The
Vikings are back: 'Valhalla' series brings more
adventures to screen
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[February 25, 2022]
By Marie-Louise Gumuchian
LONDON (Reuters) -
The new show "Vikings: Valhalla", which
premieres on Netflix on Friday, pairs history
with drama to narrate Viking adventures from
more than 1,000 years ago, starting with a
revenge mission against the English throne. |
Set some 100 years after the
end of the hit series "Vikings", it tells the
tales of Norse figures like explorer Leif
Eriksson, his headstrong sister Freydis
Eriksdotter and determined Prince Harald
Sigurdsson.
"It was great to dive into the legend that lives
in these sagas but stripping it back down and
really telling a human story," actor Sam Corlett,
who plays Leif, told Reuters.
The plot follows Greenlanders Leif and Freydis
who travel to Kattegat on a personal vendetta,
but he is soon drawn by Harald (Leo Suter) and
King Canute (Bradley Freegard) to avenge fellow
Vikings killed in England.
Meanwhile Freydis, portrayed by Frida Gustavsson,
is taken under the wing of female Kattegat
leader Jarl Haakon, played by Caroline
Henderson, developing a strong bond also shared
by the two actresses.
"It was incredible to work on a show where you
have space for two strong female leads who are
working together," Gustavsson said.
"It's not a walk in the park ... long, long,
long days ... we were freezing and we were tired
... It's not easy but I think the work ethic
that we had together and the friendship with the
rest of the cast as well just really helped,"
Henderson said.
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The series features plenty of
seafaring and bloody battles. It also looks at
the distrust between pagan and Christian
Vikings.
"It tracks these characters through the
reasoning of ... where did they get their
motivation to do that? And I found that that was
really exciting," showrunner Jeb Stuart said.
"There's a lot of history involved in it but
it's also a grey area that a historical
dramatist like myself can actually play in
without making stuff up that's outside my zone.”
Asked about the enduring popularity of Vikings,
Suter said: "We're still talking about them,
right? They did amazing things. King Canut glued
together a North Sea empire. Harald Hardrada was
a ferocious fighter who travelled across Europe,
Leif connected Europe and America."
"So the feats they did were historic ... They
were legends of their time."
(Reporting by Marie-Louise Gumuchian; Editing by
Angus MacSwan)
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