![]() After a stakeout ignited a brutal moment of violence, he’s been busted down to Department Q, a basement office that handles cold cases. But I won’t say whether this angry cop finally grins, nor will I supply any other spoilers about this expertly plotted Nordic noir.Īdmittedly, Morck (Nikolaj Lie Kaas) has cause for his surliness. So bad that by the end of “The Keeper of Lost Causes,” you may fear that his stone face will split down the center if he forces himself to smile. Here are reviews of the other films in the trilogy, “The Absent One” and “A Conspiracy of Faith.”ĭetective Carl Morck has one mood, and boy, it’s bad. ![]() This pitch-black series, with its brooding protagonist, may draw comparisons with “The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo,” but consider this: The stories are even sharper. ![]() ![]() The film adaptations of Jussi Adler-Olsen’s Nordic crime novels were a hit in Denmark, and now all three, known as “The Department Q Trilogy,” are being released on Friday in the United States. ![]()
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