Crimson Rivers 2: Angels of the Apocalypse movie plot
2022-03-18 08:01
After the Alpine case, Sheriff Pierre Nimanswas promoted to the police chief with his outstanding case handling skills. And his new partner Ledais also maturing and has begun to handle cases independently. A series of murders on the Franco-German border brings the two back together. In the Abbey of La Bodi in northeastern France, the statue of Jesus on the wall bleeds. Nimans used scientific instruments to find out a corpse that had been plunged into the wall by a living piston, and a mysterious totem appeared next to the corpse. The imprint showed that the deceased was not an ordinary victim. The strange rituals that take place on the dead also seem to hide unusual meanings.
On the other hand, Detective Leda hits a man who looks exactly like Jesus with his car, and the man who calls himself "Jesus" falls into a terrified semi-conscious state. Leda thinks he's just meeting a religious fanatic, but he soon discovers that there's a strong connection between the incident and the case in which Nimans was in charge. In this way, the case that the two police detectives were investigating each turned into a bizarre case with common clues. A series of murders continued to occur, and more and more doubts were concentrated in the monastery. Because every time a crime scene has a mysterious monk with supernatural abilities, he disappears without a trace after killing his dissidents. For a time, the eyes of Nimans and Leda were foggy, until they finally discovered that each victim had the same name and occupation as the Twelve Apostles of Christ. With the help of policewoman and religious history expert Marie, Nimans and Leda delve into a mysterious and unbelievable conspiracy to uncover the truth
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Extended Reading
Crimson Rivers 2: Angels of the Apocalypse quotes
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Reda: You still never told me.
Commissaire Niemans: What?
Reda: The name of your dog.
Commissaire Niemans: I found an interesting name, a dangerous dog's name.
Reda: For a Yorkshire?
Commissaire Niemans: Yes, I called him... Reda!