The Crimson Rivers (French: Les Rivières pourpres) is a French-Belgian-German crime thriller television series created by Jean-Christophe Grangé and first broadcast in Romandy since 6 September 2018 on RTS 1.
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The Crimson Rivers | |
---|---|
French | Les Rivières pourpres |
Genre | Crime thriller |
Created by | Jean-Christophe Grangé |
Based on | Les Rivières pourpres by Jean-Christophe Grangé |
Directed by | Ivan Fegyveres Olivier Barma Julius Berg |
Starring | Olivier Marchal Erika Sainte |
Composer | David Reyes |
Country of origin | France Belgium Germany |
Original language | French |
No. of seasons | 3 |
No. of episodes | 24 |
Production | |
Executive producer | Thomas Anargyros |
Producers | Sabine Barthélémy Bastien Sirodot Nadia Khamlichi Adrian Politowski |
Editors | Jean-Daniel Fernandez-Qundez Ain Varet Joël Jacovella |
Running time | 45-49 minutes (French) 90 minutes (German) |
Production companies | Storia Télévision Maze Pictures |
Release | |
Original network | RTS 1 France 2 ZDF |
Original release | 6 September 2018 (2018-09-06) (Switzerland) 5 November 2018 (2018-11-05) (Germany) 26 November 2018 (2018-11-26) (France) |
In Belgium and France, it has been broadcast since 26 November 2018 on France 2,[1] and in Germany since 5 November 2018 on ZDF.
Following the events in Guernon, Commissioner Pierre Niemans (Olivier Marchal) is transferred to head the Central Office Against Crimes of Blood (OCCS). He teams up with a former and best student Camille Delaunay (Erika Sainte). The commissioner considers her as his daughter. Together they will solve the most difficult investigations.
In December 2015, it was announced the adaptation of the novel Blood Red Rivers by Jean-Christophe Grangé as a television series screened by EuropaCorp with the German production company Maze Pictures as its co-producer.[2][3]
In July 2017, Olivier Marchal was chosen to play the character of commissioner Pierre Niemans.[4] Grangé originally wanted Jean Reno in the series, but "everyone considered that he was too old for the role" as he explained in an interview, in November 2018.[5]
The actress Erika Sainte is chosen by the author for the role of Lieutenant Camille Delaunay, after spotting her in the series Baron Noir.[6]
Filming began in November 2017 in Namur Province, Walloon Brabant and in Brussels, Belgium.[7] The religious site visible in many scenes is the former Abbey of Marche-les-Dames.
"The Day of the Ashes" were partially filmed in the city of Tournai (in particular on the forecourt of the cathedral) and in Hainaut. The Liège-Guillemins railway station appears at the start of the episode. The chapel is located in Marcourt, in the province of Luxembourg, where it is the hermitage of Saint-Thibaut.
"The Children's Crusade" was shot partly in the Charleroi region. The Collège du Christ-Roi[8] in Ottignies serves as the backdrop for the Saint Vincent Institute.
The Province of Namur serves as the backdrop for "The Last Hunt": the Château Bayard (in Éghezée) as well as a modernist villa[9] from 1927, in a 4 hectares (430,000 sq ft) wooded park in Blaimont (in Hastière), located a few kilometres from the French border and Dinant.
In "Songs of Darkness", some scenes were shot at the hotel "Les trois 3 clés" in Gembloux. The CBR building in Watermael-Boitsfort, a building by Belgian architect Constantin Brodzki, inaugurated in the early 1970s, was selected for the scenes of the police station.
The shooting of "Holy Theft" took place in Haute-Savoie, partly at the Château of Avenières in Cruseilles, as well as in Sainte-Croix-en-Jarez and in the woods of Vézelin-sur-Loire, in Loire.
The shooting of "Lune noire" took place in Picardy, partly in Ault-Onival,[10] its cliffs, the esplanade under the storm, and the former Derloche-Cantevelle locksmith factory which transformed into a gendarmerie, and mainly in Hesdin – Pas-de-Calais in the villa Debruyne,[11] also called “Château Dalle”, bequeathed in 2016 with its 7,000 square metres (75,000 sq ft) park to the town of Hesdin.
For "XXY", the shooting took place in Vresse-sur-Semois, Belgium, in August 2020.[12]
English episode titles of Seasons 1 and 2 come from the on-demand services All 4 and SBS On Demand.
A second season was announced on 17 December 2018. It is broadcast over four evenings, in January 2020.
In the United Kingdom, it aired on More4 on 11 January 2019 as part of Walter Presents.[13] The second season aired on 20 August 2021.[14]
In Australia, it was released on SBS' on-demand service SBS On Demand on the 26 December 2019;[15] it aired on the main channel on 14 April 2021.[16] Season 2 was released in March 2020 in the streaming service;[17] and later aired on television on 6 December of the following year in SBS.[18]
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: CS1 maint: url-status (link)1. ^ Guernon is a fictional town in the Alps created for the novel Blood Red Rivers. It is also present in the film adaptation.