The Danish Woman () is an Icelandic-French television miniseries created by Benedikt Erlingsson. Co-written by Benedikt and ÃÂlafur Egill Egilsson. The six-episode series premiered at the Series Mania festival in March 2025 and received critical acclaim from international media including Variety, Le Monde, and Le Figaro.
It follows Ditte Jensen, a retired Danish intelligence officer who relocates to ReykjavÃÂk, where her instincts as an elite operative and her strong sense of justice lead her to intervene in the lives of her neighbors, blurring the line between heroism and intrusion.
The series follows Ditte Jensen, a retired Danish intelligence officer who moves to an apartment building in ReykjavÃÂk, intending to live anonymously and tend to her garden. However, her background as an elite operative and her strong sense of justice lead her to become involved in the lives of her neighbors. She uses her skills to intervene in various situations and conflicts within the building community, believing that the ends justify the means in her pursuit of helping others, whether they welcome her assistance or not. Her neighbours include an alcoholic, a domestic violence victim and refugees facing deportation. However, her interventions backfire in the final episode: she came to the assistance of a neighbour who was in debt to drug dealer, but finds he (46 years old) had impregnated a teenage girl, and then the antagonised drug dealer (who was also a former spy) plants drugs in her bathroom, resulting in a visit from armed police.
The series was created by Benedikt Erlingsson. Co-written by Benedikt and ÃÂlafur Egill Egilsson. Benedikt is an acclaimed Icelandic filmmaker whose previous works include Of Horses and Men (2013), which won the Kutxa-New Directors Award at the San Sebastián International Film Festival, and Woman at War (2018). Woman at War () received multiple international awards including the LUX Prize from the European Parliament, the SACD Award at Cannes' Critics' Week, the Nordic Council Film Prize, and ten Edda Awards.
Co-creator and writer ÃÂlafur Egill Egilsson previously worked on the Icelandic crime series Trapped, Katla, The Oath, and Woman at War.
The series was produced by Slot Machine (France) in coproduction with Gullslottid and Zik Zak Filmworks (Iceland). Producers Marianne Slot and Carine Leblanc developed and produced the series through Slot Machine, a Paris-based production company founded by Marianne Slot in 1993. The company has produced works by international filmmakers including Lars von Trier, Lucrecia Martel, Bent Hamer, Maà Âgorzata Szumowska, Paz Encina, Lisandro Alonso, Emma Dante, Marian Crisan, Juliette Garcia, Yeà Âim UstaoÃÂlu, Sergei Loznitsa, and Naomi Kawase.
Production involved collaboration with broadcasters RÃÂV, ZDF/Arte, DR, Yle, and SVT. Filming took place in Iceland over 54 days.
The series' soundtrack was composed and arranged by Matti Kallio, and performed by Kallio, Andre Ferrari, Pekko Käppi, and Maija Kauhanen. Trine Dyrholm performs multiple songs throughout the series, including "", "", and "" by Anne Linnet; "Human Behaviour" by Björk; "" by Gnags; "Euphoria" by and Peter Boström; by ; "" by Jørgen Olsen; "Buster" by Nanna Lüders Jensen; "" by '; and "" by Steinunn Harðardóttir.
The soundtrack was released by Crunchy Frog Soundtracks, a soundtrack sublabel of Crunchy Frog Records.
The series had its world premiere at Series Mania in Lille, France, in March 2025, where the first two episodes were screened as part of the International Panorama Section. It was subsequently presented at the Transilvania International Film Festival in Cluj-Napoca, Romania, and at Seriencamp in Cologne, Germany.
The series is scheduled for broadcast in 2026 on RÃÂV (Iceland), ZDF/Arte (Germany/France), DR (Denmark), Yle (Finland), and SVT (Sweden). In Australia, it is available on SBS on Demand as of 19 February 2026.
The series received positive reviews following its festival screenings. Cineuropa described it as "jubilant", while Le Figaro called it "a marvel of Nordic black comedy". Le Monde praised Trine Dyrholm's performance as "extraordinary".
Variety highlighted the series' originality and dark humor in its coverage of the Series Mania premiere. Drama Quarterly noted the series' unique approach to storytelling and character development. Der Spiegel notes: "Anyone who has a neighbor like her doesn't need an army."