Fenris is a Norwegian TV crime drama series. It was broadcast on network Multi and released for streaming on Viaplay 25 September 2022. Its six episodes were directed by , created by Alsvik with Magnus Monn-Iversen, and written by Alsvik, Maren Skolem and Nikolaj Scherfig. Fenris was filmed in Folldal, Nord-ÃÂsterdal during September 2021, and is set in ÃÂstbygda, Innlandet county near Norway's border with Sweden. It depicts struggles between conservationists protecting wild wolves and farmers and shooters, who agitate for open culling.
Lead protagonist Emma (Ida Elise Broch) returns to her home town to update wolf distribution for SNO (Norwegian: , English: Norwegian Nature Inspectorate) after her estranged father and wolf researcher Marius (Magnus Krepper) stops reporting. In August 2022 teenager Daniel (Alfred Vatne) goes missing; most locals blame the wolves. Other major roles are journalist Naim (), police sheriff Asbjørn (Jan Gunnar Røise) and his sister Anne (Ingjerd Egeberg), the town's mayor.
15-year-old Daniel disappears in early August 2022, he studied wolves in Innlandet county. Emma returns to her home town ÃÂstbygda with her son Leo. She asks her father Marius why he stopped reporting wolf numbers. Emma finds Daniel's coat, which is bloodied and has wolf hairs. Asbjørn organises search patrols while investigating Daniel's parents and associates. The locals quickly blame wolves and Marius; with their animosity being fueled by Naim's alarmist reports. It's soon discovered wolf hair found on Daniel's coat belongs to the alpha-male, Fenris, which disappeared in June. Emma believes the blood and wolf hair on the coat were planted in order to draw suspicion away from the perpetrator. A few days later, Marius also goes missing. Emma eventually finds his corpse in a distant cabin. While local police, led by Asbjørn, determine it was suicide, Asbjørn is seen hiding evidence as he leaves the cabin. Due to suspicious timing of Daniel's disappearance and Marius' death, Naim begins to doubt Daniel was attacked by a wolf. Leo is abducted by Stian's gang, smeared with meat, and tied to a tree. The next day, Tuva convinces Stian to help locate Leo, who is later rescued.
Asbjørn authorises a local wolf cull. Emma thwarts hunters by removing the female wolf's tracking collar. While tracking the wolf with Emma, Naim is injured by an illegal bear trap. Jan and Anne promote their wilderness lodge project to investors. Adrian declares his love for Elvira. Jan blackmailed Marius into giving him the GPS tracker due to Jan discovering Marius had been having an affair with Elvira. Jan the. poached Fenris and unintentionally injured Sunniva. Asbjørn, Jan's uncle, covered up both events. Adrian tries to help Jan by kidnapping Daniel and hiding him on a farmhouse in Sweden. Emma finds Fenris' carcass and tells Asbjørn to cancel hunt permits. Asbjørn takes Emma to farmhouse where Jan shoots Adrian and Asbjørn. Jan puts Emma in basement with Daniel and starts gassing them with car exhaust. Tuva and police arrive. Tuva kills Jan and rescues Emma and Daniel. Tuva re-investigates the mountain cabin crime scene and ultimately determines Marius had been murdered. Emma discovers Anne previously had an affair with Marius and they would meet at the cabin to maintain privacy. Anne killed Marius.
The Wall Street Journals John Anderson observed "One of the intriguing things about the thoroughly engrossing Fenris is the multitude of possible motives among the villagers. And the varieties of their animal instinct." Writer for Prime News Print felt it is "Bold, gripping, and compelling, it's an exceptional series that accomplishes more by doing less... One of the most winning aspects of the series is its cinematography, which stands out among even other great Nordic noir series." Ida Elise Broch who portrays Emma Salomonsen compared her character Emma with Ibsen's Hedda Gabler, "an enigma... unapproachable and extremely complex." Prime News Prints reviewer praised Broch's portrayal of Emma, "a brilliant performance... her grit and her oft-concealed vulnerability... [her] emotional trajectory is a sight to behold."