A Stockholm detective under internal investigation heads to a ski resort to unwind, until a young girl's disappearance compels her back to work.
Ratings
Curator score: 3.2/10
IMDb: 6.7/10
Rotten Tomatoes: 86%
TMDB: 6.6/10
Production
SF Studios, Nordisk Film & TV Fond
Cast
Carla Sehn, Kardo Razzazi, Charlie Gustafsson, Francisco Sobrado, Pia Johansson, Maxida Märak, Cora Watson, Cecilia Forss
Where to watch
Netflix, Netflix Standard with Ads
Curator Review
Verdict
A competent Nordic crime thriller with wintry atmosphere, a familiar damaged-detective setup, and enough procedural momentum to keep mystery fans engaged. It’s more sturdy than standout: the mood and setting do a lot of the work, while the plotting and character beats stay comfortably within genre expectations.
Best for
Fans of Scandinavian crime dramas and cold-weather noir
Viewers who like compact, bingeable mystery series
Audiences drawn to internal-affairs tension and troubled investigators
People who enjoy scenic, atmospheric crime stories over twist-heavy spectacle
Skip if
You want a highly original or psychologically daring mystery
You prefer fast, glossy, high-concept thrillers
You’re looking for a deeply character-driven ensemble with broad emotional range
You’re tired of the familiar 'cop under pressure solves a local disappearance' template
Overview
The Åre Murders uses its snowy resort setting effectively, giving the series a crisp, isolated atmosphere that suits the Nordic noir tradition. The premise is immediately legible and easy to binge: a detective trying to step away from work is pulled into a disappearance that quickly becomes personal and procedural. That structure makes it accessible, even when the show leans on familiar genre rhythms.
Worth noting
What keeps it watchable is the combination of winter landscape, internal-investigation tension, and a lead role built around professional strain. It has the clean, efficient storytelling many crime viewers want from a limited-run mystery, with enough local texture to distinguish it from generic small-town procedurals. The downside is that it rarely feels surprising; the emotional beats and investigative turns are often exactly where you expect them to be.
Bottom line
If you like Scandinavian crime series that prioritize mood, competence, and steady escalation, this should work fine. If you’re hoping for a breakout mystery with sharper character psychology or more ambitious plotting, it may feel more functional than memorable.