Brace yourself for a heady dose of tension: the Quebec mini-series that is causing a stir is more than a regular whodunit—it’s a nerve-jangling thriller you just can’t afford to overlook. With blood on the floor, double-crossing corporations, and secrets clawing their way out of silence, this six-parter is about to get fiercely under your skin.
A Bloody Wakeup Call: The Case That Shatters Illusions
The story launches with the kind of awakening no cup of coffee can fix: a brilliant business lawyer from Montreal spends the night at her hospitalized mother’s side, only to wake up the next morning in—brace yourself—a pool of blood. But don’t blame the prop department: the blood seeps from the apartment above, once home to Mercedes Casares, a Guatemalan immigrant whose fate is tragically sealed.
This isn’t just any murder. It’s the trigger that thrusts our heroine into the core of a chilling scandal—a vast ecological, economic, and social nightmare connected to the multinational industrial and mining giant her law firm represents. Forget open-and-shut cases—she’s entangled in a corporate labyrinth, and the map is drawn in red ink.
A Relentless Pursuit of the Truth
But what’s a nightmarish crime scene if not the beginning of a personal revolution? Unwilling to turn a blind eye—even as her boyfriend (who’s also a colleague, awkward!) advises against it—she sets out to expose the murky depths of the industrial giant’s wrongdoings. A lawyer exposing her own firm’s client? Talk about risk: she’s gambling with more than just her career—her own safety is in real jeopardy.
How real is all this? Well, you may wonder just where the screenwriters dredge up such disturbing material. Yet, chillingly, almost every detail finds roots in reality. Director and creator Sophie Deraspe, already known for the film Bergers, has carried out extensive investigations into the malpractices perpetrated by major multinationals operating in Central America:
- Rampant environmental pollution
- Strong-arm tactics and intimidation
- Blackmail and brazen corruption
These corporate behemoths, with swarms of lawyers perpetually safeguarding their immunity, seem to stop at nothing. The mini-series doesn’t just entertain: it casts a stark light on the victims, plunging viewers into fiction that feels eerily anxious—and seriously unsettling.
Deadly Motives and a Knot of Suspects
The series isn’t content with one shocking crime. In another case, the body of a woman is found sprawled across the hood of her own car, stabbed a staggering forty times. Subtlety doesn’t seem to be the killer’s strong point—clearly, this murder was personal.
The suspect list is practically overflowing:
- The victim’s husband, naturally
- Her numerous romantic entanglements
- The town sheriff, who’s rather preoccupied with sweeping away evidence linking him to her
- His ex-wife, a former local TV star turned journalist, now covering the case, hoping for a career reboot and, perhaps, hiding her own secrets
There’s suspicion in every shadow, and everyone seems to have a reason—personal vendettas simmer under the surface as the investigation barrels ahead.
From Whimsical to Harrowing: Secrets, Feminism, and Twisted Charisma
This six-episode adaptation of British novelist Alice Feeney’s His and Hers (originally Lui et moi, Hauteville) begins with the breezy flair of a screwball marriage comedy with a splash of feminism. But don’t get too comfortable: as the episodes unfold, the tone darkens and the mood intensifies. Old resentments, truths, and deep-seated traumas start leaking from behind the thick wall of silence constructed over years.
Bolstered by the double-edged charisma of leads Tessa Thompson and Jon Bernthal, His and Hers weaves an intricate, spiderlike mystery—each new revelation tightening the web. When resolution comes, it’s less of a lightbulb and more of an electric shock: surprising, chilling, and sure to linger.
If you crave thrillers with real bite—gritty, socially engaged, and charged with danger—you’ll want to binge this Quebec mini-series ASAP. Just don’t make any plans: this is a mystery that grabs you by the collar and won’t let go.