From Netflix:
Soon after arriving in Heiderfeld, inspector Yoann Peeters is called to the scene of a suspected suicide and begins uncovering troubling details
From Netflix you can stream the 10 episodes of Season 2 of this French (English subtitles) crime soap-opera. Each episode lasts about 50 minutes.
SECOND REVIEW: Please note that there is already a review for Season 1 which is dated 2016. To appreciate Season 2 you should first watch Season 1. My review for Season 1 raves positively and might now be taken with a grain of salt. It is still true that I was so taken with the plot, characters, and mystery that I once again binged on the series. However, this time let me be a bit more critical.
For adjectives describing this strange-fest consider: exaggerated, corny, repetitive, histrionic, improbable, riddled with inconsistencies, and ending in a questionable conclusion. How’s that for damning with praise?
So what is so watch-worthy? For one thing the cast consists of some of the more peculiar non-Hollywood characters I have ever seen. All names hereafter are the character names because it is unlikely that any of the French and Dutch actors will be familiar. Dany Bastin is the center of attention as the accused. He is a skinny young man whose entire body is marked by a severe case of psoriasis. When was the last time you saw an actor with truly repellent skin? He, his brother Christian, his brother’s wife Zoe, and his mother all seem to be underfed, sub-intelligent, unattractive, poverty-stricken members of some lower order of humans. Astrid du Tilleul is the wealthy, nasty, dissolute, drug addict murder victim. Her jealous sister Astrid and Astrid’s husband are the oddest looking pair of scheming and murderous morons to hit the screen. Even dumber are some of the police officers. At least one officer, Marjorie, is, however, honest despite her physical unattractiveness. Not so honest is her partner.
On and on and on goes the series. Yet somehow I was eagerly drawn to each episode (like a moth to a burning candle?) If my description has not yet turned you away from this mess, just have fun watching the exaggerated set of unlikely events. You won’t know “who done it” until the very end.