Une femme avocate, mère de trois enfants, voit sa vie bouleversée par la disparition inexpliquée de son mari, dont elle découvre les activités mystérieuses.Une femme avocate, mère de trois enfants, voit sa vie bouleversée par la disparition inexpliquée de son mari, dont elle découvre les activités mystérieuses.Une femme avocate, mère de trois enfants, voit sa vie bouleversée par la disparition inexpliquée de son mari, dont elle découvre les activités mystérieuses.
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Cecile Bois's performance as Gloria is a tour de force while still being part of an excellent ensemble cast. We leave the usual Paris for Brittany in winter for this mystery that keeps you guessing to the end. I liked Gloria immediately, including her clothes (since this seems to be an issue with other reviewers) which were stylish on her pleasantly plump figure. For all those who live their lives on Instagram, this is what a woman who has had children really looks like. Gloria is completely believable, not perfect at all, but doing the best she can in such an extreme situation. She certainly goes where angels fear to tread in her search for the truth and there are awakenings of many kinds for people involved. The female police detective examining the case is a piece of work and French social bureaucracy is something else again! Recommended unreservedly.
Opening episode. Consitently told how wonderfule and beautiful she is children, friends. Well, no: families do not behave like this. If anything, the Mother should not need constant reassurance from her children. Very very poor continuity. She's a lawyer, wears the same outfit for the whole week. Before Joey Star complements her on her cooking, they should have panned away from the instant spaghetti. She does nothing, washing, cooking, shopping. Which begs the question, who does all the housework? She doesn't have a clue for a lawyer. The imbecilic things she does. Husbands car numberplate, nope, not a clue, not a letter or number. Could be just poor continuity and directing. Too predictable and too much padding out. Two episodes required max.
This is a six-episode miniseries from French TV, featuring a justifiably frazzled woman suddenly facing chaos on many fronts. Gloria (Cecile Bois) is a lawyer about to return from maternity leave after eight months at home with her third child. Her loving husband David (Michael Cohen) is also a partner in their firm. When he drives off to court one morning, she has no reason to feel anything but joy over their stable, successful life together.
But David vanishes. Accident? Foul play? Another woman? All possibilities are bounced around as Cecile's efforts to find out what happened spiral ever deeper down the proverbial rabbit hole. Old losses and grudges start emerging as her marriage, career, children and extended family either unravel, or become threatened. Or both. Gloria is smart and resourceful, but soon finds herself swamped from suddenly having to deal with problems and people beyond her ken.
Gloria has to quickly step in for David on a couple of cases, showing her professional brilliance, and making useful new friends of a couple of disreputable clients. Then her supposedly prospering firm turns out to be deeply in debt, and David's finances may have been entangled with some large-scale criminal activity, now putting their lives in unexpected danger. Added to all these destabilizing surprises is the involvement of a police detective zealously committed to nailing Gloria for everything in reach due to an episode in their legal history. Plus the suspense of an anonymous string-pulling villain even worse than the one she discovers to be the at the center of this crisis, Gaelle Brak (Anne Consigny). {Whew! I'm tired just from writing this paragraph.} That's a lot to unpack in six episodes, but they manage. If this summary seems familiar, that could be because Gloria is adapted from a 2017 British TV thriller, Keeping Faith, that ran for four years.
Even though Gloria and her kids face many threats - physical and otherwise - throughout, nothing occurs on-screen that's more graphic than our U. S. prime-time crime dramas. Actually, less so. We mostly see Gloria in various degrees of desperation and frustration as she pounces on each clue or lead, often unwisely, and frequently aggravating her situation.
Bois' performance as a woman suddenly under incredible stress due to no fault of her own is suitably exhausting to watch. We really feel her desperation and empathize with her scattershot reactions. Many may question her judgment at times, but we remain firmly in her corner. Because she's constantly having to respond to new surprises coming from all directions, the series carries considerable intensity over to its audience. Two arguable flaws come to mind. Gloria may be blindsided too many times in too many ways for some viewers' patience. And the most intriguing character of the lot is Consigny's calmly understated local crime boss, who deserved more screen time than allotted.
Bottom line - good for a binge, when you're craving ramped-up suspense.
But David vanishes. Accident? Foul play? Another woman? All possibilities are bounced around as Cecile's efforts to find out what happened spiral ever deeper down the proverbial rabbit hole. Old losses and grudges start emerging as her marriage, career, children and extended family either unravel, or become threatened. Or both. Gloria is smart and resourceful, but soon finds herself swamped from suddenly having to deal with problems and people beyond her ken.
Gloria has to quickly step in for David on a couple of cases, showing her professional brilliance, and making useful new friends of a couple of disreputable clients. Then her supposedly prospering firm turns out to be deeply in debt, and David's finances may have been entangled with some large-scale criminal activity, now putting their lives in unexpected danger. Added to all these destabilizing surprises is the involvement of a police detective zealously committed to nailing Gloria for everything in reach due to an episode in their legal history. Plus the suspense of an anonymous string-pulling villain even worse than the one she discovers to be the at the center of this crisis, Gaelle Brak (Anne Consigny). {Whew! I'm tired just from writing this paragraph.} That's a lot to unpack in six episodes, but they manage. If this summary seems familiar, that could be because Gloria is adapted from a 2017 British TV thriller, Keeping Faith, that ran for four years.
Even though Gloria and her kids face many threats - physical and otherwise - throughout, nothing occurs on-screen that's more graphic than our U. S. prime-time crime dramas. Actually, less so. We mostly see Gloria in various degrees of desperation and frustration as she pounces on each clue or lead, often unwisely, and frequently aggravating her situation.
Bois' performance as a woman suddenly under incredible stress due to no fault of her own is suitably exhausting to watch. We really feel her desperation and empathize with her scattershot reactions. Many may question her judgment at times, but we remain firmly in her corner. Because she's constantly having to respond to new surprises coming from all directions, the series carries considerable intensity over to its audience. Two arguable flaws come to mind. Gloria may be blindsided too many times in too many ways for some viewers' patience. And the most intriguing character of the lot is Consigny's calmly understated local crime boss, who deserved more screen time than allotted.
Bottom line - good for a binge, when you're craving ramped-up suspense.
I've just finished watching Gloria. And didnt mind it.but had nagging feeling the story line was very familiar to UK series Finding Faith. Was it adapted.
Absolutely stellar performances from very talented leads. Though Mariama Gueye has to be the absolute stand out of the series, she possesses such a captivating and powerful presence on screen and I cannot wait to see what she appears in next (she is one to watch for sure!).
The story and script were very well thought out and had a charming mix of emotions and suspense, and I felt we went on such an interesting ride with Gloria.
I would highly recommend this series to anyone.
The story and script were very well thought out and had a charming mix of emotions and suspense, and I felt we went on such an interesting ride with Gloria.
I would highly recommend this series to anyone.
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- AnecdotesInitially scheduled to film in 67 days from February 5 to May 6th 2020, production was suspended after 29 days on March 16 after France went into lockdown due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Filming resumed on July 15 and was completed on September 18 of that same year.
- ConnexionsRemake of Keeping Faith (2017)
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- How many seasons does Gloria have?Alimenté par Alexa
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