
Forbrydelsen: The Danish Crime Drama That Defined Nordic Noir
How Søren Sveistrup's breakthrough series set the standard for international detective television
Forbrydelsen—which translates simply as "The Crime" in Danish—arrived on DR1 on 7 January 2007 as a bold experiment in television storytelling. Created by Søren Sveistrup and produced by Danmarks Radio (DR) in co-production with ZDF Enterprises, the series would prove to be far more than a conventional procedural. It became the blueprint for Nordic noir on an international scale.
The genius of Forbrydelsen lay in its narrative structure. Each 50-minute episode covers exactly 24 hours of investigation, creating a real-time tension that mirrors the relentless pace of an active murder inquiry. Rather than solving a different crime each week, the series commits to season-long arcs, allowing complex plots to unfold gradually while maintaining momentum through plot twists and character development. This format proved revolutionary and remains distinctive among crime dramas.
Season 1, which aired across 2007 in two blocks (January to March, then September to November), consisted of 20 episodes that tracked the investigation into the rape and brutal murder of 19-year-old Nanna Birk Larsen. Her body was discovered on 3 November, and the narrative spans the subsequent 20 days of investigation through 22 November. Detective Inspector Sarah Lund, portrayed with understated intensity by Sofie Gråbøl, partners with Jan Meyer (Søren Malling) to pursue the case. The investigation becomes entangled with the mayoral campaign of politician Troels Hartmann, adding a political dimension that transcends the typical crime-and-punishment narrative.
The series' setting is integral to its appeal. Copenhagen itself becomes a character—photographed in muted, atmospheric tones that emphasize the Danish landscape's austere beauty. This visual language, combined with the deliberately paced investigations and complex character work, established what audiences would come to recognize as the Nordic noir aesthetic.


