“Trapped” and Detective Series in General…
If you
watch enough detective series – or are encouraged to watch them by your partner –
you will see certain patterns, almost like a long ‘pick and choose’ list of conventions tacked to the wall in a
writers’ conference room come to life.
Trapped is a series set in
Andri and Hinrika in "Trapped." |
One of the leading staples of the genre is the angry, stupid or obnoxious teen-aged daughter. Season Two has this is spades. Andri's daughter Thorhildur seems to have a grudge about nothing. And, per usual, the kids soon learn the rules of reality as they are put in jeopardy. Another staple is that the lead detective has a bad home-life or better yet, is divorced. He’s got a job to do! In this case Andri is divorced and even lives at his ex-wife’s parent’s house for awhile, like some sad, temporarily homeless man.
Then there is the exotic location, which
provides a vicarious tourist jolt for those who go nowhere. Who wants to have a murder happen in your
boring back yard? Usually it is in a small town or city where in reality, no
murders would ever happen. But in Nordic
detective series and others, killings are routine in these places - even if the motives seem especially weak, as it does here. The small fishing port in Trapped, Siglufjörður, is in the far north of Iceland,
nestled in a fjord with mountains, sheep farms, rattle-trap fishing boats and
snow. The weather is also malevolent, as
a storm isolates the town in the first season.
The town becomes the murder capital of
Another
thing that happens time and time again is that everyone who talks to a cop on
these shows lies or hides something. And
it is always obvious to the audience. Witnesses are many times of no help, busy themselves doing something else as if the cops aren't there. In
Trapped, there are so many secrets, lies and cover-ups, it seems only
the police are straight-forward. Mis or non-communication is standard as well. The
lead detective usually has a somewhat troubled relationship with liquor, his
temper or some horrible past event, but he’s always a genius. Yup. Andri
figures nearly everything out quickly, pays attention to facts, psychology and
detail and rarely fucks up. But he’s running from some failure in
In these shows the crime has to be especially gruesome, or the body has to be found in the woods or sea, decomposing or somehow unrecognizable. Here it is a headless and armless torso. And in too many shows, it is a woman. The ‘dead woman’ thing never ends, which is both a reflection of reality and perhaps a suggestion. Yet these series never deal with male chauvinism or 'femicide.' The murders in Trapped are especially horrid. It seems burning to death is a thing that many Icelander’s fear the most. Can’t you just shoot someone?
There are always several red herrings dragged in front of the audience. Most are obvious and eventually the ‘bad guy’ appears at the end, sometimes dropped from the sky to be taken down. But throwing suspicion on as many people as possible is consistent, as everyone seems guilty or stupid in some way. In this series the perpetrators are neatly caught after 10 episodes, with so many plot twists that the writers themselves have to be laughing in their conference room. The more convoluted the plot, the more the police seem like geniuses for following through to the end. Another convention is that people in deadly peril never act like it. They remain pathetically oblivious and complacent until the criminal shows up with his gun. And he always does. “Your life is in danger!” “Duh... whaaaat?”
Evidently people got tired of murders in the tropics |
March 14,
2021
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