The configuration of the 2019 horror television series by Samuel Bodin “Marianne” is delightfully fun. A horror author named Emma Larsimon (Wood Victory) has just killed the main character in his series of horror novels based on witches, happy to remove the series. Oddly, one of Emma’s friends, Caroline, calls her and explains that her elderly mother ended up believing that she is possessed by Marianne, the witch of Emma’s books. Indeed, Caroline followed (in public) after talking about the way Emma’s parents will also be taken by Marianne. When Emma returns to her hometown, her parents soon attack her assistant Camille (Lucie Boujenah) before walking in the naked and bloody woods carved on their faces.
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And it’s just in the first episode. The rest of the series of eight episodes takes place mainly in the hometown of Emma as she returns to Suss out her youth and resolves her mysteries of personal witches. It seems that Emma has had Marianne nightmares since she was a child. She finds her gang of old high school friends, notably Séby (Ralph Amoussou), her teenager. Although Séby is married to a child, Emma finally has a one -night stand with him. However, there is a twist: the Séby with which she slept was actually a disguised demon. Season 1 ends with Emma realizing that she is pregnant and that the child may not be entirely human.
Unfortunately, “Marianne” was canceled after her brief race in 2019, so the public could never see this demonic pregnancy unfold, nor how Emma was able to face it. According to some fans, this also left the relationship between Emma and Camille not resolved, given their intense chemistry and their romantic tension. In 2020, Bodin appeared on the Podcast “Phantom Limbs” (easily transcribed by bloody disgusting), and he talked a little about what he wanted season two “Marianne” to look like.
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Marianne, season 2, was going to be on love
Fans will not be disappointed to learn that Bodin openly foresee an ambiguity romance with Camille and Emma. Bodin said that the central theme of the first season was friendship, because a large part of history was devoted to Emma to rediscover its roots and reconnect with the secondary friends. The second season would extend this theme to love. The story, Bodin said, would follow Emma as she fell in love with a chic and older woman. This older woman, however, would begin to exploit Emma in a way that Bodin does not specify. Camille should then move forward and save Emma from the degreasing treatment of this woman, revealing that the two younger women were in love with all this time.
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Bodin also declared that he would abandon the framework of the small town in favor of the big town, and they would no longer be children. Wrestling The Stephen King “IT” Fat of the first season. As for pregnancy, Bodin wanted to go up a little, describing the planned opening of the second season:
“The second season begins with Emma, nine months after the end of the first season. Emma is not pregnant. She has a normal belly. In her bathroom, there are a lot of pregnancy tests – all the negatives. At the end of the first season, the test was positive. But after this one, there was not another positive test, they are all negative. [Then]When she makes love with this guy, her belly begins to grow, taking the form of a nine -month pregnant belly. “”
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Bodin explains that Séby was indeed a demon, but that the baby of season 2 would be more a demonstration of Marianne. After all, it’s a bit of Marianne baby.
Emma’s father was … Marianne!
A major theme of the second season would also explore Emma’s signaling talents as a writer. Emma is afraid that she has lost the talent for writing, and even tries to resuscitate the protagonist which she had previously killed, only to find the inspiration that did not come. It was perhaps his demons and nightmares who inspired her, and with her personal demon, Marianne, now defeated, Emma no longer had to use her art as an adaptation tool. Good mental health, noted Emma, harmed her work. As Bodin said:
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“Her publisher tells her that it is not good. During the first season, it is easy for her to write, but because there is perhaps something about Marianne in there. Something that Marianne gives her, in a way. So now, Marianne is not there to write, and Emma is struggling with that. She will realize” Oh my God, I don’t know how to write. in the first season, but with a bad [writing]. “”
Which would have been hilarious. Bodin said that at the end of the second season, Emma would find her muse, only this time, in a completely different style.
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Unfortunately, “Marianne” was canceled shortly after her brief race (Something that Netflix does a lot), and season 2 does not seem to be in the cards. At the very least, we know that Bodin thought about it. And if the money appears, it may still see the light of day. In 2023, Bodin made the film “Cobweb”.