Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueA young doctor gets a heart transplant. While recovering, she's invited to visit her donor's hometown. She discovers a community, a family with secrets, and an ancient mystery, and a baby's ... Tout lireA young doctor gets a heart transplant. While recovering, she's invited to visit her donor's hometown. She discovers a community, a family with secrets, and an ancient mystery, and a baby's disappearance from a local park.A young doctor gets a heart transplant. While recovering, she's invited to visit her donor's hometown. She discovers a community, a family with secrets, and an ancient mystery, and a baby's disappearance from a local park.
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The Crystal Cuckoo: Spanish thriller series. Clara Merlo (Catalina Sopelana), a young doctor, undergoes a heart transplant. Seeking to meet her donor's family, Clara travels to a small mountain town, an event that coincides with the disappearance of a baby in a public park. Her stay in the town leads her into a spiral of secrets, mysteries and disappearances stretching back over decades. This one has a touch of Folk Horror about it, involving local festivals where people dress up in bird masks. One of those associated with the disappearances also wears such a mask and performs bird dances. An involved, complex narrative moving between the 1970s, early 2000s and 2023/2024. It will keep you gripped though, just pay attention. Some gruesome murders, a terrible predator and a few plot twists. You may work out some of what is going on but the finale surprised me. Six episodes on Netflix. It reminded me of The Baztan Trilogy serial killer films also on Netflix. Directed by Laura Alvea & Juan Miguel del Castillo, Written by Jesús Mesas Silva & Javier Andrés Roig, based on the novel of the same name by Javier Castillo. 8/10.
So many people have been missing over the years and no one is looking for them!!!! This could have ended on killing No1. The series builds up successfully but got me frustrated when I realized how many people were missing because the police was nowhere to be found!! But overall you can watch this...
I liked this 6-episode miniseries; it goes by quickly and is quite intense and mysterious with disturbing crimes and moments of high tension.
The scene of the 'Tamborrada' is amazing and my favorite.
The idyllic setting in Cáceres-Extremedura, tragically hit hard by last summer's forest fires, is a welcome bonus. And the landscapes are simply breathtaking!
I would have liked if Clara's character had been developed more; it remains quite superficial.
And also the series finale must be a bit longer, perhaps with one more episode; it ends somewhat rushed. Although it also had some unexpected moments at the end.
This Spanish newcomer will undoubtedly be most enjoyable for viewers who can lose themselves in the mystery of Yesques And of course if you enjoy the legends of the forest combine with very dark crimes.
Enjoy the ride!
The scene of the 'Tamborrada' is amazing and my favorite.
The idyllic setting in Cáceres-Extremedura, tragically hit hard by last summer's forest fires, is a welcome bonus. And the landscapes are simply breathtaking!
I would have liked if Clara's character had been developed more; it remains quite superficial.
And also the series finale must be a bit longer, perhaps with one more episode; it ends somewhat rushed. Although it also had some unexpected moments at the end.
This Spanish newcomer will undoubtedly be most enjoyable for viewers who can lose themselves in the mystery of Yesques And of course if you enjoy the legends of the forest combine with very dark crimes.
Enjoy the ride!
I landed back in Spain again, not a difficult task because Netflix Espana is apparently going gangbusters. This time, it was in the beautiful rural setting of Extremadura, a village named Yesques where creepy things are underfoot because people keep disappearing. Then there's that huge forest with a wolf population. There's the strange village annual parade where villagers enact 'lost souls' in animal costumes...
But that's not where we start. No, it's young Madrid doctor Clara we focus on first. When she suffers a collapse and gets a new heart, she becomes obsessed with the idea of leaping over legal boundaries and finding everything she can about her donor. And that is what leads us to the village, to the mother of dead boy Carlos.
Now Carlos's death too is deemed mysterious. His ex, Maria, claims he drove his car on purpose over that bridge. But there's MORE tragedy: Carlos's father Miguel, a policeman, has disappeared too. Miguel's partner Rafa has an unsavory uncle who may or may not be implicated in a fire that's burned down his old house and his ex-wife with it...but wait, that was years ago, because, alas, there is a split timeline to contend with.
You see, this was the directorial decision I have issues with. Shaky focus on who our lead actually is. Carla arrives in the village due to a donated heart, and the bond she forms with the donor's mother is thoughtfully paced. And this was a pretty darn strong reason or narrative thread for us to follow. But then we have to keep jumping back to 2004 in order to understand why Miguel first became obsessed with a certain suspect, then disappeared himself. (ALSO there is a third storyline from 1979.) So then why even bother giving Carla a new heart? The lead might as well have been Maria, Carlos's ex. She was already in the village, and we wouldn't have had this misleading heart thing to meander through.
The other bothersome element was the nauseating violence. I simply wanted to scream at a scene late in the penultimate episode, where I couldn't believe we were being made to watch this. My sensitivity is surely going up the older I get. Granted it was not handled poorly, but yeesh! And other small niggles via unnecessary red herrings cropped up, but weren't disastrous for the viewing experience.
But they did manage to keep me watching until the end, so that is something. Just that with a tighter narrative focus we might have been better off. The fine performances and spectacular rural Spanish scenery do elevate the goings-on when they get bogged down, too, so that is a plus. But I am now very ready to watch something lighthearted, something whimsical, even. Enough of murders, women being hit, people disappearing, fires, abductions, aaargh! I have my eye on something already and shall report back on that shortly.
But that's not where we start. No, it's young Madrid doctor Clara we focus on first. When she suffers a collapse and gets a new heart, she becomes obsessed with the idea of leaping over legal boundaries and finding everything she can about her donor. And that is what leads us to the village, to the mother of dead boy Carlos.
Now Carlos's death too is deemed mysterious. His ex, Maria, claims he drove his car on purpose over that bridge. But there's MORE tragedy: Carlos's father Miguel, a policeman, has disappeared too. Miguel's partner Rafa has an unsavory uncle who may or may not be implicated in a fire that's burned down his old house and his ex-wife with it...but wait, that was years ago, because, alas, there is a split timeline to contend with.
You see, this was the directorial decision I have issues with. Shaky focus on who our lead actually is. Carla arrives in the village due to a donated heart, and the bond she forms with the donor's mother is thoughtfully paced. And this was a pretty darn strong reason or narrative thread for us to follow. But then we have to keep jumping back to 2004 in order to understand why Miguel first became obsessed with a certain suspect, then disappeared himself. (ALSO there is a third storyline from 1979.) So then why even bother giving Carla a new heart? The lead might as well have been Maria, Carlos's ex. She was already in the village, and we wouldn't have had this misleading heart thing to meander through.
The other bothersome element was the nauseating violence. I simply wanted to scream at a scene late in the penultimate episode, where I couldn't believe we were being made to watch this. My sensitivity is surely going up the older I get. Granted it was not handled poorly, but yeesh! And other small niggles via unnecessary red herrings cropped up, but weren't disastrous for the viewing experience.
But they did manage to keep me watching until the end, so that is something. Just that with a tighter narrative focus we might have been better off. The fine performances and spectacular rural Spanish scenery do elevate the goings-on when they get bogged down, too, so that is a plus. But I am now very ready to watch something lighthearted, something whimsical, even. Enough of murders, women being hit, people disappearing, fires, abductions, aaargh! I have my eye on something already and shall report back on that shortly.
We were so close to not watching this based on the reviews, but I've come to realise if you just look at the numbers these reviews are quite deceptive. If you see 10s and 1s then investigate further as that's classic review bombing. At the time of my review this is a 6.5, which is no way fair. 7.5 minimum.
Anyway, no spoilers here but we really enjoyed this. It's been a while since I was excited to watch the next episode of something. It picks up speed in the 2nd or 3rd episode. The actors were all very good and the writing was decent. I definitely recommend this if you like a good thriller.
Anyway, no spoilers here but we really enjoyed this. It's been a while since I was excited to watch the next episode of something. It picks up speed in the 2nd or 3rd episode. The actors were all very good and the writing was decent. I definitely recommend this if you like a good thriller.
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Détails
- Durée
- 45m
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.00 : 1
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