Married Alma spends a fateful weekend away from home that ignites passion, ends in tragedy, and leads her to question the truth about those close to her.Married Alma spends a fateful weekend away from home that ignites passion, ends in tragedy, and leads her to question the truth about those close to her.Married Alma spends a fateful weekend away from home that ignites passion, ends in tragedy, and leads her to question the truth about those close to her.
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I expected some silly soap opera. It turned out to be much better than expected. Sex scenes are not overwhelming and quite beautiful, but it is not about sex. It is an attempt to look into the driver of our desires that we can't resist. Someone said it is predictable, I disagree. Only closer to the end I started to see who is the perpetrator. Scenes repeat is a bit annoying and imaginary scenes are also confusing. But overall it is watchable. Very good messages : "There are 2 types of relationships in life: those that inspire us to give our best and those that destroy us. Those that give us peace and those that take it away. Why the hell we choose wrong most of the time. Why do we choose type of love that tears us apart. Society and stereotypes push us toward that chaos. It teaches us that pain is fun. And it isn't. That is not true. Pain is perverse. It is exciting. But it hurts. We have to earn again to love. It is our duty."
There are a lot of plot twists that don't have a really good arguement to make you belive them. Makes your head explode
You can show what happened differently in dream and hallucination scenes , but if you do this in flash-back scenes, you will be lying. The script writer and the director has to be honest with the audience. Making mind games,
trukes that will make the audience curious is welcome but you are hated when you treat the viewer as an idiot. Respect please.
I condemn Netflix for purchasing such an unethical strategy.
I condemn Netflix for purchasing such an unethical strategy.
As someone else described (in paraphrase) starts off well then gets stupid. Over use of flashback and delusional thinking to depict an unreliable narrator. It has so many characters "flashing back" to moments that didn't happen, it's hard to tell them from the flashbacks/events that did. I don't know if the makers had to meet a minimum episode requirement, but the use of repeated scenes and the utter stupidity of some of the exchanges seem like filler.
There are a few other noticeable flaws in writing. "Are you married?" (asked while the woman is wearing a bridal set with a huge diamond.) And the final pool scene - WTF happened there?!?!?
My bigger peeve with the story is the depiction of - for the vast majority of the story - otherwise intelligent, accomplished women as becoming stupid after a good f*%&$k. On the other hand, the story closes out pondering that plot point, so, much like with the flashbacks, it feels like you - the viewer - were punk'd. I'm not sure if that's good or bad.
Reminds me a bit of those B horror films that are so bad, they're good. The makers knew this and are laughing all the way to the bank. Which is why it gets an 7 instead of 5.
Overall, the mystery is gripping enough to make one want to hang around to see whodunit and why. But the urge to do something else while watching or fast forwarding is overwhelming.
Oh, and that whodunit. Who = resolved. Well, at least one of them. Why = not so much - for all of them. Which sets the stage for season 2.
There are a few other noticeable flaws in writing. "Are you married?" (asked while the woman is wearing a bridal set with a huge diamond.) And the final pool scene - WTF happened there?!?!?
My bigger peeve with the story is the depiction of - for the vast majority of the story - otherwise intelligent, accomplished women as becoming stupid after a good f*%&$k. On the other hand, the story closes out pondering that plot point, so, much like with the flashbacks, it feels like you - the viewer - were punk'd. I'm not sure if that's good or bad.
Reminds me a bit of those B horror films that are so bad, they're good. The makers knew this and are laughing all the way to the bank. Which is why it gets an 7 instead of 5.
Overall, the mystery is gripping enough to make one want to hang around to see whodunit and why. But the urge to do something else while watching or fast forwarding is overwhelming.
Oh, and that whodunit. Who = resolved. Well, at least one of them. Why = not so much - for all of them. Which sets the stage for season 2.
Every frame has in it many bottle green things like walls, Jeans, jackets, cars, combs, toothpicks, pins in front of which many men and women perform Sex acts. They keep coming and going in front of you, they fight, cry, go in flashback, go in hallucinations and do more sex. They argue, they fall in love, they murder , they repent, they burn factory and they do more sex. In the mean time editor is completely confused as to what has come in front of him, how to edit chronologically but he gives up, probably he also edits while he has sex. We don't know. Yes, we don't know what happened in 18 episodes.
Did you know
- TriviaMaite Perroni revealed in an interview that she was wearing pasties during her topless shower scene and CGI nipples were added in post-production, which disappointed a lot of her fans.
- How many seasons does Dark Desire have?Powered by Alexa
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- Таємне бажання
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- Mexico City(location)
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