| Dept. Q | |
|---|---|
| |
| Genre | Crime thriller |
| Based on | Department Q by Jussi Adler-Olsen |
| Developed by | Scott Frank Chandni Lakhani |
| Starring | |
| Music by | Carlos Rafael Rivera |
| Country of origin |
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| Original language | English |
| No. of series | 1 |
| No. of episodes | 9 |
| Production | |
| Executive producers |
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| Producer | David Brown |
| Running time | 42–71 minutes |
| Production companies |
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| Original release | |
| Network | Netflix |
| Release | 29 May 2025 – present |
Dept. Q is a British crime thriller television series created by Scott Frank and Chandni Lakhani, based on the book series Department Q by Danish writer Jussi Adler-Olsen. It premiered on Netflix on 29 May 2025. [1] In August 2025, it was renewed for a second season. [2]
Top-rated detective Carl Morck is returning to police work. He has recently been involved in an ambush shooting, in which he was badly wounded, his colleague and friend James Hardy was paralysed and a young uniformed police officer was killed. Morck receives a muted welcome since his colleagues generally regard him as arrogant and asocial (which he is). Morck is also required (against his will) to attend therapy sessions for the after-effects of the shooting.
The Scottish government has decided to temporarily concentrate on unsolved crimes, believing that successful outcomes will generate good headlines that improve public opinion regarding the police force. Morck's hard-pressed and under-resourced commander, Moira Jacobson, is offered a substantial budget to set up a new unsolved crimes unit. Preferring to use most of the budget for her own department and current cases, she assigns Morck as the sole officer dealing with a large number of cold cases. Morck is given a semi-derelict basement office/bathroom to work in, the former Shower Quarters of the police station, thus the Q in the series title.
Civilian employee Akram Salim, a Syrian former policeman looking for more challenging work, quietly insinuates himself into Morck's basement and is tasked with organising case files. While doing that, he suggests investigating the missing Crown Office solicitor Merritt Lingard. Joined by a recovering Hardy and young constable Rose Dickson, the misfit team begin looking into Lingard's disappearance –the main case investigated during the first season of the series.
| No. | Title | Directed by | Written by | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Episode 1 | Scott Frank | Chandni Lakhani and Scott Frank | |
At the Leith Park, Edinburgh home of a man found stabbed in the head, DCI Carl Morck, DI James Hardy, and patrol officer PC Anderson are ambushed by a masked gunman who shoots all three of them; Anderson is killed, James is paralysed and Carl is traumatised. Struggling with his wayward teenage stepson Jasper, the recovering but depressed James, and his own trauma and guilt from the shooting, Carl is forced to attend mandatory therapy sessions with Dr Rachel Irving, but finds little solace. Back at work, Carl is relegated to the police station's derelict basement area by Chief Superintendent Moira Jacobson to establish a brand new cold case unit, "Department Q". Swamped by hundreds of cold cases to pick, Carl begrudgingly accepts the assistance of Akram Salim, a civilian worker with police experience in his native Syria. Akram studiously reads each file, ultimately landing on the sudden 2020 disappearance of notorious advocate Merritt Lingard, which he suggests they start with. Four years earlier: Ambitious lawyer Merritt lives with her non-verbal brother William, who is cared for day-to-day by their housekeeper Claire Marsh. After Merritt and solicitor Liam Taylor fail to convict businessman Graham Finch of the murder of his wife, Merritt receives anonymous death threats. She is last seen aboard a ferry with William; in the present day, Merritt is still alive, held captive for over four years inside a hyperbaric chamber by mysterious abductors at an unknown location. | ||||
| 2 | Episode 2 | Scott Frank | Chandni Lakhani and Scott Frank | |
Discovering Jasper is skipping school to hang with a wayward girlfriend, Carl makes an embarrassing pass at Rachel during their session. Akram presents Merritt's case to Moira as Dept. Q's first assignment, and a skeptical Carl speaks to Fergus Dunbar, the former detective who handled the case when Merritt first disappeared. Carl and Akram visit William's care facility but the director, Dr Fiona Wallace, refuses to let them see him. They interview Claire, who explains that William's disability resulted from a severe head injury and insists Merritt would never have willingly abandoned her brother. Carl confides in James about the case, and is also approached by Lord Advocate Stephen Burns, Merritt's former supervisor. Carl suffers a panic attack after Moira forces him to deliver a statement about the case at a press conference. Watching the statement on TV, a distressed William escapes from the facility and runs away into the forest. In the chamber, Merritt has covered the walls with names of all those she successfully prosecuted in her career. Once a month, she is forced to guess on whose behalf her unseen abductors—a grandmotherly woman and a younger man in a distinctive cap—are seeking revenge. This time, she guesses Kirsty Atkins, an informant in the Finch case whom she failed to save from prison, but the captors laugh and inform Merritt that her answer is once again wrong. | ||||
| 3 | Episode 3 | Elisa Amoruso | Chandni Lakhani and Scott Frank | |
Carl is chastised by Moira for missing his appointments with Rachel, who visits Dept. Q and opens up to Carl about her own failed marriage. Jasper tries to broker a gentlemanly agreement with Carl for the two of them to stay out of each other's way and move on from one another. Carl and Akram retrace Merritt and William's steps on the ferry to Mhór where they grew up, watched by the man in the cap. Local Police Constable Cunningham explains that William was savagely beaten and crippled during a robbery by Harry Jennings, who died shortly afterwards whilst trying to escape from the police. Carl and Akram interview William and Merritt's estranged father, Jamie, who despises his daughter for taking William away from him and also for stealing her late mother's necklace. Finding Merritt's former home ransacked and destroyed by squatters, William recovers one of his drawings before fleeing. Akram and Carl find William hiding in Claire's garden. Together with Claire, the three of them help William use his drawing to explain that he saw the man in the cap, not just on the ferry but also stalking Merritt at home previously. After reluctantly returning to Dr Wallace's facility, William tries to re-draw the man in the cap. James persuades Carl to give him a police laptop so that he can help on the case. Carl also reluctantly accepts desk-bound DC Rose Dickson into Dept. Q, completing the new team. He begins to suspect that Merritt's case was intentionally mishandled and buried. Threatened with sudden pressure changes, unbearable noise and explosive decompression, Merritt discovers an old message carved into the chamber wall: "L. H. Why are you here?" | ||||
| 4 | Episode 4 | Elisa Amoruso | Stephen Greenhorn and Scott Frank | |
Carl deduces that the Leith Park gunman was lying in wait and must have had a getaway driver. Rachel is surprised to learn Carl agreed to sole custody of Jasper during his divorce. Victoria, Jasper's absentee mother and Carl's ex-wife, makes a fleeting visit, urging Carl to be a more understanding parent to his stepson, telling him that Jasper actually idolises and loves him. Afterwards, Carl lashes out at his lodger Martin. James advises Rose to delve deeper into Harry Jennings. At Mhòr, Rose charms Cunningham and his deputy and son Colin. She is unable to meet Harry's mother, but learns Merritt returned for Harry's funeral and took the necklace. A romantic note to Merritt from 'S', discovered in her files, leads Dept. Q to question her assistant Sabrine, as well as Stephen Burns. Merritt's colleague on the Finch case, Liam, admits he had an affair with Merritt but denies writing the note, and hotel records reveal the man who last stayed with her there: Sam Haig. Four years earlier: After ending her relationship with Sam, Merritt is assaulted and abducted on the ferry by her two captors and imprisoned in the chamber. Her first guess as to who she wronged is Sam, but her captors declare that although she is responsible for his death, she is incorrect. | ||||
| 5 | Episode 5 | Elisa Amoruso | Stephen Greenhorn and Scott Frank | |
Frustrated with Dept. Q's lack of progress, Moira suggests to Rachel that she step down and re-assign Carl to another therapist. Carl and Akram learn that Sam Haig was a secretive reporter covering organised crime who died in a climbing accident just one day before Merritt disappeared. Interviewing Sam's editor, Carl loses his temper with a pushy reporter and assaults him. James, now starting a promising rehabilitation treatment, discovers Merritt had access to her mother's considerable family wealth, which passed to William in her absence. Carl confronts Dr Wallace for embezzling William's money and forcibly removes William from the home, placing him into Claire's care. Carl accuses Moira of being pressured to bury the initial investigation into Merritt's disappearance. A laundry receipt leads Rose and Akram to learn Merritt tried to apologise to Kirsty Atkins' family, so they interview the soon-to-be-paroled Kirsty; she knew Finch had abused his wife and had agreed to testify, but after Merritt suddenly reneged on the deal, Kirsty was brutally stabbed and almost murdered. Four years earlier: Burns obstructs Merritt from letting Kirsty testify, for spurious and vague reasons. After Kirsty is targeted in prison and nearly killed, a guilty Merritt reaches out to a reporter she has just met, Sam. | ||||
| 6 | Episode 6 | Scott Frank | Colette Kane and Scott Frank | |
A suspect is arrested in the Leith Park shooting. Carl revisits the crime scene, deducing that the stabbing victim must have been an informant, and that PC Anderson in hindsight was behaving suspiciously. However, Carl is unable to conclusively identify the suspected shooter in a line-up. Carl is upset further to discover that Rachel is no longer his therapist. He calls Jasper to arrange a meeting in a cafe. Carl turns his attention to Finch, causing Fergus to be beaten and threatened against cooperating with the investigation. Jasper is then also threatened by a sinister and mysterious man in the cafe; Carl arrives and viciously beats the man in the street, but the incident is caught on video. Tracking down the getaway driver, Akram brutalises him into revealing he works as a chauffeur for a company owned by Finch. Liam is questioned again by Dept. Q about the Finch case, realising that Burns interfered with the case behind his back. James suspects that Finch had also threatened Burns' daughter. In the present, Merritt learns the chamber's airlock has broken whilst delivering her a meal. Four years earlier: Merritt has a clandestine meeting with Sam, who claims to be investigating corruption within the Crown Office. She arranges another meeting at a hotel, ostensibly to discuss Burns' interference with the Finch case, and she and Sam sleep together. | ||||
| 7 | Episode 7 | Scott Frank | Colette Kane and Scott Frank | |
Carl begins to mend his relationship with the now frightened Jasper. He also drops in unannounced at Rachel's home, but leaves her irritated when he is unable to articulate a reason for visiting. Carl and Akram all but confirm that Burns was intimidated by Finch into blocking Kirsty's testimony. They confront Finch at his private golf club with incriminating text messages to his henchmen, conclusively proving that he ordered Kirsty to be killed. However, Finch denies having anything to do with Merritt or Sam, and Finch's lawyer claims that it was actually Sam who tipped them off about Kirsty's deal. The detectives learn from a journalist that Sam was once a violent juvenile offender who later tracked down a boy he had attacked. Rose questions Paul Evans, the climbing instructor who discovered Sam's body, who reveals that Sam had been sleeping with his wife, but denies killing him. Whilst scrubbing the names from the chamber walls, Merritt recalls Harry Jennings; they were close as teenagers, despite her father's disapproval. After being given pliers to remove an infected tooth, she later uses them to sabotage the airlock mechanism during a meal delivery. The pressure smashes the hatch door into the female captor's face, knocking her out. Merritt attempts to escape and call the police, but is quickly recaptured by the man in the cap. | ||||
| 8 | Episode 8 | Scott Frank | Teleplay by : Scott Frank | |
In a dream, Carl solves the Leith Park shooting and takes revenge, but wakes up no closer to closing the case. He accosts Rachel during a cafe date to seek her advice. The Dept. Q team run out of steam, but are rejuvenated upon realising that Merritt and Paul Evans actually knew two different Sam Haigs. Akram and Carl visit the young offenders institution where Sam was sent; they discover that the boy Sam attacked was Lyle Jennings, Harry's younger brother. The man in the cap locks Merritt back in the chamber, but caresses her with love. He takes her mother's necklace, but later returns it. Merritt remembers how, as a teenager, she fantasised with Harry about stealing her mother's jewellery to escape Mhòr, only for him to actually carry out the robbery, attack William, and fall to his death. When her female captor demands a final guess, a desperate hint from the man in the cap leads Merritt to realise 'L' and 'H' were the Jennings brothers; the man in the cap is Lyle, and the woman is his mother Ailsa, both of whom blame Merritt for Harry's death. Merritt goads them to kill her, causing a distressed Lyle to reveal himself to her as the man she knew as Sam Haig. | ||||
| 9 | Episode 9 | Scott Frank | Teleplay by : Scott Frank | |
Video of the deeply disturbed Lyle's youth counselling sessions reveals that his unstable mother often locked her sons in the chamber. Cunningham, who always believed that Lyle killed Merritt, finds her and is furious to discover they have kept her in a hyperbaric chamber for four years. When Cunningham says he cannot let this go, Lyle bludgeons him to death. Dept. Q questions William, who identifies Lyle both as his attacker and the man in the cap. The real Sam found Lyle to make amends, but Lyle killed him, staged his death as a climbing accident, and assumed his identity. Lyle and his mother abandon Merritt in the chamber with rising pressure, but Carl and Akram return to Mhòr and search the Jennings' property. Finding Cunningham's body and the chamber, they are ambushed by Lyle, and Carl is shot protecting Akram, who disarms and kills Lyle. Merritt is rescued and reunited with William, while Ailsa shoots herself to escape police on the ferry. Three months later: In return for his silence on Burns' corruption, Carl blackmails him into increased funding for Dept. Q, a new car, and making Akram an official detective. Carl meets Merritt, choosing not to reveal his identity to her. James returns to work, now walking on crutches, as Moira considers assigning him to the still unsolved Leith Park shooting. | ||||
On 27 April 2023, Scott Frank was selected to develop an English language eight-episode TV series adaptation of the first of Jussi Adler-Olsen's Department Q book series, with Frank co-writing with Chandni Lakhani, and Left Bank Pictures producing the series for Netflix. [4] On 6 February 2024, Stephen Greenhorn and Colette Kane were revealed to be writing with Frank and Lakhani, with Frank directing the first two episodes. [5] In August 2025, the series was renewed for a second season. [6]
On 27 April 2023, it was announced that the series would be set in Edinburgh, Scotland, as opposed to the Copenhagen, Denmark setting of the source material. [4] Filming took place in Edinburgh between February and June 2024. Scenes for the Jennings property were filmed at Burntisland Docks in Fife, [7] [8] [9] although set on the fictional island of Mhòr. [10] The police station scenes featured Argyle House. [11]
The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported an 87% approval rating based on 49 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "In a sea of generic crime dramas, Dept. Q stakes its claim amongst the thrilling, enthralling, and sublime thanks to a winning cast and veteran creative Scott Frank." [12] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, gave a score of 69 out of 100 based on 22 critics, indicating "generally favorable". [13]
Kristen Baldwin of Entertainment Weekly gave the series an A− and said, "'Broken people healing themselves by providing closure for crime victims' can be an especially effective sub-genre if the writing, directing, and casting align – and in Dept. Q everything gels beautifully." [14] Lucy Mangan reviewed the series for The Guardian , giving it a rating of 4/5 and describing the script as "sharp and lean, and especially good at channelling Morck's spitting sarcasm". [15] Alan Sepinwall of Rolling Stone wrote, "Goode is an exposed nerve, ready to lash out at anyone around him for the slightest offense, which makes him a good match for Manvelov's understated cool as Akram, who is clearly much more dangerous than his reserved and polite demeanor would suggest." [16] Daniel Fienberg of The Hollywood Reporter commented, "Solid mystery, great ensemble, ample ongoing potential." [17]
According to data from Showlabs, Dept. Q ranked seventh on Netflix in the United States during the week of 2–8 June 2025. [18] [19]