Review of the Netflix TV Series The Nurse (2023)
Based on Kristian Corfixen's book of the same name, which was published in 2021, the Danish production The Nurse (2023) details the crimes that Danish night nurse Christina Aistrup Hansen committed in 2012 and 2015. The true story of Christina Aistrup Hansen, a night nurse who was convicted of murder in 2017 and released on Netflix in 2023, serves as the basis for the Danish television series The Nurse. In 2016, Christina Aistrup Hansen was found guilty of killing three patients at the Danish Nykbing Falster Hospital. The preliminary became perhaps of the main case covered by the Danish media. In Denmark, the nurse became known as the "Devil of Death." In 2016, she was given a life sentence for three murders and one attempted murder.
Director: Kasper Barfoed
Cast: Josephine Park, Fanny Louise Bernth, Dick Kaysø, Amalie Lindegård, Peter Zandersen
One Word Review Good To Watch
Quick Review
The shocking content and the fact that it is based on a real event lend a grim seriousness to the Netflix Danish miniseries "The Nurse," which is short and easy to watch. The show is broken up into four episodes that last between 40 and 50 minutes each. It focuses more on the drama of the situation as a whole than on any action or legal explanation of the case. Nonetheless, regardless of being very cleaned by they way it recounts the story and furthermore having a moving effect, there isn't a lot of new in “The Nurse.”
Albeit the entire matter displayed in“The Nurse.” sounds too hazardous and in this way fictitious, the miniseries is really founded on stunning genuine occasions in Denmark. Pernille Kurzmann Larsen, a real nurse, called the police in Nykobing Falster in March 2015 to report her suspicions that Christina Aistrup Hansen, her coworker, had apparently killed three patients and attempted to kill a fourth. The subsequent proper police investigation was also mentioned in the very last episode.
This miniseries's production process is actually delightfully Danish in that there is no unnecessary drama. Instead, the actual events are the main focus, which works very well for the story. Additionally, it does not diminish the story's suspense or violence in any way.
Although "The Nurse" concludes on a positive note, We would point out that it completely ignores the investigation and legal aspects of the case. This is, obviously, an extremely deliberate and formal choice, yet had we been made piece of the police examination that followed, "The Nurse" might have been a more strong and engaging watch.
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