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#franck siriani
milk-luvr-dot-com · 2 years
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hey black spot/zone blanche bitches
enjoy
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littledozerdraws · 4 years
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Binged Zone Blanche this weekend - a good watch!!
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bryndeavour · 5 years
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Teddybear’s Gay Panic || Zone Blanche S01E03
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knochensammler · 4 years
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Black Spot (2017) - s01e01
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maureyk · 5 years
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WHERE IS THE ZONE BLANCHE/BLACK SPOT FANDOM????
I seriously need to talk about this show! (especially Nounours)
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webseriesrating · 4 years
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Black Spot:  Black Spot is a French Belgian thriller series. Captain Laurène Weiss is the head of the Gendarmerie (local police) of her hometown of Villefranche, a small, isolated town surrounded by a huge forest in the mountains. Prosecutor Franck Siriani arrives to learn why the town’s murder rate is six times the national average. The forest is a strange and exceptionally dangerous place, in which many of the murders take place.
Recommendation: Very Good Watch Season Strength: Very Good IMDB Score: 7.6 Rotten Tomatoes: 89% Season 1 Start:  2017 Network: France 2, Netflix, Amazon Prime Originating Country: France, Belgium
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spryfilm · 4 years
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Streaming review: "Black Spot" (Zone Blanche) - Season 2 (2018)
Streaming review: “Black Spot” (Zone Blanche) – Season 2 (2018)
“Black Spot” (Zone Blanche) – Season 2 (2018)
Television/Drama
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Eight Episodes
Created & written by: Mathieu Missoffe
Directed by: Thierry Poiraud and Julien Despaux
Featuring: Suliane Brahim, Hubert Delattre,and Laurent Capelluto
Franck Siriani: “Your murder rate is six times the national average!”
Some television shows wear their influences out in the open begging to be…
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metawitches · 5 years
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Black Spot (Zone Blanche) Season 1 Episode 1: Stranger Comes to Town Recap
Black Spot (Zone Blanche) Season 1 Episode 1 Recap-Laurène Weiss, police chief of remote, mysterious Villefranche, bristles when prosecutor & outsider Franck Siriani helps with the high murder rate in person. #BlackSpot #ZoneBlanche
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Zone Blanche/Black Spot is a French/Belgian 2 season series, with 8 episodes per season, that’s available on Netflix. The show takes place in the mysterious, isolated village of Villefranche, which is set so deep in the primeval forest that the entire village and its surroundings have no cell phone reception- the black spot, or zone blanche, of the title. People tend to die in the forest, giving…
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movies44waliworld · 4 years
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At the top of the list of places I wouldn’t like to live: Villefranche, an absurdly isolated (and thankfully fictional) small town buried in a dense forest that also forms the setting for Netflix’s new international original series, Black Spot. The population is tiny. Technology works only intermittently, if at all. And people are, predictably, going missing and getting killed. Welcome, then, to this weekend’s binge viewing. This eight-part first season is steeped in mystery, small-town oddness and grim noir flourishes, and is a highly compelling diversion; it’s the kind of show that sustains suspense all the way through, too, so its substantial running time feels put to good use in unpacking various overarching cases and self-contained mysteries. At the center of Black Spot is Laurène Weiss (Suliane Brahim), a hometown police inspector nursing the legacy of her own victimhood and struggling with Villefranche’s escalating murder rate — several times the national average already, and seemingly not slowing down. This last matter is also the concern of Prosecutor Franck Siriani (Laurent Capelluto), who arrives with countless open case files, and that’s before women start getting hung from trees. Laurène’s past and Sirliani’s objectives form a couple of overarching plots in Black Spot Season 1, along with the mystery of the mayor’s (Samuel Jouy) missing daughter. The balance between short-term and long-term problems is deft, giving the show a strong sense of cohesion and pace, and it even manages to make small-town politics and drama interesting, which is quite a feat. It isn’t as rich in symbolism as similar international noir offerings, either, which is probably a good thing; the overwhelming miserableness of its setting and story — despite some brief moments of levity — might be off-putting to some on its own, so it being overly enigmatic wouldn’t have been a point in its favor. As things stand this is highly compelling television that’ll fit right in on the streaming platform, where it’ll doubtlessly find an audience keen for a trip into the woods. by movies 44wali
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