‘Veronika’ is a haunted story of justice and one woman's resilience (2024)

There are a host of ghosts in Swedish series Veronika, beyond the young boy who appears as a spectral vision to mother, police officer and addict Veronika Gren (

The Sandhamn Murders

’ Alexandra Rapaport). But there are already ghosts aplenty in Veronika's life - the people she couldn't help, the fears of what humans are capable of, and her own compulsive drive to numb her feelings with pills.

Though we are introduced to Veronika at home, waking to her dog licking her face and her children being bustled off to school by their father, there is a lurking sense of dread in the sparse, spectral music and the grey-washed palette. There's something below this seemingly docile surface that is keeping Veronika on tenterhooks. Her day is filled with visits to the homes of addicts and petty criminals. But it is not these places that are haunting Veronika's mind. She is having visions of victims of unsolved crimes, silently demanding her attention to their existence in a transitory world between the living and the dead. When Oskar appears to her, a nine-year-old boy who apparently drowned – did he fall? Was he pushed? – Veronika is driven to find out what really happened, for Oskar and for her own peace of mind.

‘Veronika’ is a haunted story of justice and one woman's resilience (1)

Alexandra Rapaport as Veronika Gren. Credit: Viaplay


Justifiably, Veronika fears she's losing her mind. Perhaps it's her work, but perhaps it's the prescription pill addiction she's been attempting to hide from her family that is forcing her to lose her grip on reality. Still, when she is assigned to the gruesome murder of two teenage girls, it is an opportunity to achieve justice for the victims and to potentially satiate the ghosts in her head with a sense of finality. It may also prevent the killer from striking again, which becomes Veronika’s full-time fixation.

Rapaport (also an executive producer) is both haunting and uncomfortably relatable as Veronika, and she is joined by an accomplished cast including Tobias Santelmann (

Exit

,

Atlantic Crossing

,

Darkness: Those Who Kill

, Beforeigners) as her husband, Tomas, who is struggling to support his wife while suspecting she might be losing her mind.

‘Veronika’ is a haunted story of justice and one woman's resilience (2)

Tobias Santelmann as Tomas. Credit: Viaplay


Creators and writers Katja Juras and Anna Lindblom have crafted a tender, clever psychological drama that never falls down the rabbit hole of science fiction, despite the ghosts and parallel worlds Veronika exists between. The depiction of addiction is sensitive to the realities of the shame, hunger and guilt that accompany the addict’s inevitable sacrifices. Veronika’s children look at her with adoration but also with a puzzlement that suggests they know she is keeping troubling secrets from them. Juras and Lindblom are in familiar territory. Their previous, writing collaboration, the fifth and final series of Gåsmamman, depicted the life of a suburban mother of three in Stockholm who is thrust into the criminal underworld when her children’s lives are jeopardised.

Danish director Jonas Alexander Arnby’s CV includes the series War of the Worlds, Exit Plan and Darkness: Those Who Kill. His knack for crime series alongside explorations of sci fi and the supernatural is seen again here.

‘Veronika’ is a haunted story of justice and one woman's resilience (3)

Veronika (Alexandra Rapaport) faces more than the ghosts of the past as the series unfolds. Credit: Viaplay


The producers have wisely kept the series to eight episodes, managing to create a slow burning pace while avoiding drawn out, unnecessary plotlines. The story has breathing room to unfold, and Veronika is allowed to be complicated, flawed and sympathetic all at once.

In a virtual ocean of crime series, Veronika offers viewers something beyond the formulaic. It is a character study of a woman traumatised by her job and what she has seen and felt powerless to change on the frontline of justice. Her responsibilities to her family, to victims and their loved ones, living and dead, both drive her onward and also drive her mad. It is a compelling dilemma, and Rapaport is exceptional as the soul of this series. Let it keep you awake at night, perhaps with your own ghosts.

Veronika is streaming now at SBS On Demand.

Stream free On DemandVeronikaseries •crime •Swedish Mseries •crime •Swedish M
MORE TO WATCH
Top new series coming to SBS On Demand in March 2024
'Game of Thrones' to groundbreaking profiler: 'Catch Me A Killer' star Charlotte Hope on her new role
The Queen of Nordic Noir has opened ‘The Beach Hotel’
'The Carnival' takes us into the world of touring sideshows
Commiserate, pontificate, or laugh out loud at the ‘Worst Day Ever’ collection on SBS On Demand
'Alone Australia' season 2: Meet the 10 brave folk taking on the wild
From heroes and history to compelling crime: discover Acclaimed World Drama at SBS On Demand
The lies and betrayals don’t stop when the mission ends in 'Classified'
‘Veronika’ is a haunted story of justice and one woman's resilience (2024)
Top Articles
Latest Posts
Recommended Articles
Article information

Author: Msgr. Benton Quitzon

Last Updated:

Views: 6135

Rating: 4.2 / 5 (43 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Msgr. Benton Quitzon

Birthday: 2001-08-13

Address: 96487 Kris Cliff, Teresiafurt, WI 95201

Phone: +9418513585781

Job: Senior Designer

Hobby: Calligraphy, Rowing, Vacation, Geocaching, Web surfing, Electronics, Electronics

Introduction: My name is Msgr. Benton Quitzon, I am a comfortable, charming, thankful, happy, adventurous, handsome, precious person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.