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Streaming series review - Master Crimes: Season 2

Light French murder mystery series returns with another half-dozen engaging episodes

Master Crimes: Season Two ***1/2 (out of 5) Professor Arbus and her posse of post-grads return for six more 45-minute episodes of solving murders via psychology and logic, usually different from where the available clues would lead normal police forces, in this light French procedural. Please click on my review of Season One, below. All the principal cast returns, the rest of the comments other than episode plots still apply, and I type too slowly to repeat it all and still do other things in life.

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The crimes and twists are comparable in quality to the first season. The humor is somewhat more prevalent, as Arbus and Delandre have become friendly, and comfortable with each other’s skill set. There are also more romantic and other types of intrigue among all the principals that unfold throughout the season. The most notable arc is for Valentine, the perky social media maven, who adds new dimensions, touched with mystery, to her character. We also learn a lot more about Mia’s backstory and its residual complications.

As far as principal plots in the stand-alone episodes are concerned, they open with a nekked dead guy, posed like The Thinker in a gallery (no naughty bits on-camera). He’d been the model for a small art therapy class of fresh-faced suspects. The second begins with a stiff in a cave within a hippie-style, self-sufficient eco-community, with secrets beneath the Kumbaya façade. Then we go to a dead dude in a wolf mask, laid out in a pet cemetery. He was the founder of a successful dating site that matches couples, using their pets as the prime indicator of compatibility.

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Then a rich young woman who embarrassed her family by running her own sex site is found dead in her horse’s stall of the family stable. Obsessive fan, or family squabble behind the crime? The next involves the preserved head of a woman, posed in a coffin that’s part of the décor in an Escape Room adventure. The last starts with a burned body in a burned circle in the guy’s back yard. It looks like some sort of ritual, which is confirmed by others appearing in the same condition at the same time.

There’s no need to binge this one, since each is a new crime. In fact, it might be better not to. Arbus’ well-earned aura of wry superiority straddles the fence between amusing and smugness. Too much of that too close together might grate on some viewers. As before, all the crimes are solved, as are most of the subplots. No cliffhangers, though the finale dangles a new matter begging for a third season. I truly hope it shall come to pass.

(Master Crimes: Season 2, in French with subtitles, streams on MHz Choice as of 11/11/25)

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