
Scandinavian Star: The Documentary That Reopened a Tragedy
A six-part series examines the 1990 ferry disaster that killed 159 and questions whether the official investigation got it right
On the night of April 7, 1990, fire broke out aboard the MS Scandinavian Star, a passenger ferry sailing from Oslo to Frederikshavn in international waters. Of the 383 passengers and 99 crew members on board, 159 died—most from toxic smoke, including hydrogen cyanide from burning melamine materials and carbon monoxide, rather than burns themselves.
The official investigation quickly concluded the fire was set by a convicted arsonist who died in the blaze. The case was closed, the tragedy filed away. But thirty years later, that conclusion would face serious scrutiny.
**A Series That Questions Everything**
In 2020, the six-part documentary series *Scandinavian Star* premiered simultaneously on public broadcasters DR (Denmark), NRK (Norway), and TV4 (Sweden). Directed by Mikala Krogh and based on investigative journalist Lars Halskov's book *Branden - Gåden om Scandinavian Star*, the series explores far more than the fire itself. It examines failed investigations, political responses, survivor testimonies, and allegations of authority cover-ups.
The documentary's timing was significant. By 2020, questions about the case had persisted for years. In 2013, a Norwegian research group called Stiftelsen Etterforskning Av Mordbrannen Scandinavian Star had challenged the official finding, claiming multiple deliberate fires and raising questions about other deaths that preceded the main blaze. Their allegations prompted Norwegian police to reopen the investigation in 2014.
But the reopened investigation found no evidence of sabotage or insurance fraud, and the case was closed again without charges in 2016. Two years later, in 2018, the Norwegian parliament confirmed the same conclusion: no evidence of foul play beyond the initial findings.


