For the past few weeks, during the end-of-summer TV lull, my husband
and I have gotten hooked on a dark, suspenseful mystery series called The Killing on Netflix. All the new fall shows are starting now, but we are still loving this great suspense show!
Mareille Enos (more recently of The Catch)
plays homicide detective Sarah Linden. As the first episode opens,
Sarah is on her last day on the job in Seattle, ready to retire and
start a new life with her boyfriend in sunny Sonoma, CA. She and her
son, Jack (played by Liam James), have tickets for a late-night flight
and have already packed up their home.
Then, a new case hits: a 16-year old girl, Rosie Lawsen, is missing and soon found dead.
The case really gets under Sarah's skin as she and her replacement,
Stephen Holden (played by Joel Kinnaman), criss-cross the city trying to
find clues to Rosie's murder. Sarah misses her late-night deadline - a
few times - and finally pledges to stay an extra week to try to wrap up
the case. But this case is not easily solved.
Meanwhile,
Rosie's family is devastated. Her father, Stan (played by Brent
Sexton), owns his own moving company, but years ago he worked for the
Russian mob as a "fixer." Her mother, Mitch (played by Michelle Forbes),
is wrecked by depression at the loss of her daughter and can't even
take care of their remaining two younger sons. Her sister, fun aunt
Terry, steps in to help.
Meanwhile, there is a close
mayoral race going on in Seattle, pitting the sitting mayor, Lesley
Adams (played by Tom Butler) against the handsome, charismatic
man-of-the-people councilman Darren Richmond, played by Billy Campbell.
Politics gets pulled into the mix when a car registered to the
councilman's campaign is found to be connected to the case.
The
action goes back and forth between the detectives trying to solve the
case, the grieving family who wants justice, and the ever-more nasty
political campaign, as the Richmond side tries to distance itself from
the horrific crime, and the Mayor tries to imply Richmond was involved.
The tone of the show is dark and brooding, much like Sarah herself, set
against the backdrop of a mostly dark and always raining Seattle (you
won't want to visit the city after seeing all this dark rain!). There is
plenty of suspense as the experienced detective and the newbie work
(sometimes at odds with each other) to try to find a lead, with all
kinds of unexpected twists and turns in the plot.
The
entire cast is excellent in this show, but Mareille Enos is really
outstanding. If you've only seen her before as the glamorous, wealthy
Alice on The Catch, you will barely recognize her here. This is a
grittier, more real feeling Enos who fully inhabits the character of
Sarah, with her almost-obsession with being a good detective and solving
this case in constant battle with her desire to be a good mom (and some
secrets in her background). Her relationship with Holden is also an
interesting one to watch develop, as she completely distrusts him at
first, and he has his own secrets. His performance is also very good -
both characters feel real and relatable.
We are in
the middle of season 2 (of 4 seasons total), and Linden and Holden are
still working on the same case, with all elements of the show digging
deeper and deeper. There are surprises and red herrings in every show,
plus plenty of character development on all sides. Like I said, we are
completely hooked. If you liked The Fall, this show has a similar
dark, gritty feel to it (it seems to be as dark and rainy in Ireland as
it is in Seattle). It's perfect for this spooky season! (though we
enjoyed it during the hot summer, too).
The Killing
is a Netflix Original program, so it is available for streaming only on
Netflix, with all four seasons there. Or you can watch it on DVD (link
below).
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