In fact, the full title of the show is Jo Nesbø’s Detective Hole; the author himself wrote all of the episodes, so you can be sure that it sticks close to the hugely successful novels, which have sold over 50 million copies worldwide. That authenticity pays off in a tense, colorful, gritty series that’s entertaining from start to finish.
Funny name, gripping drama
Harry Hole means serious business
If you’re like me, when you saw that a show called “Detective Hole” was blowing up, you wondered about the title: Is this about a hole where detectives hang out, or is it about a guy named Detective Hole? It’s the latter; Harry Hole (Tobias Santelmann) is a brilliant detective who struggles with alcoholism and depression in his personal life. In Norwegian, his name is pronounced “Har-ee Hoo-leh,” so it’s not meant to be funny, but if you’re an English speaker, you probably can’t un-see it. The full Norwegian title for the show is “Jo Nesbø’s Harry Hole,” which just makes things worse, but we’re going to rise above it.
The drama gets going when Oslo police discover a woman’s body; her finger has been severed, and there’s a tiny red diamond placed behind her eyelid. Similar murders begin happening every five days, so Harry has a serial killer on his hands.
Some critics think there are too many subplots at work in Detective Hole, and it’s true that the first season can drag a bit in the middle while it sorts through the particulars, but ultimately all the threads weave together very nicely into a thrilling climax.
Detective Hole is great at setting a mood
In some ways, Detective Hole isn’t doing anything that hasn’t been done before. There are a lot of shows about troubled detectives who are great at their jobs but fall apart when they’re off the clock, True Detective and Mare of Easttown being a couple of recent examples. Likewise, Detective Hole fits very neatly into the “Nordic noir” genre, slow-burning Scandinavian crime fiction with a bleak mood. The Girl With the Dragon Tattoo is a popular example, and is the Christopher Nolan movie Insomnia, which was a remake of a Norwegian film.
As Harry Hole himself, Tobias Santelmann looks perpetually haunted. He does a lot with a lot with a little, conveying depths of trauma and neurosis with the tiniest of glances. Harry isn’t a cuddly main character, but he does mean well; he’s flawed but redeemable, and you want to root for him more and more the more you get to know him.
But Joel Kinnaman all but all steals the stage from under Santelmann’s feet as the conniving, flamboyant Tom Waaler. While Harry looks like a perpetual ruffled mess, Tom is impeccably dressed with a razor-sharp haircut. He’s a preening, self-satisfied near-sociopath, Norway’s answer to Patrick Bateman. Kimmaman, who these days is best known for playing straight-shooting astronaut Ed Baldwin on the excellent sci-fi show For All Mankind, lets loose and has the time of his life playing this character. He may never live the mirror scene down, and I mean that as a compliment.
Also, at one point Swedish acting legend Peter Stormare shows up as a gang leader. Detective Hole is bursting with talent.
Will Detective Hole be back for a second season?
There are plenty more adventures to undertake
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And while the first season of Detective Hole does resolve the main plot, it makes clear that there are more crimes out there for Harry to uncover. Unfortunately, Netflix has not confirmed as of yet whether Detective Hole will return, but given its worldwide success, the chances are good.

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Harry Hole redeemed
Nesbø’s Harry Hole books were actually adapted to the screen before: in 2017, Michael Fassbender played Harry in The Snowman, based on the seventh book in Nesbø’s series. The Snowman is widely considered one of the best of Nesbø’s novels, which is why it was so disappointing that The Snowman movie was awful, with critics and fans alike roundly rejecting it.
Detective Hole is the second chance the series deserves. It needs to get another season if for no other reason than to actually give the world the great adaptation of The Snowman that it needs.
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