Talk:The Crimson Rivers

Fair use rationale for Image:Crimson rivers.jpg
Image:Crimson rivers.jpg is being used on this article. I notice the image page specifies that the image is being used under fair use but there is no explanation or rationale as to why its use in Wikipedia articles constitutes fair use. In addition to the boilerplate fair use template, you must also write out on the image description page a specific explanation or rationale for why using this image in each article is consistent with fair use.

Please go to the image description page and edit it to include a fair use rationale. Using one of the templates at Fair use rationale guideline is an easy way to insure that your image is in compliance with Wikipedia policy, but remember that you must complete the template. Do not simply insert a blank template on an image page.

If there is other other fair use media, consider checking that you have specified the fair use rationale on the other images used on this page. Note that any fair use images uploaded after 4 May, 2006, and lacking such an explanation will be deleted one week after they have been uploaded, as described on criteria for speedy deletion. If you have any questions please ask them at the Media copyright questions page. Thank you.BetacommandBot 20:55, 2 June 2007 (UTC)

WikiProject class rating
This article was automatically assessed because at least one article was rated and this bot brought all the other ratings up to at least that level. BetacommandBot 08:11, 27 August 2007 (UTC)

Explanation of the plot
Actor Vincent Cassel who played detective Max Kerkerian admitted, "I can't help explain the film because I didn't understand it!" "We cut out everything in the film that was explanatory, therefore 'boring' [according to the director]. You end up with a film that's not boring but you don't understand it [at] all."

The University of Guernon, one of the oldest institutions in Europe, is the lifeblood of the small town. Not only does the school produce its own power and water but its hospital provides free health care for the entire valley. It is noted as being staffed by graduates of the university and has its own maternity wing.

Two days after Remy Callois, librarian at the University, is reported missing, his corpse is found, mutilated and staged halfway up a cliff face. Curled into the fetal position his hands have been amputated, arms and legs broken in several places and he has been lacerated with a carpet cutter. While still alive, his eyes were surgically removed and the sockets filled with rain water.

While the local police ask the usual questions, Niemans travels to the offices of Dr. Cherneze the local ophthalmologist to ask about the removal of the eyes from Callois. Cherneze, who once worked at the university, has been treating genetic eye afflictions in the population. He tells Niemans that because the college is so isolated, there is a long history of inbreeding amongst the professors. This has led to a weakening of the bloodlines and the increased instance of serious genetic disorders. However in the past two generations the trend has reversed, with the local village children becoming ill and the college babies remaining healthy. When questioned on the mutilation of the corpse, Cherneze hints that the killer is leaving Niemans clues as to their motive by removing the only two aspects of the body that are unique to each individual - the eyes and hands.

Meanwhile in Sarzac, Kerkerian is called on to investigate the desecration of a grave and the illegal entry to the local elementary school. The grave belongs to Judith Herault, who died when she was ten and has been painted with swastikas. When he arrives at the school, where he is informed nothing is missing, he asks about Judith and finds that the files and pictured from the years she attended school have been stolen. The administrator vaguely recalls something about the girl being hit by a truck and on further inspection, Kerkerian finds that the body was so badly destroyed that it was identified by a finger, held by the mother on the side of the road in 1982. The mother consequently went mad, he is told.

In Callois' apartment, Niemans finds images of athletes along with texts on genetic deformities. The embossed front cover of Callois' Ph.D. thesis is translated for him by the Dean's assistant and son Hubert as "We are the masters. We are the slaves. We are everywhere. We are nowhere. We control the crimson rivers.' He then goes to meet Fanny Ferreira, a glaciologist who works for the university to steer the frequent avalanches away from the school. Fanny was the person who found Callois body and informs him that with the right equipment and training it would be possible for anyone to stage the body where it was. She openly dislikes the school and its arrogant professors and reacts with anger when Niemans labels her as one of them. The pathologist informs Niemans that the rain in Callois' eye sockets was acid rain, something that has not fallen in the area since the seventies.

Kerkerian has located Judith's mother, locked away in an abbey. Now living as Sister Andrée, she has not been seen in fifteen years but when questioned, she tells him that when her child was ten she fell ill. She took her daughter to the hospital where she was born to get help but there they were attacked by demons. They fled but her daughter was killed. She says the reason the pictures were taken is to erase her daughter from history. That her face is a threat to the demons who have returned to complete their mission. She tells him it all began in Guernon.

Fanny takes Niemans up to the glacier so they can get a sample of ice to compare against the acid rain in Callois eyes. Convinced there must be a clue somewhere, Niemans follows a glacial melt tunnel to a cave that contains a second body, frozen into the ice.

Investigating the swastikas with the local skinhead gang, Max traces a car to Phillip Sertys in Guernon and meets Niemans while attempting to break in. Sertys is the body in the ice, a doctor that worked in the maternity ward at the University hospital. Inside his apartment is not only the photograph stolen from the school in Sarzac but evidence that he was using selective breeding to create a superior fighting dog. Cages of dogs in the back room react to the intruders and Niemans is paralyzed by his fear of the animals until Kerkerian coaxes him through.

Sertys was not tortured like Callois; his hands were removed post mortem as were his eyes which have been replaced with fake glass prosthetics. 'Like you would find at an eye doctors' remarks the pathologist, leading Niemans to race back to Cherneze's practice. The doctor is already dead, his empty eye sockets pouring blood. However they are in time to disrupt the killer, who races away after emptying Nieman's gun into the wall but not hitting him. Kerkerian gives chase but the killer is faster and had superior stamina and escapes. Returning to the scene, where the killer has written "I will trace the source of the crimson rivers" in Cherneze's own blood above his body, the prints on Niemans gun are found to belong not to a criminal but to the finger of Judith Herault, who is supposed to have been dead for eighteen years.

Max is sent to excavate the grave in Sarzac, which turns out to be empty except for a picture, while Niemans gives Fanny a lift back to her house from the police station where she had been questioned following their discovery of the second body. Her house is filled with the equipment she uses on the mountain, including grenades to set off controlled avalanches. While talking she admits to having almost married the Dean's son after they had been paired together in the library for three years. When he returns to the school, the local police captain tells him that Callois' thesis is full of Nazi sentiments and theology and that it ends with the way to create the perfect man in this society, by mixing athletic children with mentally gifted ones and breeding them. He compares this to the eugenics experiments in villages during Nazi reign.

Kerkerian returns with the photo, which Niemans recognizes as Fanny and on the way to her house they piece together the story. Due to the poor bloodlines and genetic mutations in the inbred professor’s offspring, the doctors at the hospital had been swapping healthy village children with the frail university children. Sertys, they deduce, must have swapped Fanny for Judith. Callois had taken over his father's job arranging the matches meaning the college was not so much a school as a giant breeding cult.

They're almost killed by the Dean's son trying to ram their car off the road, in an effort to halt them from finding the truth but make it to Fanny's house. There they find a torture room in the basement complete with the missing hands and eyes of the victims. Though she could have killed him earlier, Fanny is now gone and so are her grenades. Niemans gives the order to evacuate the valley while he and Kerkerian travel up the mountain to find Fanny.

Seeing her set the charges, the duo confront Fanny only to be set upon by her double. Judith and Fanny were identical twins. Fanny had been swapped at birth but Judith left behind, so when she got sick and her mother went with her to the hospital, the university staff knew they had to get rid of her. Their mother cut off Judith’s finger and faked her death to save her child. However it meant that Judith had to live in the shadow of Fanny for the last eighteen years and doing so has sent her mad. Judith has been exacting her revenge by killing those responsible for her lost life.

She attacks Kerkerian, knocking him out momentarily while Niemans tries to reason with Fanny after throwing away his gun. Judith retrieves it and hands it to her sister. When Judith instructs Fanny to kill Niemans she refuses to shoot the innocent man and instead turns the gun on her sister. At the same time Kerkerian shoots Fanny in the shoulder and the combined noise sets off an avalanche that sweeps away Judith and buries the three in the snow. The movie ends with them being found by search dogs and Niemans finally beginning to explain to Kerkerian his fear of canines. — Preceding unsigned comment added by 86.160.187.66 (talk) 10:16, 9 May 2013 (UTC)

TV Series
There is also a 2018 TV Series, presumably based on it. We should write an article on this. LongHairedFop (talk) 21:07, 30 January 2019 (UTC)