February Wrap-Up: Han Kang's new book, too many Nordic dramas, The Whale + more

Hi, welcome to my longest video for the shortest month of the year! Because that makes sense somehow.

I read some fantastic books in February, including a mysterious horror, a hilarious Medieval Icelandic Saga where everyone is called Thor and Han Kang's latest book to be translated, just to name a few.

I watched quite a few movies, and it was a rollercoaster ride of emotions from the heartbreaking The Whale and a devastating Holocaust drama to Puss in Boots: The Last Wish, Cédric Klapisch's latest film En Corps (Rise) and Netflix's Troll!

TV shows were pretty much all Nordic dramas because I recently subscribed to Viaplay - so I watched Exit, which is about 4 bankers in Norway who are despicable, Furia a drama about Fascist extremism in Europe, Jordskott a Nordic Noir meets dark Brother's Grimmesque, fairytale and Valkyrien a medical drama with a dark twist.

Essay: Sworn Sisterhood? On the (Near-) Absence of Female Friendship from the Íslendingasǫgur: https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.5406/...

5 reasons why you must watch Babylon Berlin

Recently I decided to finally watch Babylon Berlin, it has been on my watchlist for a couple of years now and I don’t quite know what I was waiting for.

Needless to say, I watched all 3 seasons in like a week and now I’m reading the books it’s based on to be a little nerd and compare the two. This is something I do quite often, just to see if the book is better or if perhaps it’s one of those rare cases when the adaptation stands proudly superior to its source material…only time will tell.

Anyway, let’s get on with the show…

5 reasons you must watch Babylon Berlin

1. It’s a fascinating historical drama

And an utterly beautiful and frightfully expensive one at that (it’s the most expensive German tv show ever made!). Because the show is set in the late 1920’s you get fantastic fashion and music but you also get Weimar Germany, the interim between WW1 and WW2. It’s an utterly fascinating time and unlike all the characters in the show, we know what darkness lays ahead (the wall street crash and Nazis!) which makes for some great tv.

2. A homage to neo-noir detective stories

Hardboiled detective fiction never goes out of fashion, and this twisty and stylish adaptation really likes to play with traditional neo-noir imagery. The main detective Gereon Rath (Volker Bruch) is almost never without his hat and trench coat and his shadow is often present on-screen too especially if he’s hunting down a criminal. There’s also a very Fritz Langesque ‘talkie’ film at the centre of Season 3’s mystery and how the whole crime unravels feels very pulpy and I loved the vibe.

3. The soundtrack

The background music really makes all the difference and immerses you even deeper into the story and the time period it is set in and helps build tension in all the right places. There’s also a couple of performances and dance moments that are really fantastic, especially the one in episode 2 that introduces you to the song ‘Zu Asche, Zu Staub’ (to ash, to dust) which becomes a reoccurring motif throughout the first 2 seasons and tbh I can’t get enough of the song and the several remixes that have been released.

4. A fantastic will they won’t they relationship

Herr kommissar, eh hem I mean Inspector Gereon Rath has a very complicated love life and things get even more complicated when the intelligent, beautiful and ambitious Charlotte Ritter (Liv Lisa Fries) enters his life. They grow closer and closer together over the seasons and the chemistry between Bruch and Fries is brilliant, I challenge you not to root for the two while watching.

5. You like very ambiguous characters and political intrigue

Game of Thrones was once the pinnacle of TV, it was a cultural phenomenon that entranced viewers (myself included) because of its dark themes, characters with very questionable morals and firecracker political tension. Babylon Berlin has all of these in spades and fingers crossed it doesn’t lose all sense and sabotage character arcs as it continues to be adapted. Sorry GOT, you really did shoot yourself in the foot!

and one more for luck

6. The elevator

Yes, you read the right. Some scenes of the show are shot at Rathaus Schöneberg (the city hall of Tempelhof-Schöneberg) and many of those scenes include the trippy Paternoster Elevator. I mean just look at how cool it is…

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Well, it’s safe to say that I am obsessed with Babylon Berlin and I can’t wait for season 4 to come out next year!

Babylon Berlin is available to watch on Now TV