probationary training get to join the detective branch on secondment. It's ludicrous that a green recruit gets allowed to infiltrate an international drug smuggling gang. It's absurd that the particular team of cops training the newbies would be given such a role or that they would even be allowed to continue operating. However, the storyline was good, the acting excellent, the settings in Gothenburg real.
There is a back story that holds the narrative together and this is why this short series was successful. The police department is undergoing criticism for its response to a series of riots and is being investigated particularly in respect of the team Katarina Huss and her fresh-faced colleagues are assigned to. We know the official story and the real story comes out little by little. It's not hard to guess who the baddie is but what is hidden and has to be worked out is how and why the other participants played their roles.
During the slow revelations leading to the truth of the riots, Katerina throws herself into solving crimes, some of which she has been dumped into, and does it with empathy and intelligence but her methods and motivations are often not appreciated by the team, nor by her superiors. I didn't anticipate the final denouement and how it happened. There were a couple of things leading up to the unmasking of the culprit that didn't ring true including that hoary old plot device of, "I can't tell you now, just give me a bit of time".
All things considered, this was an enjoyable tale of moral dilemmas and crime solving. In an epilogue to the climax, Katerina has to make a decision for her future. To enable a second series, she makes the "wrong" decision and becomes complicit in what she fought against. I look forward to her development and the effects of her actions and choice in Season Two if and when it is commissioned.
There is a back story that holds the narrative together and this is why this short series was successful. The police department is undergoing criticism for its response to a series of riots and is being investigated particularly in respect of the team Katarina Huss and her fresh-faced colleagues are assigned to. We know the official story and the real story comes out little by little. It's not hard to guess who the baddie is but what is hidden and has to be worked out is how and why the other participants played their roles.
During the slow revelations leading to the truth of the riots, Katerina throws herself into solving crimes, some of which she has been dumped into, and does it with empathy and intelligence but her methods and motivations are often not appreciated by the team, nor by her superiors. I didn't anticipate the final denouement and how it happened. There were a couple of things leading up to the unmasking of the culprit that didn't ring true including that hoary old plot device of, "I can't tell you now, just give me a bit of time".
All things considered, this was an enjoyable tale of moral dilemmas and crime solving. In an epilogue to the climax, Katerina has to make a decision for her future. To enable a second series, she makes the "wrong" decision and becomes complicit in what she fought against. I look forward to her development and the effects of her actions and choice in Season Two if and when it is commissioned.
Can anyone explain to me exactly why the Riots and their aftermath is so pivotal in Huss? I got quite confused as to the relevance of these riots - and just exactly why they formed such a central psychodrama - to the series. I'm exactly like Katarina - who looked totally nonplussed at let's say some stage of the proceedings - without giving a spoiler!. If someone could give me a synopsis to why the four (?) Cops got each.other into such a pickle over these riots I would be grateful. Otherwise Huss wasn't bad as an insight into how Swedish rookie cops settle into their new jobs - even if one has a mother who is a top police officer. Wonder if the series had a police adviser? The Correction episode was powerful stuff. More Chicago -than small "l" liberal Sweden! David J Baird Melbourne Australia.
Karin Franz Körlof is standout as Katarina Hoss in this binge watchable high quality TV series from Sweden. All the cast are good, and the direction is top notch. While the procedure maybe stretched beyond credibility at times and Katarina is too much of a loan wolf to be a real team player that's the whole point and you can't help but follow her progress... The plots are good, especially Episode Four which is edge of your seat working on several levels. Looking forward to Season Two.
The idea is good. Modern policing from a trainees viewpoint ... pretty frightening.
What lets it down is Huss finding herself as part of a investigation team only days after having joined the uniformed force as a trainee.
It is the same in episode 2, although worse. Huss seems Hell bent on losing her job. Again she is drafted into the homicide team. Sleeps with the boss, joins a police vigilante team and constantly goes her own way and disobeys orders.
It continues in this vain and get worse throughout the series.
It is disappointing because the idea and crime stories deserved more.
The character of Huss is just not credible as is her involvement in the cases in the first few weeks of of her "training". The ending is just a joke.
What lets it down is Huss finding herself as part of a investigation team only days after having joined the uniformed force as a trainee.
It is the same in episode 2, although worse. Huss seems Hell bent on losing her job. Again she is drafted into the homicide team. Sleeps with the boss, joins a police vigilante team and constantly goes her own way and disobeys orders.
It continues in this vain and get worse throughout the series.
It is disappointing because the idea and crime stories deserved more.
The character of Huss is just not credible as is her involvement in the cases in the first few weeks of of her "training". The ending is just a joke.
Particularly the Scandinavians have learned to produce (and like?) police series with strong yet feminine policewomen trying and often succeeding in contriving in the men´s world... But the novelty has passed and the quality often depends on the cases to solve and on the performers to catch the eye (or not)...
I can´t say that Karin Franz Körlof is too pleasant to follow and the cases she is involved are not too interesting either, in come cases I could guess the wrongdoer at an early stage. The "big secret" as a certain leitmotif through all episodes was also somewhat trivial. On the other hand, I did not have high hopes here, thus I am not disappointed, and the inclusion of performers not being part is every Swedish series is a plus as well. Thus, 7/10 seems reasonable.
I can´t say that Karin Franz Körlof is too pleasant to follow and the cases she is involved are not too interesting either, in come cases I could guess the wrongdoer at an early stage. The "big secret" as a certain leitmotif through all episodes was also somewhat trivial. On the other hand, I did not have high hopes here, thus I am not disappointed, and the inclusion of performers not being part is every Swedish series is a plus as well. Thus, 7/10 seems reasonable.
Did you know
- ConnectionsSpin-off from Irene Huss (2007)
- How many seasons does Huss have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime
- 1h 30m(90 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.00 : 1
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