
“When I get lazy and start doing my old recipes, I hope someone will stop me and say, ‘Wait a minute, you said that was wrong.’ So let’s see.”
#The killing danish version tv#
“I really believe that what is good for TV and movies is that you reinvent the whole thing again and again. I want it to end when it is still good, when we are still ambitious, thinking we did something out of the ordinary. I feel so much bad television is due to never-ending stories, just to make money. “We didn’t want to do a never-ending story. That’s part of the reason I want to stop because, in a while, it would have been just be a recipe like all the other shows that continue and continue. I wanted to redo the genre and to invent my own recipe.

“When you see a show like Taggart a lot of times, the mysterious ways of the show decline.
#The killing danish version professional#
“The thing is, when you do a show for a lot of years, of course you get a very professional show but, on the other hand, you get a show that is very obvious when it comes to the recipe. It was shown on Danish television, I think maybe Saturday at 10pm. He said: “I saw Taggart when I was younger. While Soren has nothing against it – in fact, he was a fan when it was shown on TV in Denmark– he did not want The Killing to turn into a Danish version. Scotland’s internationally famous TV export holds the record for being the world’s longest-running crime drama. While his fingerprints are still on the body, he has revealed the real culprit is… Taggart. It could have run and run but creator Soren Sveistrup has decided to kill off The Killing. Over three series, it has proved an international phenomenon, the biggest Danish export since Carlsberg and Hans Christian Andersen. DANISH crime drama The Killing came to a nail-biting climax last night, bringing the curtain down on Detective Sarah Lund, her Faroe Islands jumpers and Saturday night subtitles.
