From Yahoo:
“‘Beforeigners’ Is
Time-Traveling TV Sci-Fi with a Fascinating Present-Day Twist”
TV is littered with “what if”
stories — worlds that take our own and add one huge change. Often, that means
organizing a show around one massive mystery or event and following the people
left to parse the aftermath. The main thing that separates “Beforeigners” from
other shows like it is the massive time jump it takes in its very first
episode. After introducing its inherently hook-y premise — groups of people
from centuries, and even millennia, past pop up in the water outside
present-day Oslo — the show immediately chooses to spend its time in a world
where that new reality isn’t as unfamiliar. Tensions still run high in certain
corners, but the intervening years have brought new institutional changes for
daily life in the Norwegian capital. Runes appear on public signage, new terms
(both preferred and derogatory) emerge to describe the newcomers, and there’s a
fresh bureaucratic infrastructure designed to help acclimate these transtemporal
visitors to their new home.
It’s a home where they don’t
always feel welcome. “Beforeigners” is able to tap into its immigration themes
without resorting to purely an on-the-nose, manipulative metaphor. The
scene-to-scene details indicate real effort to understand what these groups of
“multi-temporal” people might mean for society at large. Their arrival wouldn’t
be without trauma and pain and loss. Some would feel more comfortable living in
an era hundreds or thousands of years beyond the one they knew, while many
others would try their best to carve out a world as if nothing much had ever
changed. It’s why the show almost doesn’t need the murder-mystery that weaves
its way through the opening season. Even in dimension-bending realities, though,
there are still dead bodies on shores and detectives with substance abuse
problems to crack the case. Luckily, “Beforeigners” has a pair of compelling
characters at its center, with detective Lars Haaland (Nicolai Cleve Broch)
learning how to work with new recruit Alfhildr Enginnsdóttir (Krista Kosonen).
Through Alfhildr, the audience gets to see someone who was once a Viking-era
soldier do her best to help bring about justice in a much different way.
In addition to demonstrating how
this world shows different levels of hospitableness to those arriving through
mysterious underwater time portals, it also pinpoints a very recognizable
reaction to commodify the inexplicable. Even for a process marked by tragedy
for those who find themselves unwittingly at the center, this version of Oslo
is no stranger to niche industries that pop up in its wake. Though
“Beforeigners” has an understanding of why certain people might find it
appealing to fully commit to a 19th century lifestyle alongside those
cloistering themselves from the rest of the city, there’s a nod to the fact
that some of that process is designed for a different kind of more cynical
gain. What co-creators Anne Bjørnstad and Eilif Skodvin (who also served the
same role on “Lillyhammer” back a decade ago) manage to zero in on are the ways
that people compartmentalize what they can’t explain. It’s a lot easier for
most people in “Beforeigners” to try to ignore the implications of time travel
(in a similar way to how those in present-day Seoul face the unthinkable in
“Hellbound”). Yet, even in “Beforeigners,” when faced with what amounts to a
significant humanitarian crisis, there’s also a prejudiced, NIMBY-like
underpinning that a lot of the ancillary characters feed into in both casual
and more organized ways.
With most of the story delivered
through the lens of law enforcement tasked with figuring out the various abuses
and crimes that grow out of such an unexpected cosmic tear in reality, there’s
still plenty of other reasons that “Beforeigners” stays eminently watchable.
Most of them play out in the series’ opening credits, with Lars (and sometimes
Alfhildr) driving through Oslo with Bobby Bland’s “Ain’t No Love in the Heart
of the City” playing over a montage of kids playing, people in animal pelts walking
around business centers, and graffiti expressing either solidarity with or
animus toward thousands of new neighbors from throughout history. The rest, as
hinted in the closing sequences of Season 1, is all the more reason to be
excited about where the show can go next.
^ This may be from 2021, but it
really sums-up “Beforeigners” well. I just started watching this show and
really like it. I like how it shows the issues we faced in the past and the
issues we face now in a new and interesting way. ^I really hope there’s a
Season 3. ^
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