"Cardinal" John & Lise (TV Episode 2020) Poster

(TV Series)

(2020)

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8/10
Cardinal Sins With Lise
Lejink20 October 2020
For the fourth and reportedly final series of "Cardinal", the show returned to the wintry, snow-bound settings of the first run. There's a new serial killer in Algonquin, kidnapping apparently random citizens, securing their wrists with wire, coercing them to dictate a farewell message to a named loved-one before leaving them outside through the sub-zero night chill to die horribly of exposure, with a falcon's feather left beside them as a calling-card. The victims seem random, the first a well-to-do state prosecutor, the second a church-going elderly lady and we see their swarthy, coolly professional killer going about his business. Cardinal and Delorme initially struggle to connect the crimes but the killer isn't finished yet.

Things get personal for Delorme when the next scheduled victim turns out to be her ex-husband, now in tow with a new wife and child, but this is when things start going wrong for the killer and in a twist to events, the scheming paymaster behind it all has to come into the open, at this point revealing motive which goes back to a twenty year old miscarriage of justice involving the death by exposure of a young woman and its cover-up by the true perpetrators.

My suspicion and indeed fear, building up over the previous series, that Cardinal and Delorme would finally get it together personally, turned out to be well-founded, but in the end didn't spoil my enjoyment. Their coming together was handled tastefully with the only on-screen demonstrations of their mutual attraction being a hug here and some hand-on-hand action there. I doubt it will be the most loquacious of relationships given each character's reticence to speak but I wish them well for the future as they discuss their next gruesome case over morning coffee and toast.

The six-part story built up the tension gradually and convincingly, with both detectives as usual demonstrating Sherlock Holmes-type deductive abilities to join the, so far as I could see, wide-apart dots to crack the case leading to a tense conclusion fittingly set in the frozen wasteland of Algonquin.

Billy Campbell and Karina Vanasse as ever both ably inhabit their characters and there was strong support too from their regular back-up team especially Glen Gould and James Downing. Beautifully shot with countless drone-shots of the snowbound countryside turning up (or should that be down) the chill factor, this series was well up to previous standards. If the show is indeed now wrapped-up, then it certainly went out on a satisfying loose-ends-tied-up way, although while it might sound a bit masochistic to wish another serial-killer on the citizens of Algonquin Island, I would certainly like to see John and Lise team-up again in the future.
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9/10
A good Season 4 wrap
polsixe13 May 2020
Much better than Season 3, the basic police procedural in the winter Northern Ontario setting works well over the six episodes. Some long term story arcs develop. The protagonist and backstory were fairly believable. Producers and Directors also,did well portraying the deep frozen North.
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8/10
Scandi Noire in Canada
charlesfranks-4193112 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
It's all a bit familiar: haunting music over the credits, tick, haunted detective wrestling with personal trauma, tick; dark story with deranged serial killer, tick. It's all a bit reminiscent of the superior "The Bridge". Even the basic plot for this last series - man kills the loved ones of those he wants to avenge himself upon - is the same as the 4th series of The Bridge. So I enjoyed it I liked the principal characters, I liked the sparse dialogue between them and the subtle emotional interaction. The story was OK but derivative and ultimately not very convincing. The last episode in particular was a disappointing conclusion and John and Lise going after the killer on their own was totally stupid. Overall worth a look, but a pale reflection of The Bridge.
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10/10
Going out in style
lisbethinsydney23 May 2020
Farewell to the outstanding team of John Cardinal and Lise Delorme in this final series. Beautiful photography and production, a tense, creepy crime story, so well acted as in the previous seasons although this is perhaps the best. There's more room to explore the connection between these two fascinating individuals. We won't see them, or their like, again. So sorry to see them go but it was great to know them.
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6/10
A Season marred by a weak antagonist
Crystal_Dive23 May 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Akin to those slasher films where the wronged returns 20 years later to kill off the wrongdoers, this sort of antagonist just do not work in this sort of hardboiled cop thriller. It's made even worse by the failed attempt to make the viewer sympathize with the killer.

By episode 4 , you would have also wondered what was the purpose of the redherring in Episode 1 , if not just to give the police a lead to investigate, because it certainly does not fit the nodus operandi in Episode 2 onwards.

All those wasted minutes in that, and focusing on tertiary characters whom gets killed off in the next episode, in such a limited run , rather than devoting more screentime to develop the relationship between the protagonists, was a mistake.
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