
Des crimes presque parfaits
2010•10.0/10
Documentary
Ratings
🎬TMDb
10.0/10(2)
Investigating the most notorious and infamous crimes in French history. These cases didn't merely capture the public's attention, but the events would go on to inspire some of the world's most chilling films and novels.
Production
Pallas Télévision
Language
FR
Status
Returning Series
First Aired
November 13, 2010
Last Aired
December 11, 2023
Networks
Planète+ Crime Investigation, Investigation, PLANÈTE+, Planète+ Justice
Created By
Pauline Verdu, Patrick Schmitt
Seasons & Episodes
Select a season to view episodes. Reddit links may contain spoilers.
Season
E1
Episode 1
Air date: 2010-11-13
E2
Episode 2
Air date: 2010-11-20
In 1887, the Henri Pranzini affair hit the headlines. A handsome man, cultivated and intelligent, this oriental seducer with languid charm is an adventurer, coupled with an avid gamer. In 1887, he met Marie Régnault, known as Régine de Montille, a famous courtesan of the time. This meeting will end with a bloodbath.
E3
Episode 3
Air date: 2010-11-27
In September 1869, in Pantin, near Paris, the atrociously mutilated bodies of Madame Kinck and her six children were discovered. The father remains untraceable. After investigation, the culprit, Jean-Baptiste Troppmann, is identified. The Troppmann affair is one of the most astonishing and sinister in the French criminal annals of the 19th century. It caught the imagination of public opinion like that of some of the greatest writers of the time: Flaubert, Barbey d'Aurevilly, Tourgueniev or Rimbaud.
E4
Episode 4
Air date: 2010-12-04
Danielle Thiéry returns to the Lafarge affair which, in 1840, divided the experts and kept France in suspense. Married to Charles Lafarge, Marie was not happy. However, her husband refused a divorce and forced her to live in her rat-infested home. To fight against rodents, Marie obtained large doses of arsenic. In December 1839, she sent a cake to Charles on a trip to Paris. Charles fell seriously ill and died a few days later, in January 1840. No traces of poison were found on Charles' body, but Marie was nevertheless charged with murder. Even today, no one knows if Marie had poisoned her husband.











