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Borgen (TV series)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Danish political drama television series

Borgen
GenrePolitical drama
Created byAdam Price
Written by
Directed by
Starring
ComposerHalfdan E
Country of originDenmark
Original languageDanish
No. of series4
No. of episodes38(list of episodes)
Production
ProducerCamilla Hammerich
Running time55–59 minutes
Production companySAM Productions
Original release
NetworkDR1
Release26 September 2010 (2010-09-26) –
3 April 2022 (2022-04-03)
Christiansborg in 2004

Borgen (Danish pronunciation:[ˈpɒˀwn̩]) is a Danishpolitical drama television series.Adam Price is the co-writer and developer of the series, together withJeppe Gjervig Gram andTobias Lindholm.Borgen is produced bySAM Productions on behalf ofDR, the Danish public broadcaster, which previously producedThe Killing. In Denmark, "Borgen" (lit.'The Castle') is the informal name ofChristiansborg Palace where all three branches of Danish government reside: theParliament, thePrime Minister's Office, and theSupreme Court, and is often used as astand in term for the Danish Parliament (Folketinget).

The programme tells how, against all the odds, Birgitte Nyborg Christensen (Sidse Babett Knudsen)—a minor centrist politician—becomes the first femaleprime minister of Denmark.[1] Other main characters areBirgitte Hjort Sørensen as Katrine Fønsmark, a TV1 news anchor;Pilou Asbæk as Kasper Juul, aspin doctor;Søren Malling as Torben Friis, news editor for TV1;Mikael Birkkjær as Birgitte's husband, Phillip; andBenedikte Hansen as Hanne Holm, a journalist.[2]

The first season ofBorgen premiered in Denmark on 26 September 2010. Two more seasons, each also ten episodes long, followed in September 2011 and January 2013. Nine years later, in February 2022, the eight-episode-long fourth season (subtitledPower & Glory) was released in collaboration withNetflix.

Birgitte Nyborg

[edit]

Adam Price, the creator of the series, has stated, "I definitely want you to believe there is a shred of idealism in Birgitte Nyborg that is real. She's also become a very professional political being, but there is definitely that idealism, and that's important."[3]

Sidse Babett Knudsen plays Nyborg. In describing her relationship with the character, she said, "They liked to see a woman feeling guilty and I didn't like that ... I think [Nyborg] should be responsible for her feelings. And when she has to make unsympathetic decisions, she should stand by them. I don't want her to feel sorry for herself or suddenly become a soppy mess in her private life, because you wouldn't believe her as a prime minister if she did that."[4]

In the first episode, Birgitte is the leader of a minoritypolitical party, the "Moderates". However, as a result of a sequence of events following a closely foughtgeneral election, she finds herself a compromise candidate for the role of prime minister and wins, juggling a variety of interests among her collaborators. She learns on the job and serves in this position until the end of the second series. In the first series, she is known as Birgitte Nyborg Christensen. She and her husband Philip Christensen separate, in part because of tensions arising from her job responsibilities and how it affects her family, including two children. The couple divorce at the end of the first episode of series two, and she uses the name Birgitte Nyborg.

In the elapsed time between the second and third series, Nyborg loses her position. She leaves the government and becomes a businesswoman and public speaker. She returns in the third series to form a new political party, the "New Democrats". The series ends with Nyborg taking up the position of theDanish foreign minister.[5]

In the fourth season, titledRiget, Magten, og Æren (The Kingdom, the Power, and the Glory), Nyborg remains as foreign minister. She has to navigate the implication of oil being found inGreenland, which threatens to derail her party's green agenda, sparks an international crisis with the US, China, and Russia; and pushes the government to the brink of collapse.[6]

The series ended with Nyborg having resigned as leader of the New Democrats and foreign minister. It also hints that Nyborg will become the next danishCommissioner of theEuropean Commission.[7]

Cast

[edit]
ActorCharacterRole
Sidse Babett KnudsenBirgitte NyborgModerate party leader and prime minister (season 1 & 2)
New Democrats party leader (season 3 & 4)
Foreign Minister (season 3 & 4)
Nyborg-Christensen family
Mikael BirkkjærPhillip ChristensenBirgitte Nyborg's husband – lecturer at Copenhagen Business School
Freja RiemannLaura ChristensenBirgitte Nyborg-Christensen and Phillip Christensen's daughter
Emil Poulsen (season 1, 2 & 3)
Lucas Lynggaard Tønnesen (season 4)
Magnus ChristensenBirgitte Nyborg-Christensen and Phillip Christensen's son
Birgitte Nyborg's staff
Pilou AsbækKasper JuulCommunications chief for Birgitte Nyborg (season 1 & 2)
Journalist (season 3)
Morten KirkskovNiels Erik LundPrime Minister's Office permanent secretary
Iben DornerSannePrime Minister's Office personal assistant
Hanne HedelundJyttePrime Minister's Office secretary
Mikkel Boe FølsgaardAsger Holm KirkegaardDeputy ambassador to the Arctic
Simon BennebjergOliver HjorthMinistry of Foreign Affairs personal assistant
Magnus MillangRasmus Gren LundbækMinistry of Foreign Affairs permanent secretary
Channel TV1
Birgitte Hjort SørensenKatrine FønsmarkTV1/Ekspres journalist (season 1 & 2)
New Democrats Campaign Manager (season 3)
TV1 Head of News (season 4)
Benedikte HansenHanne HolmJournalist on TV1 (season 1 & 3)
Ekspres journalist (season 2)
Søren MallingTorben FriisTV1 news editor
Lisbeth WulffPia MunkTV1 editor
Thomas LevinUlrik MørchTV1 news anchor
Christian TafdrupAlexander 'Alex' HjortTV1 programme director
Anders JuulSimon BechTV1 news anchor
Özlem SaglanmakNarciza AydinTV1 news anchor
Nyborg's government
Lars KnutzonBent SejrøFinance minister (season 1), later Birgitte's advisor (seasons 2, 3 and 4)
Dar SalimAmir DiwanGreen Party leader, Energy and Climate minister
Stine StengadeHenriette KlitgaardBusiness minister (Moderate Party)
Jens Jacob TychsenJacob KruseEU Minister (Moderate Party), later EU Commissioner, later Moderate Party leader
New Democrats
Kristian HalkenErik HoffmannFormer vice-chairman of the New Right party
Julie Agnete VangNete BuchFormer Moderate member of parliament
Jens AlbinusJon BerthelsenFormer Moderate member of parliament
Minister of Justice (season 4)
Laura Allen MüllerNadia BarazaniNew Democrats member of parliament
Minister of Climate and Energy (season 4)
Lars MikkelsenSøren RavnNew Democrats economics consultant
Labour Party
Peter MygindMichael LaugesenLabour leader – Ekspres newspaper editor
Flemming SørensenBjørn MarrotForeign minister, Labour leader (replacing Laugesen)
Lars BrygmannTroels HöxenhavenJustice minister and Labour deputy leader,
laterForeign minister and Labour leader (replacing Marrot)
Bjarne HenriksenHans Christian ThorsenDefence minister, later Foreign minister and Labour leader (replacing Höxenhaven)
Petrine AgerPernille MadsenEquality minister, laterFinance minister and Labour deputy leader
Johanne Louise SchmidtSigne KraghPrime minister (season 4)
Party leaders
Søren SpanningLars HesselboeLiberal leader – Prime Minister (seasons 1 & 3)
Ole ThestrupSvend Åge SaltumFreedom leader
Marie AskehaveBenedikte NedergaardFreedom deputy leader
Jannie FaurschouYvonne KjærNew Right leader
Signe Egholm OlsenAnne Sophie LindenkroneSolidarity Party leader
Members of the Danish Parliament
Fadime TuranAicha NagrawiSolidarity
Claus BueParly PetersenLabour
Mette KoldingInger HansenLiberal
Greenlandic government
Angunnguaq LarsenJens Enok BerthelsenPrime Minister for Greenland (seasons 1 & 2) / MP for Greenland (season 4)
Svend HardenbergHans EliassenResource minister
Nivi PedersenEmmy RasmussenPremier's office head of department
Other characters
Alastair MackenzieJeremy WelshBirgitte Nyborg's boyfriend (season 3)
Claus Riis ØstergaardOle DahlCommunications chief for Lars Hesselboe (season 1)
Mille DinesenCecilie ToftPhillip Christensen's girlfriend – Paediatrician (season 2)

Political parties and media

[edit]
Parliament Seats, Series 1–2
Structure
Political groups
Government (83)
  •   Labour (35)
  •   Moderates (31)
  •   Greens (17)

Supported by (8)

  •   Solidarity (6)
  •   Centre-left Greenland/Faroe Islands parties (2)

Opposition (88)

  •   Liberals (32)
  •   Freedom Party (29)
  •   New Right (25)
  •   Centre-Right Greenland/Faroe Islands parties (2)
Parliament Seats, Season 3 Finale
Structure
Political groups
Government (82)
  •   Liberals (46)
  •   New Right (23)
  •   New Democrats (13)

Supported by (5)

  •   Moderates (5)

Opposition (92)

  •   Labour (42)
  •   Greens (22)
  •   Solidarity (12)
  •   Freedom Party (12)
  •   Greenland/Faroe Islands parties (4)

While the political parties in the series are fictional, they may be recognisable as theirreal-life equivalents.[8]

  • The Moderates (De Moderate), Birgitte Nyborg's centre-left party in the first two series, is based on theDanish Social Liberal Party (Radikale Venstre)
  • The centre-left Labour Party (Arbejderpartiet) is based on theSocial Democrats (Socialdemokraterne)
  • The left-wing environmentalist Green Party (Miljøpartiet) is similar to theSocialist People's Party (Socialistisk Folkeparti)
  • The far-left Solidarity Collective (Solidarisk Samling) is similar to theRed-Green Alliance (Enhedslisten)
  • The New Democrats (Nye Demokrater), Birgitte Nyborg's new centrist party in the third season is based on theNew Alliance (Ny Alliance)
  • The centre-right Liberal Party (De Liberale) is based onVenstre
  • New Right (Ny Højre) is similar to the conservativeConservative People's Party (Konservative Folkeparti)
  • The national-conservative Freedom Party (Frihedspartiet) is stated by party leader Svend Åge Saltum to be a successor party toMogens Glistrup'sProgress Party (Fremskridtspartiet), just like its real-life successorDanish People's Party (Dansk Folkeparti)

The fictional broadcasters and newspapers also have their real-life equivalents: the public broadcaster TV1 is based onDR1, the tabloid newspaperEkspres is inspired byEkstra Bladet, and the commercial 2'eren is similar toTV 2.

Election results

[edit]

Season 1 starts with a general election that leads to a multi-party government that includes the Moderates, Labour and the Greens, supported by the Solidarity Collective. This continues into Season 2, with the Greens leaving government towards the end of that season.

Season 3 follows an election where the Liberals are back in power with the New Right, supported by the Freedom Party and the Moderates. The finale includes a snap election that ends with the Liberals forming a centre ground coalition with the New Right and the New Democrats, supported by the Moderates, with no involvement from the Freedom Party.

Season 4 begins with the Labour Party (the largest party) and the New Democrats (with 14 seats) in coalition, supported by the Greens, Solidarity and Greenlandic representatives. The government only has a majority of one based on this support. It is stated that the opposition includes the Liberals with 42 seats, the Freedom Party with 27 seats and the New Right with 18 seats.

Episodes

[edit]
Main article:List of Borgen episodes
SeasonEpisodesOriginally aired
Season premiereSeason finale
11026 September 2010 (2010-09-26)28 November 2010 (2010-11-28)
21025 September 2011 (2011-09-25)27 November 2011 (2011-11-27)
3101 January 2013 (2013-01-01)10 March 2013 (2013-03-10)
4813 February 2022 (2022-02-13)3 April 2022 (2022-04-03)


Reception

[edit]

The series has been well received by critics and audiences alike.[9] It became a hit in Denmark as well as Australia, the UK and the US (via Netflix), becoming one of several Danish series to do so in recent years.[9] Maggie Brown ofThe Guardian cited the strong female characters, originality and an ability to "uncannily forecast actual developments in Danish politics" as reasons for its success.[9] Jane Merrick ofThe Independent published a list of similarities from Series 2 to actual events in present-day UK politics following the conclusion of the series in the UK.[10]

US critics have been similarly positive, withNewsweek dubbing Borgen "the best TV show you have never seen"[11] and bestselling novelist andEntertainment Weekly columnistStephen King put the series on the top of his top 10 list of the best TV shows of 2012.[12]The New York Times also offered praise, describing Borgen as a "bleaker, Nordic version ofThe West Wing" and saying it "finds a remarkable amount of drama and suspense in center-left alliances, pension plans, and televised debates."[13]

With several middle of the road 3/6 star ratings, the Danish media's reaction to the third series was noticeably less positive than for the first two series.Politiken commented that the third series "ended like a soap opera" and "never succeeded in breaking free from predictability";[14] withBerlingske's review declaring that while the third series "tied up the loose ends in pretty bows and was, like the rest of the series, well performed, it was also insidiously dull".[15] Tabloid paperBT however claimed that the series "finished on a peak" and with this third season had "become the best Danish series in years".[16] The critique came after several months where storylines from the third series in an unprecedented manner for a Danish drama series had sparked media headlines and created hefty debates in real life Danish politics on, among other issues, prostitution and pig farming, epitomised by Danish MP Mai Henriksen fromConservative People's Party, who was widely accused by colleagues and journalists of advocating a bill of rights for prostitutes, solely because she was inspired byBorgen.[17]

For the fourth season, thereview aggregator websiteRotten Tomatoes reported an approval rating of 95% based on 19 reviews, with an average rating of 9.5/10. The website's critics consensus reads, "Borgen returns after an extended hiatus with its emotional heft and political intelligence wholly intact, reasserting itself as the best kind of brainy escapism."[18]

Awards

[edit]
Adam Price with thePeabody Award forBorgen at the 73rd Annual Peabody Awards
Award ShowYearCategoryNominee(s)Result
International Emmy Award2012Best Performance by an ActressSidse Babett KnudsenNominated
Monte Carlo TV Festival2011Outstanding Actress in a Drama SeriesSidse Babett KnudsenWon
2013Best International Drama TV SeriesBorgen IIINominated
Best European Drama TV SeriesBorgen IIIWon
Outstanding Actress in a Drama SeriesBirgitte Hjort SørensenNominated
British Academy Television Awards2012International PrizeBorgenWon
2014International PrizeNominated
Prix Italia2010Best TV Drama – Series and SerialsWon
Festival International de Programmes Audiovisuels2011Best TV Series and SerialsWon
TV series and Serials: Best MusicHalfdan EWon
Peabody Award2013Area of ExcellenceBorgenWon[19]
Critics' Choice Awards2023Best Foreign Language SeriesNominated[20]

Borgen won the award for Best International TV series at the2012 British Academy Television Awards.[21]Awards for the series include the 2010Prix Italia for best drama series,[22] a Golden Nymph toSidse Babett Knudsen for Outstanding Actress in a drama series at the 2011Monte-Carlo Television Festival,[23] and the Fipa Grand Prize for Best TV Series as well as for Best Original Soundtrack at the 2011Festival International de Programmes Audiovisuels.[24]

Radio

[edit]

DR1 produced a spinoff radio serial,Udenfor Borgen ("Outside the Castle"), to accompany the release of the television show. The main character is Hans Gammelgard (voiced by Danish actor Finn Nielsen),private secretary in theMinistry of the Environment, who faces unexpected adversity after he tries to push for a controlled approach to the cultivation ofgenetically modified crops by Danish farmers.[25][26]

Beginning in December 2013,BBC Radio 4 aired an English-language translation of the Danish radio serial, entitledBorgen: Outside the Castle, starringTim Pigott-Smith as Hans Gammelgard.[27] Reviewer Fiona Sturges ofThe Independent thought the radio version was "wholly pointless", and noted in particular that, unlike the television series, the radio program was "relegating its female characters to the fringes, casting them as secretaries and anxious mothers."[28] On the other hand,Gillian Reynolds ofThe Telegraph gave the radio show a positive review, approving its complex treatment of the intricacies of the civil service.[29] In 2015Deutschlandfunk broadcast this radio serial with German explanations for some of the wordplays such asMOM=MON forMomentum=Monsanto.[30]

Remake

[edit]

In September 2011, it was announced thatNBC would produce a US remake ofBorgen, with a pilot being developed byDavid Hudgins andJason Katims ofFriday Night Lights fame.[31] The NBC remake never materialized, but in November 2013 it was confirmed by Adam Price thatHBO andBBC Worldwide were set to begin production on a U.S. remake of the series.[32][needs update]

Merchandise

[edit]

DVD

[edit]

The first three series have been made available in Denmark and the UK on DVD. Both are coded Region 2 format and consist of the complete episodes as screened on DR1 and BBC4.

In the US, MHz Networks released all three series and the complete series box set on DVD coded Region 1.

DVD NameEpisodesDVD release dates
Region 2 (Denmark)Region 2 (UK)Region 1 (US)
The Complete First Series103 February 2012 (2012-02-03)6 February 2012 (2012-02-06)[33]12 March 2013 (2013-03-12)[34]
The Complete Second Series1030 May 2012 (2012-05-30)4 February 2013 (2013-02-04)[35]25 June 2013 (2013-06-25)[36]
The Complete First and Second Series203 April 2013 (2013-04-03)4 February 2013 (2013-02-04)[37]
The Complete Third Series1014 November 2013 (2013-11-14)16 December 2013 (2013-12-16)[38]21 January 2014 (2014-01-21)[39]
The Complete Series3016 December 2013 (2013-12-16)[40]21 October 2014 (2014-10-21)[41]

Book

[edit]

A novelisation of the first series ofBorgen was released in Denmark, The Netherlands, and France on 19 February 2013. The Danish release from DR in conjunction with publisher Lindhardt & Ringhof is written by Jesper Malmose.[42] Head of DR Sales Anders Kjærsgaard Sørensen hopes to have the book available in the UK soon[when?].

Music

[edit]

On 26 February 2013, DR Salg, the commercial distribution arm of DR, madeBorgen (Original TV Series Soundtrack), nineteen tracks ofHalfdan E's original compositions for the show, available for digital download oniTunes.[43][44]

Based on the music from the show and entitled 'Borgen 2010', Halfdan E has also made a longer composition available throughSoundCloud.

References

[edit]
  1. ^"10 Foreign TV Shows You Should Be Watching".businessinsider.in. 13 September 2020. Retrieved13 September 2020.
  2. ^Gilbert, Gerard (5 January 2012)."Nothing Like a Dane".The Independent. London. Retrieved5 January 2012.
  3. ^"Borgen creator Adam Price on what's next for Birgitte Nyborg in the show's third and final series",The Guardian, 14 November 2013. Accessed 20 December 2013
  4. ^"Borgen: Sidse Babett Knudsen interview",The Telegraph, 27 Jan 2012. Accessed 20 December 2013
  5. ^"Clive James:Losing sleep over beautiful Birgitte",The Telegraph, 20 November 2013. Accessed 20 December 2013
  6. ^"Jasper Rees:Borgen: Power & Glory, review: the seminal Scandi series makes a triumphant return",The Telegraph, 02 June 2022. Accessed 05 June 2022
  7. ^"When Fiction and Reality Meet: Lessons for the EU from the Danish TV Show Borgen".Earth Island Journal. Retrieved3 March 2023.
  8. ^"Revealed: the real Borgen",The Radio Times, 4 February 2012
  9. ^abcBrown, Maggie (14 January 2012)."Borgen: Inside Danish TV's thriller factory".The Guardian. London. Retrieved13 January 2013.
  10. ^Merrick, Jane (3 February 2013)."From rainy Copenhagen, to wet and windy Westminster".The Independent. London. Retrieved19 February 2013.
  11. ^Borgen: The Best TV Show You’ve Never Seen
  12. ^King, Stephen (21 December 2012)."Stephen King: The Best TV I Saw in 2012".Entertainment Weekly. Archived fromthe original on 30 May 2013.
  13. ^Stanley, Alessandra (20 October 2011)."Cover-Ups, Personal and Political".New York Times. Retrieved13 March 2013.
  14. ^"Borgen ended like a soap opera" (in Danish). Politiken. Archived fromthe original on 12 March 2013. Retrieved11 March 2013.
  15. ^"Behind the walls" (in Danish). Berlingske. 10 March 2013. Retrieved11 March 2013.
  16. ^"Why Borgen will be sorely missed" (in Danish). BT. 10 March 2013. Retrieved25 March 2013.
  17. ^"Conservative politician: Borgen was used as leverage for debate on prostitution" (in Danish). Information. 4 February 2013. Retrieved25 March 2013.
  18. ^"Borgen: Power & Glory: Season 1".Rotten Tomatoes.Fandango Media. Retrieved21 February 2024.
  19. ^73rd Annual Peabody Awards, May 2014.
  20. ^Nordyke, Kimberly (15 January 2023)."Critics Choice Awards: Full List of Winners".The Hollywood Reporter.Archived from the original on 16 January 2023. Retrieved16 January 2023.
  21. ^"Two DR shows vie for glory".Copenhagen Post. Retrieved6 May 2012.
  22. ^IMDb: Awards for Borgen Retrieved 15 January 2012
  23. ^"Golden Nymphs Awards Listing Palmarès des Nymphes d'Or. 10 June 2011 – 10 Juin 2011, Grimaldi Forum, Monaco"(PDF). MONACO MEDIAX. p. 3. Archived fromthe original(PDF) on 14 August 2011. Retrieved7 January 2012.
  24. ^"Jury and Awards – Series and Serials – FIPA 2011 – International Festival of Audiovisual Programs". FIPA. Archived fromthe original on 4 August 2012. Retrieved7 January 2012.
  25. ^"Udenfor Borgen" [Outside the castle].DR (in Danish). 23 September 2010. Retrieved11 December 2014.
  26. ^Stroyer, Rasmus (7 October 2010)."'Udenfor Borgen' fanger lyttere ind" ['Outside the Castle' captures listeners].DR (in Danish). Retrieved11 December 2014.
  27. ^"Borgen spin-off to air on BBC Radio 4".BBC News. 27 November 2013. Retrieved11 December 2014.
  28. ^Sturges, Fiona (19 December 2013)."Borgen: Outside the Castle – The Week in Radio: appalled by a British Borgen that's an insult to women".The Independent. Retrieved11 December 2014.
  29. ^Reynolds, Gillian (18 December 2013)."Borgen – Outside the Castle, Radio 4, review: Gillian Reynolds reviews the week in radio and admits that she's hooked on the audio version of the Danish political drama".The Telegraph. Retrieved11 December 2014.
  30. ^"Politthriller im englischen Original" (in German).Deutschlandfunk. 2015. Archived fromthe original on 19 September 2016. Retrieved30 July 2016.
  31. ^Andreeva, Nellie (26 September 2011)."NBC to adapt Danish drama Borgen with FNL's David Hudgins and Jason Katims".Deadline Hollywood.
  32. ^"Borgen to get a US remake on HBO". Retrieved4 February 2017.
  33. ^Amazon UK:Borgen – Series 1 Relinked 14 December 2013
  34. ^Amazon US:Borgen – Season 1 Relinked 14 December 2013
  35. ^Amazon UK:Borgen – Series 2 Relinked 14 December 2013
  36. ^Amazon US:Borgen – Season 2 Relinked 14 December 2013
  37. ^Amazon UK:Borgen – Series 1 & 2 Relinked 14 December 2013
  38. ^Amazon UK:Borgen – Series 3
  39. ^Amazon US:Borgen – Season 3
  40. ^Amazon UK:Borgen – Trilogy
  41. ^Amazon US:Borgen – The Complete Series
  42. ^"Borgen goes from the screen to bedside table" (in Danish). DR. Archived fromthe original on 23 February 2013. Retrieved13 February 2013.
  43. ^"Borgen goes from the screen to bedside table" (in Danish). DR. Archived fromthe original on 23 February 2013. Retrieved14 February 2013.
  44. ^"Halfdan E – Borgen (Original TV Series Soundtrack)". iTunes. Retrieved14 February 2013.[dead link]

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