Disparue
- Miniserie de TV
- 2015
- 52min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
7.3/10
1.3 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Cuando una adolescente no regresa a casa de un festival, sus padres contactan con la policía.Cuando una adolescente no regresa a casa de un festival, sus padres contactan con la policía.Cuando una adolescente no regresa a casa de un festival, sus padres contactan con la policía.
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This eight-part French remake of an earlier Spanish TV series became the latest sub-titled fix of my wife and I. After a succession of Nordic Noir programmes, this Lyons-set mystery thriller made for an effective change of pace and kept us gripped until the end. Centring around the disappearance of an apparently captivating 17 year old girl after she attends an outdoor pop concert on her birthday, what follows is part police-procedural, part whodunnit and part examination of the effects of grief and loss on individual family and friends connected to the girl.
Unsurprisingly, over eight one-hour episodes, other murders follow, but there is thankfully no serial-killer excess, with a plausible explanation for the subsequent deaths and a reasonable twist at the end, where my previously smug and apparently accurate selection of the killer was controverted, at least somewhat, by the concluding events.
Unlike the familiar Swedish - Danish shows of late, the style here is less dark and oppressive. There is an identifiable French take on events, from much of the action centring on the family restaurant to the seemingly national trait of infidelity with almost every adult character having affairs outside of their established relationships.
The main focus is on the pressures which overtake the marriage of the mother and father of the deceased Lea, the husband who becomes obsessed with finding the killer, harassing the pursuing detective team and setting up his own incident room in his cellar while his wife bottles up her emotions as she tries to keep her family together and marriage intact.
My only gripes would be that I found it hard to accept that a young girl like Lea could beguile so many men, both young and old, as she apparently does, plus I'm not certain the police would actually tolerate the seemingly ever-present attention of the crazed husband-father. Nevertheless, unshowily but effectively directed and excellently acted by almost every cast member, this was an intensely good production from start to finish.
Unsurprisingly, over eight one-hour episodes, other murders follow, but there is thankfully no serial-killer excess, with a plausible explanation for the subsequent deaths and a reasonable twist at the end, where my previously smug and apparently accurate selection of the killer was controverted, at least somewhat, by the concluding events.
Unlike the familiar Swedish - Danish shows of late, the style here is less dark and oppressive. There is an identifiable French take on events, from much of the action centring on the family restaurant to the seemingly national trait of infidelity with almost every adult character having affairs outside of their established relationships.
The main focus is on the pressures which overtake the marriage of the mother and father of the deceased Lea, the husband who becomes obsessed with finding the killer, harassing the pursuing detective team and setting up his own incident room in his cellar while his wife bottles up her emotions as she tries to keep her family together and marriage intact.
My only gripes would be that I found it hard to accept that a young girl like Lea could beguile so many men, both young and old, as she apparently does, plus I'm not certain the police would actually tolerate the seemingly ever-present attention of the crazed husband-father. Nevertheless, unshowily but effectively directed and excellently acted by almost every cast member, this was an intensely good production from start to finish.
One of best taut drama, suspense, series I've seen. On a free trial of "Acorn TV" on Amazon, I decided to give this a try and was immediately drawn in and couldn't tear myself away. Great mystery, story, characters, acting, direction, and locale in Lyon, France.
The very real anguish of a family, after the disappearance of their teenage daughter and the gradually building nightmare gathers steam hour after hour, keeping you guessing right up to the end. A +++
The very real anguish of a family, after the disappearance of their teenage daughter and the gradually building nightmare gathers steam hour after hour, keeping you guessing right up to the end. A +++
From 'Twin Peaks' to 'The Killing', we're all familiar with the basic template of 'The Disappearance': an attractive but apparently ordinary teenage girl suffers a grim fate, and the detectives have to understand her dark secrets to figure this out. Cue lots of grieving relatives, red herrings and nasty surprises in an extended format. Some series of this sort are even rather good, but 'The Disapperance' will not be joining my list of favourites. Somehow the characters just don't come individually to life, perhaps in part because everyone is beautiful. And a lot of the plot seems to hang upon the girl's father conducting a shadow of the police investigation in a way I found scarcely credible. Finally, the red herrings are all ultimately revealed to be just that, completely unrelated to the crux of the story. Perhaps the problem is simply that the story isn't sufficient interesting to sustain eight episodes. 'The Killing' had a political dimension whereas 'Twin Peaks' soon went off in its own, original direction. Without any novelty, 'The Disappearance', while nicely put together, lacks any elements to lift it above its genre.
If considered separately, particularly, then Disparue is definitely not bad - the story is in place, tensions and twists available, most of performances and characters sustained... But, having comprehensive knowledge of similar Scandinavian creation, then you might want to declare that the final solution is too trivial, there are several scenes providing no additional value to the course of events, and that the French-specific qualities (e.g. friskiness, inconsistency, fast talking) do not fully fit in the background, requiring more balanced and reasoned approaches and actions (instead of Lyon - although a fine place - the location could have been a city in Northern France where Belgian/British "calmness" is more visible). Moreover, female performances excel the male ones, and as for some suspects, it was evident right away that they cannot be offenders in this case, event taking into account the past actions.
But still, if you have not seen e.g. Forbrydelsen, then Disparue is a unquestionably a worth-watch, preferably within short interval, in order to main the thrill between the episodes.
But still, if you have not seen e.g. Forbrydelsen, then Disparue is a unquestionably a worth-watch, preferably within short interval, in order to main the thrill between the episodes.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThis is actually a French remake of the Spanish series "Desaparecida" which also was released in 2007. The Spanish series were based on a true story.
- ConexionesFeatured in Un soir à la Tour Eiffel: Episode dated 29 April 2015 (2015)
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- Tiempo de ejecución52 minutos
- Color
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