The creators of Stranger Things came loaded with hype, yet Netflix’s newest obsession slipped in from the ice. What are viewers finding in this Nordic chill that the kings of nostalgia could not deliver?
Two Netflix debuts landed on March 26 and the upset came from the north. “Harry Hole,” adapted from Jo Nesbø and led by Tobias Santelmann with Joel Kinnaman as his foe, pulled 4.9 million views in week one, edging the Duffer Brothers’ horror outing “Un très mauvais pressentiment” at 4.5 million. The thriller sits second among non-English titles behind “Emergência Radioativa,” while its rival holds the same spot among English series behind “One Piece.” Early scores favor the Oslo-set manhunt, hinting at why viewers and critics are sticking with this hard-bitten detective.
March 26, 2026 marked a curious clash on Netflix. 2 debuts, 2 tones: Un très mauvais pressentiment, a horror bet from the Duffer Brothers, and Harry Hole, a Nordic thriller adapted from Jo Nesbø. The hype machine seemed to favor horror, with a bigger push and name recognition. Yet early chatter hinted that viewers were tilting toward Oslo’s darkness, drawn by the promise of procedural menace. The duel quickly turned into a referendum on tone and craft.
The numbers settled it. Harry Hole logged 4.9 million views in week 1, edging past Un très mauvais pressentiment at 4.5 million. Tobias Santelmann plays the brilliant, frayed detective, while Joel Kinnaman cuts a cold silhouette as his adversary. The horror newcomer had pedigree, but its punch landed lighter than forecast (data from Netflix’s first-week charts).
When critics and audiences weighed in, the gap widened. Numbers matched the mood. Harry Hole posted stronger marks and a higher global placement, while its rival slid to runner-up in English-language tallies.
Both launches were solid rather than seismic, yet the thriller’s momentum proved steadier on discovery platforms like AlloCiné. Curiosity held, and completion looked robust.
On screen, the series leans into classic Nordic noir textures, but with muscular pacing and icy restraint. Santelmann’s Harry grapples with addiction while tracing ritualistic killings in Oslo, cornered by a chilling nemesis and a corrupt colleague, Tom Waaler, played with coiled menace by Kinnaman. Rooted in Jo Nesbø’s best sellers, which have sold over 60 million copies, the show arrives with a ready-made audience.
Neither premiere shattered records, yet both broaden Netflix’s slate with distinct flavors. What tips the scales? Harry Hole threads complexity with clarity, letting performances carry the dread. Its win crystallized as it topped weekly interest charts on AlloCiné, outpacing bigger brands. The takeaway is simple: the pull of Nordic noir keeps growing, and this time, it stole the spotlight.
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