

The editing here is markedly better than something like The Stand, which plays with the same conceit but isn’t as good at transitioning between timelines and making the distinction clear for the audience. Equinox treats its plot and characters with the utmost seriousness, playing up the drama and the ambiguity, and the lingering trauma of loss. Yeah, it’s a lot, but it doesn’t feel like it.

Across its six patient episodes, both the present-day and the past are explored, and a mystery begins to take shape, one that involves the usual family secrets, satanic cults, and… demons? Then again it’s a Netflix Original series, and they never really end, do they?Ĭentering on Astrid, the host of a spooky radio call-in show who, out of the blue, receives a frantic call from a weird dude who claims to be one of three survivors of a mysterious busload of students who randomly disappeared twenty years prior, Equinox chronicles her season-long investigation as she returns to Copenhagen and begins digging into the bizarre circumstances surrounding the event, motivated by the fact that her sister was among those who disappeared. It’s good, but requires a bit of patience and doesn’t necessarily amount to a conclusion that’ll be satisfying for everyone.
#Slow burn season 1 series#
Since that period between Christmas and New Year tends to go on forever, there’s plenty of time to binge Netflix’s latest moody, slow-burn international series Equinox, a six-part Danish mystery that debuted today and combines elements of family drama, a dual-timeline investigation, and horror, all in a wintry Copenhagen.
