Before the twelve-year-old girl disappears, eight-year-old Diego reveals strange visions that warn the gendarmerie captain in charge of the investigation, Romain, and especially his companion, Sarah, a young psychologist. What if what Diego sees or paints is related to this disappearance?
Every Monday from May 16 at 21:10 on TF1 and now available on Salto
Watch 6 to 6 episodes
Singer and actor Luan, who appeared in the 2015 show The Voice and Caesarized in the film La Famille Bélier, starred for the first time on television thanks to Visions. She gives her qualities to Sarah Sovant, a young psychologist who is interested in Diego faculties and will establish a very strong relationship with her.
In contrast, TF1 viewers will find one of Lupine’s stars on Netflix, Sufian Gerab, recently seen in the movie De basscene, and Les Promesses, in the role of the novel’s heroine police companion, who is in charge of the investigation. In the disappearance of little Lily.
Jean-Hugues Anglade, Marie-Ange Casta (opposite winds), Julien Boycelier, Max Bubley, Anna Marivine, again on the front page after Rebecca, Robinson Stevenin, Sophie Catan (naked) and the young Leon Durie (Loin de chez). moi) In Diego Cannes, complete the mini-series distribution of this event into six episodes.

A few years ago on the small screen a very popular TV series with the disappearance of children and adults, from Secret d’Elise to La Forêt, Le Mystère du lac and Malaterra, they had to rise again. After the dramatic success of La Promesse at the beginning of last year?
Either way, this is what Visions can offer us, which, despite its sixth-sense fantasy elements, names every box of thrillers performed in TF1 as news (we inevitably think about the disappearance of Little Mile). And it does so well even if the series worn by Luan does not reach the same heights of quality as The Promise.
Directed by Akim Isker, we owe it to the moving TV movie Nobody’s Child and the screenwriters are Jeanne Le Gilo and Bruno Degas, who know a lot about thrillers and thrillers Le Tueur du lac, Gloria, or They were 10, Visions deploys in. In any case, a well-crafted conspiracy that multiplies rocks at the end of episodes as well as false information about the identity of Lily’s killer.
And if we are clearly interested in Roman’s purely police investigation – the excellent and magnetic Sufia Guerab – who gradually realizes that he is dealing with a serial killer who has already been killed in the past, the serial is primarily trying to stand out from the crowd. A colleague who is more psychological.

Indeed, Visions’s strength lies largely in its ability to use its central fantasy element – Diego can communicate with the dead – to stir up a community of difference and explore its protagonist, Sarah’s shortcomings and wounds, which turn out to be in close contact. Diego. Because if Diego “sees dead people”, he also knows something that a young man performed by Luan should know.
Luan Emera and Leon Dourier form a duo that is easy to connect with, even when the relationship that unites them under strange circumstances reaches Crescendo. The actors in the series are also generally consistent, as well as very good performances by Marie-Anne Casta, Anne Marivine and Julien Boycelier.
Finally, the critique of Visions is only to offer a detective story that is essentially overly classic if we ignore Diego’s paranormal possibilities. And deal with its history (too much?) At a slow pace that could bother more than one and risk costing channel viewers from one evening to the next. At least from one episode to another.
But the talent of the actors – Luan and Sufia Guerab in the lead role -, Akim Isker’s very good work, fascinating aesthetics of integrity and a very successful final episode, still makes the Visions series that I recommend. Especially since it proves that fiction has its place as a bonus on the main French channel, even in small touches.
The only hope left is that Prometheus, who will arrive on TF1 in the coming months with Camille Luce and Odile Woolimin in the lead roles, will be able to go there in an even more frankly bizarre and paranormal way.
Source: allocine

Camila Luna is a writer at Gossipify, where she covers the latest movies and television series. With a passion for all things entertainment, Camila brings her unique perspective to her writing and offers readers an inside look at the industry. Camila is a graduate from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) with a degree in English and is also a avid movie watcher.