Jo Nesbø's Detective Hole ending is too disturbing for words — but you couldn't have paid me to reveal the unhinged real-life inspiration behind the Netflix scene

A police officer looks off to his left, concerned
Exactly my face as I was listening to this story. (Image credit: Netflix)
Disclaimer

Spoilers for Jo Nesbø's Detective Hole ahead.

Guys... what have we just watched? All nine episodes of Jo Nesbø's Detective Hole on Netflix are an absolute rollercoaster, but one of the final scenes in episode 10 made my stomach turn.

In a split-second, the two are face to face, and you can virtually feel the dry heave sitting inside Harry's throat. It's shocking... but weirdly enough, not as shocking as the real-life story that inspired it.

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I asked Nesbø and Santelmann to break down the gruesome crime drama scene — and what I heard was something I couldn't have ever been paid to reveal myself.

'I asked for a waterbed and they looked at me like I was asking for dirty magazines'

Jo Nesbo's Detective Hole | Official Trailer | Netflix - YouTube Jo Nesbo's Detective Hole | Official Trailer | Netflix - YouTube
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"I bought the last water bed in Oslo in the late 90s, when nobody bought the water beds anymore," Nesbø begins. "So I came into the store, and my doctor had said that because I had a bad back, I should buy one. When I asked for it, it was like I'd asked for porn magazines or something. But they had one down in the cellar.

"I had it installed, and maybe I didn't put enough bacteria-killing stuff in the bed, because after a while, when I got into bed, it started making these bubbling sounds. I'd lay there imagining that there's life evolving inside the water, intelligent life slowly developing into some kind of monster in my waterbed. That was actually the starting point of the novel The Devil Star [which the series is based on]."

Not in a million years did I think this would be the answer to my question, but it completely changes everything I know about both Nesbø and Harry Hole. But what about Santelmann? Was this all as freaky for him in the moment?

"I had the advantage of the script so I sort of knew what was coming," he explains. "But it's a freaky thing just to see, and so well done by the artists that made that character."

Thankfully, that wasn't a real person floating needlessly under a duvet and pillow. But there's no way I have even acted out the disturbing scene, let alone lived it for real.


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Jasmine Valentine
Streaming Staff Writer

Jasmine is a Streaming Staff Writer for TechRadar, previously writing for outlets including Radio Times, Yahoo! and Stylist. She specialises in comfort TV shows and movies, ranging from Hallmark's latest tearjerker to Netflix's Virgin River. She's also the person who wrote an obituary for George Cooper Sr. during Young Sheldon Season 7 and still can't watch the funeral episode.

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