Who reads this column for some time know that I’m probably out of sheer envy of a pronounced Maria Furtwängler-defensive reflex care. In this episode, but completely unsubstantiated. Already in the first scene, it gets exciting: Commissioner Charlotte Lindholm (Furtwängler) is located in the headlock of a hostage-taker, your new colleague, Anais Schmitz (Florence Kasumba) stands with his gun at ready in front of it and shoot.
The man, an Ex-soldier, speaks briefly before the shot is nonsense, of voices in his head. To is home the corpse of his wife. Clear case: post-traumatic stress disorder. If only the little son in the house would not be hiding in a closet. Says, it two people were in the house. And if not for the colleagues of the soldiers would be the number way to kill a deployment in Mali, apparently. And if there wasn’t suddenly a strange noise in Anais Schmitz’ head would be.
The military has its Finger in the game
Soon one is in the most beautiful Thriller about brain research, the military, the 5G mobile and wireless radiation, the so-called MK-Ultra-secret experiments of the CIA in the 1970s, and the research after the zombie-like controllable super soldiers. I loved this episode. The only fly in the ointment: The patch catfight between Lindholm and Schmitz is in the face of this substance is unnecessary – as well as the emerging love triangle.
For those who liked this, here’s a note: If you should ever stumble upon the movie “Jacob’s Ladder” (the Original from 1990, not the Remake of 2018) – of a similar theme. And it is even more exciting.
rating: four and a half out of five