This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Neighbor News

Miniseries review - All This I will Give You

Suspenseful French miniseries mixes murders and family skeletons well

All This I Will Give You (Tout cela je te le donnerai) *** (out of 5) is a suspenseful, if somewhat soapy, mystery drama set around a lavish French vineyard and estate. The miniseries opens with a fatal car crash on a rural road. Switch to Paris, where successful novelist Manuel Ortega (David Kammenos) is struggling to finish his latest overdue novel. He’s soon awakened by gendarmes informing him that his husband of six years is dead. Manuel is baffled because his mate, Aymeric (Alexis Loret) was supposedly on a business trip to Brussels.

We soon learn that Aymeric inherited a marquis title with the responsibility for running the family business and properties, of which Manuel knew nothing. We soon learn why. Aymeric’s family is quite a loathsome lot. Snobbish, bigoted in multiple dimensions and devoid of normal human values and emotions. The icy matriarch (Nicole Calfan) would make Machiavelli and most of the Borgias shiver. His late father and the rest were so homophobic that Aymeric could never even let them know he was gay, much less married. He was also trying to shield Manuel from the bile that would assail him if they knew about the couple.

His arrival and announcement of his relationship is greeted with anger and denial from most – especially the mother and younger brother Joffrey (Aurelien Wiik), who was poised to take the reins from the late Aymeric. Surprise! Aymeric’s will left the title and entire estate to Manuel! Bigger surprise that Manuel is so shocked that he knew nothing of his husband’s roots and situation, and disgusted by the family that greets him with such contempt that he immediately decides to renounce it all. But Aymeric anticipated that, including directives that forced him to take the job for at least three months.

Find out what's happening in Clayton-Richmond Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Aymeric’s crash seemed suspicious, but the family, which ruled the town like they owned it, quickly ordered the cops to stop their investigation before it really begins and dismiss the case as an accident. One grizzled detective (Bruno Solo) on the verge of retiring resents the hell out of their preemption, and starts his own private investigation, at first distrusted by Manuel, but ultimately working with him. Through six episodes, we learn more and more sordid details of Aymeric’s and the family’s past, including other questionable deaths before and during the course of these events. There are enough secrets and subplots to run a full season of daytime drama as the pieces of the puzzle slowly come together. Manuel’s mind is buffeted by what he learns, sometimes showing Aymeric as the good guy he’d loved, and others indicating a dark side he’d never imagined existing within in his partner.

The pace and minimal amount of action might have grown tedious but for two factors: the scripts from a quartet of writers contain a lot of meat on their bones in terms of individual character arcs and social issues along with the suspense. The other is that the Marquise and Joffrey are so contemptible that I salivated over their likely come-uppance, rooting for their fate to be as painful and humiliating as possible. This Joffrey makes the obnoxious young king from Game of Thrones seem like a nice, normal kid. Maybe there’s a lesson in what NOT to name your sons.

Find out what's happening in Clayton-Richmond Heightsfor free with the latest updates from Patch.

Director Nicolas Guicheteau makes fine use of the lavish mansion and pastoral countryside, while eliciting excellent performances from a large, diverse cast. He also blends in the essential flashbacks skillfully for our understanding and plot advancement. We get to know a lot about many of the locals besides the principals. This is slower sledding than the typical European procedural, but satisfying in content and worth considering.

(All This I Will Give You, mostly in French with subtitles, streams on MHzChoice as of 5/14/24)

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?

More from Clayton-Richmond Heights