Scandinavian crime drama has a way of clinging to the morbidly depressed viewer. The bleak landscapes of the setting of the crime double as moral terrain, and silence often carries more weight than dialogue in these shows. Land of Sin could easily be filed away as another disposable entry in the Nordic noir catalogue, but its quiet insistence is precisely what makes it linger in my mind. Created by Peter GrΓΆnlund, the Swedish miniseries compresses the genre’s familiar elements into something heavier and more intimate. Across five episodes, it builds a portrait of a rural community where people organise their lives around violence. The possibility of harm hangs sharp inside the homes, when the core family comes together or neighbours have an exchange at a funeral.

Set on the BjΓ€re peninsula, the series opens with the disappearance of a teenage boy. Two detectives from MalmΓΆ arrive to investigate: Dani, a seasoned officer trying to function despite being exhausted by emotional attrition, and Malik, her younger partner, still invested in the promise of procedure and institutional clarity.

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