The use of noir visual style, conventions of the police procedural and multiple narrative strands, The Killing provides a rich area of study for media language, which would form the foundation for work on the other theoretical frameworks.
The detective in The Killing wears a jumper and is fully covered, which may make her appear smarter as she is not sexualised and also dedicated to her work.
Knights theory of prolonging the inevitable can be applied to The Killing, as due to the common features of a police procedural drama, the audience can assume the ending but the ending of the episodes always leaves another problem for the next episode.
The crime in The Killing seems to branch off of a lot of suspects and numerous possibilities which entertain the audience as they're expecting the unexpected.
The attempt to solve the disruption in The Killing is that the car is found however, the girl is not a live so it opens up a new case which is the new equilibrium.
The Killing follows some conventions of police procedural: lack emphasis on personal lives, a high focus on law, police related topics and a detective which seems to work alone.
The Killing was the catalyst for the distribution of foreign language crime programming on UK television, influencing BBC4's scheduling but also that of other UK channels.
In media language, the use of different formal structures to position the audience to receive and interpret meaning is central, while the study of representations has at its heart the reinforcement of social and cultural values for audiences.
The Killing personifies a successful transnational, contemporary media product with long duration that has been shown in its original form across Europe and remade by Turkish and US TV.
The Killing provides a case study for the specialised nature of media production, distribution and circulation within a transnational and global context.
The Killing is part of a cultural phenomenon of the early twenty-first century which saw TV series not in English language become part of mainstream UK broadcasting.
The production, distribution and exhibition of The Killing shows how audiences can be reached, both on a national and global scale, through different media technologies and platforms, moving from the national to transnational through broadcast and digital technologies.