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Riget

Riget, known in English as The Kingdom, is a Danish television miniseries created by Lars von Trier. It originally aired on DR (Danish Broadcasting Corporation) in 1994, with a second season, Riget II, broadcast in 1997. Set in a fictional Copenhagen hospital named Riget (The Kingdom), the series blends medical drama with supernatural horror and dark satire as it follows a diverse cast of doctors, nurses, patients, and administrators confronted by inexplicable events that defy rational explanation.

The show's narrative moves between clinical procedure and uncanny phenomena—ghostly visions, political intrigues, and the sense

Riget is regarded as a milestone of Danish television and a notable example of Lars von Trier's

that
the
hospital
is
a
gateway
to
a
larger,
and
possibly
malignant,
order.
Its
tone
mixes
bleak
humor
with
atmospheric
dread,
and
its
storytelling
often
juxtaposes
documentary-like
realism
with
dreamlike
sequences
and
unsettling
imagery.
Visually,
it
relies
on
stark,
low-key
production
and
long
takes
that
emphasize
mood
over
exposition.
early
international
impact.
Its
fusion
of
genre
elements—horror,
fantasy,
and
satire
within
an
institutional
setting—has
influenced
later
supernatural
dramas
that
blend
science
and
the
occult,
and
it
remains
a
touchstone
in
discussions
of
European
auteur
television.
The
Kingdom's
two
seasons
developed
a
devoted
cult
following
and
continue
to
be
discussed
in
analyses
of
television
form
and
von
Trier's
filmography.