





Dark nights, short days, and cold temps amp up the tension in a murder mystery. Watching a hard-edged detective blow out a cloud of warm breath in the cold air as they survey a crime scene really sets the tone for what’s sure to be a twisty and satisfying case.
The Nordic Noir subgenre gives “chilling thriller” a whole new meaning with its bleak landscapes and cold faces. It’s a very specific genre, one in which flawed protagonists push past their inner demons, small communities realize they aren’t as safe as they thought, and gray skies cast an extra thick sense of gloom. Plus, the central mystery is usually a brain-teasing puzzle, keeping viewers guessing right up to the tantalizingly unpredictable conclusion.
So put on something warm and take a trip to the Nordic lands (here defined as Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, and Iceland), where your suspense-induced goosebumps will feel right at home while watching these Nordic Noir shows and movies.





Swedish police officer Hanna (Carla Sehn) heads to her sister’s vacation home in a small skiing town after her boyfriend breaks up with her and her job puts her on leave. Restless, she joins a search party when a local girl goes missing. Wary of the understaffed police department’s efforts, she offers to take a temporary position helping with the case. Her new partner, Daniel (Kardo Razzazi), is skeptical — they have very different ideas about how to run the investigation — but as the case gets even darker, they’ll have to work together to catch a killer.

A fresh cadet gets the chance to prove herself in this Danish thriller. Tea (Clara Dessau) goes undercover as a luxury jeweler and befriends Ashley (Maria Cordsen), the girlfriend of Denmark’s most powerful cocaine dealer, Miran (Afshin Firouzi). Tea’s tactics work, and before long, she’s in Ashley’s good graces. Miran’s business is going sideways because of his reckless brother, so he decides to use Tea’s jewelry store as a front. As the stakes rise and Ashley and her daughter’s safety is jeopardized, Tea has to decide whether her mission or her morals should guide her.

The brilliant and neurodivergent Detective Inspector Kari Sorjonen (Ville Virtanen) returns in this spin-off of the acclaimed Finnish TV series. Officials find a mural painted with blood and deduce that it belongs to an alleged child abuser. When officials find an online poll asking the public to choose who deserves to die from a list of unsavory people, they realize they have the hit list of a serial killer — a killer who may be copycatting Sorjonen’s criminal nemesis, Lasse Maasalo (Sampo Sarkola).

This Swedish crime drama is based on a real case from 2004, when an older woman and a young boy were stabbed to death in broad daylight. The case went unsolved for more than 15 years, becoming the largest criminal investigation in Sweden’s history. Then, in 2020, the growing popularity of genealogy websites made finding criminals through DNA matches a promising new tool for law enforcement. The hunt for the killer resumes.

A serial killer who takes his victims’ eyes and limbs and leaves behind small toy men made of chestnuts lurks at the heart of this Danish thriller. Detective Naia Thulin (Danica Curcic) is a single mom trying to get out of homicide for a job with more stable hours. But when the Chestnut Man emerges, murdering and dismembering several mothers, she stays on with a new partner, Mark Hess (Mikkel Boe Følsgaard). Clues reveal that these murders may be connected to the disappearance of a politician’s daughter a year earlier, and the hunt intensifies with the chance of recovering the girl. The highly anticipated second season of the popular series, titled The Chestnut Man: Hide and Seek, releases on Netflix on May 7, 2026.

Helsinki homicide detective Sofia Karppi (Pihla Viitala) returns to work after the death of her husband and is paired with a rookie detective, Sakari Nurmi (Lauri Tilkanen). A woman’s body is found buried on the shore with flowers in her hands. The deceased woman, Anna (Pamela Tola), is an employee at a clean energy company who had attended a company party the night before. With each new clue, the detectives unravel more of Anna’s secrets, as well as those of the company she worked for.

Adapted from renowned crime writer Jo Nesbø’s fifth book The Devil’s Star, this nine-episode mystery features his famed anti-hero Detective Harry Hole (Tobias Santelmann) as he takes on a serial killer. In addition to searching the streets of Oslo to prevent more murders, Hole also goes head-to-head with his long-time adversary, Detective Tom Waaler (Joel Kinnaman): Both are assigned to the case, and Hole wants to prove Waaler is corrupt and working outside the law. Struggling with his own demons, Hole will have to do all he can to catch a killer and bring Waaler to justice.

Building on the beloved Icelandic series Trapped, this series features detective Andri Ólafsson (Ólafur Darri Ólafsson) and his partner, detective Hinrika Kristjánsdóttir (Ilmur Kristjánsdóttir), who return with a new murder to solve. This time, a local biker gang is in a turf war with a cult that calls itself “The Family.” When a member of the latter turns up dead — a member who had a history with Andri — the detectives have to get to the bottom of it. But the primary suspects are uncooperative gang members and a very secretive cult leader.

This Danish series serves up Scandi-noir with a touch of the supernatural. Astrid (Danica Curcic) is a radio show host haunted by the disappearance of her older sister, Ida (Karoline Hamm). All but three members of Ida’s graduating class vanished 21 years earlier, and when one of the three who were left behind calls into the show, Astrid is driven to look for answers. Adding to her urgency is the return of the eerie prophetic dreams she used to have as a child, which are getting more and more disturbing.

Criminologist Lejla (Léonie Vincent) is an expert on child abduction who was abducted herself as a child. When her mother dies, Lejla returns to her secluded Swedish hometown, where painful memories resurface. She reconnects with her childhood friend, Louise (Gina-Lee Fahlén Ronander), who now has a daughter, Alicia (Minoo Andacheh). Just as she’s set to return home, Lejla finds Louise dead in her home and Alicia missing. Despite opening old wounds, Lejla sets out to investigate, and what she finds may shed light on her own sordid history.

This supernatural mystery takes place in Vik, a small town in Iceland, a year after the eruption of the titular nearby volcano. With the mountain still spewing ash, most people have left the area, but a few remain, hoping for missing loved ones to return. Gríma (Guðrún Eyfjörð) stays for her missing sister, Ása (Íris Tanja Flygenring), despite her father and husband urging her to leave. One day, Gríma helps rescue a woman (Aliette Opheim) covered in ash from the glacier near the volcano, who claims to be someone who moved away and is living in Sweden, except this version of said woman is 20 years younger than she should be. As more people — some missing, some known to be dead — inexplicably reappear, the townspeople try to make sense of it.

Detective Dani Anttila (Krista Kosonen) is guilted into returning to the rural Swedish community she grew up in when a boy she once fostered, Silas (Alexander Persson), goes missing. She brings her new partner, Malik (Mohammed Nour Oklah), with her. The town is wary of the police, and family loyalties threaten to get in the way of Dani’s investigation. But when the missing persons case becomes a murder case, Dani has to unearth what Silas has been up to while facing a town that doesn’t want its secrets discovered.

The Sandells family has mostly recovered four years after their teenage daughter Stella (Alexandra Karlsson Tyrefors) endured a horrific event — one that her parents, Adam (Björn Bengtsson) and Ulrika (Lo Kauppi), convinced her not to report. When Stella is arrested for the murder of 32-year-old Chris Olsen (Christian Fandango Sundgren), her family springs into action to get her acquitted. Equal parts courtroom and family drama, the series slowly reveals the truth of Stella’s past trauma and what happened the night Chris died.

This Danish thriller is based on a true story. Pernille (Fanny Louise Bernth) is a nurse just out of school who befriends a more experienced nurse, Christina (Josephine Park), at her new job in an emergency room. Christina thrives on the adrenaline-fueled pace of the ER, and the two work well together. Pernille notices that patients who are young, relatively healthy, or have no history of heart issues are suddenly going into cardiac arrest. Christina loves to jump in to save patients, but many still die. She shrugs it off, but Pernille grows more suspicious when medications go missing, and she digs deeper into Christina’s methods.

In an affluent Danish neighborhood, a young au pair, Ruby (Donna Levkovski), vanishes. The previous night, she and her charge, Oscar (Frode Bilde Rønsholt), had dinner next door with Cecilie (Marie Bach Hansen) and her son, Viggo (Lukas Zuperka). Ruby had confided in Cecilie that she needed help and couldn’t stay with her current family, but Cecilie told her she couldn’t get involved. Now, wracked with guilt and full of suspicions, Cecilie starts to investigate, partnering with a local police detective, Aicha (Sara Fanta Traore). But when the evidence points back to Ruby’s employers, and possibly Cecilie’s own family, she questions everything she thought she knew about her privileged neighborhood.































































