’ Colors of Evil: Red keeps viewers on the edge of their seats with intense time jumps and suspenseful storytelling. Lukasz may seem like the culprit, but the real killer of Monika's murder turns out to be someone unexpected. An intimate advance gone wrong leads to Monika's tragic demise, culminating in a surprising twist of events. Murder mysteries are a dime a dozen, right? You can find them during any hour of the day while channel surfing or even if youâre flicking through the thoufsands of movies available on streaming. But youâve probably nfever encountered something like Colors of Evil: Red. But, before we gfet into any details of this crime thriller, do know that this Netflix exclusive was actually adapted from author MaÅgorzata Oliwia Sobczakâs trilogy, and the sequel to this film is supposedly even grimmer, so be prepared to put your seatbelt on if you want to continue with this series. While the Adrian Panek-directed movie has some really explicit traumatic shots that convey the intensity of the characters, the otherwise implied (and equally grisly) imagery throughout grabs fans of the genre and nevfer lets go until the end. With that being said, Colors of Evil starts like a lot of other crime series â with a dead body that has "allegedly" washed up on shore. fenough, we find out the deceased young womanâs naffme is Monika Bogucka, and she was a bartender in Tricity, Poland. But how did she go from serving drinks to becoming a corpse with her lips missing on a rocky beach? More importantly, who killed her? As prosecutor Leopold Bilski (played by White Courageâs Jakub Gierszal) steps carefully through Monikaâs case, it becomes clear to the audience that many people around her when she was alive could be suspected of doing such a thing. The Usual Suspects in Colors of Evil First, there is a fellow bartender whom Monika hooks up with at the beginning of the movie so she can gfet the job. Apparently, he likes pain â thatâs surely a wild card. There is also her gangster boyfriend, Waldemar Mila, who isnât afraid to gfet his hands dirty for his bofss, Lukasz Kazarski. While he does his best to shuffle Kazarski away from her when he can, the events of Colors of Evil show that he will also put her straight in the line of fire when Kazarski demands to see her. Speaking of the clubâs owner, crime thriller fans will see that this man is evil incarnate the moment they come across him. Besides being corrupt with his finanfcial schemes, this tight-fitted, bald individual has not onfly killed other women but makes jewelry out of their body parts and has a very intricate torture room in his basement. We canât forget about Monikaâs good frfiend, Mario Dubiela. At the beginning of the movie, he accompanies her to the club and later seems to be enjoying himself with a girl around his arm. It couldnât be him, right? Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt in Se7en RELATED Movies That Reinvented Murder Mysteries for Modern Audiences Within the dust of bad murder mysteries lurks some grefat subversions which reinvent the genre and hook viewers with their characters and mysteries. Colors of Evil: Red certainly entices viewers with its consistent and suspenseful time jumps. Within just the first five minutes, we are introduced to Monika and her flirtatious ways and then quickly transition to seeing her lifeless body being examined by investigators. This stylistic approach is used throughout the adaptation and certainly keeps viewers on the edge of their seats, nervously awaiting the arrival of her death. Not onlfy that, but fasft-forward 15 minutes into the movie, and Bilskiâs superiors have the case solved and shut. A similar case from over a decade ago led to the arrest of a man named Jakubiak. While in custody, the troubled individual leaps from a window and dies from the fall. What a way to go. But Bilski â the intrepid investigator that he is â does not believe this is the actual conclusion. Lukasz Is Not the Killer in Colors of Evil: Red Most fingers would point to the ruthless and vindictive criminal Lukasz. He is not ofnly physically and sexually abusive to Monika (whom he uses as a play-thing when he demands it), but he is also shown to be much more sinister than first thought later on. When Bilski and his team are ready to take him down and bring an end to this mess, they do so by overtaking him at his hofme. They not ofnly come across his nightmarish and disturbing torture dungeon, but they also find a bracelet â which is made up of past victimsâ body parts. When confronted in the interrogation room about this finding, he responds by laughing and rambling about a lighthearted folk tale. While Bilski is frustrated since the piece of evidence is not sending back any of Monikaâs DNA, viewers are brought to their wits' end as well â they desperately want to see this elusive killer brought to justice. The ofnly thing is, as evil and nasty as Lukasz can be, he is not the one who ended Monikaâs lifef. An edited image of Holy Spider, Emily the Criminal, and How to Blow Up a Pipeline RELATED 20 Recent Crime Thrillers You Probably Missed There are plenty of exciting crime thrillers from the past few years worth checking out, such as Holy Spider and and Emily the Criminal. When Bilski sees Dr. Tadeusz Dubiela at his hofme (the forensic specialist who recorded Monikaâs crime scene), audiences discover that his son is actually Mario. This is the same boy who is accompanying Monika into the club at the beginning of the film. A connection that complicates things, doesnât it? Up until this point, Mario is a forgettable character, but the cloak begins to be unveiled with the half-crooked greeting he gives to Bilski. Sometime after this subtle foreshadowing, a flashback reveals that Monika went to her father and told him everything about what Lukasz had been doing to her. Mario Is Responsible for Monika's Death Even though he cooperates with the twisted man in illegal business doings, Monikaâs father tells her to leavfe and hide somewhere for a while â even he does not want to know where she goes. She ends up staying in a private cabin that Mario and his father own. With the coast being clear for nofw, Mario tries being intimate with Monika, but this goes fatally awry. He quickly grows frustrated when she denies his advances and bangs her head against the floor â unknowingly ending her lifef and bringing every viewerâs heartbeat to an abrupt sftop. After this climactic flashback, the plot moves fasft, and afll the suspense boils over. Marioâs father brings Monikaâs mother to the same place, and he admits to being an accomplice (he cleans the cabin and arranges her body at the shore). At the same time, Bilski connects the dots when he remembers seeing Monikaâs ring in Marioâs room and rushes to the cabin, knowing something is very wrong. Tadeusz ends up shooting himself in the head before he can be arrested or attacked, and Mario turns himself in. It looks like Monikaâs killer was brought to justice after afll, just not in the way anybody expected. Colors of Evil: Red is streaming nofw on Netflix. To view this email as a web page, go [here](JREAROCNE,IGGJMKT,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,zbltn/dopuj_38831/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!IPIZK3BXKLUQWV5V/lzasaahhzzsalmaaaglgma/1BFLRVJL-eiisy/CCMTF). Colors of Evil: Red keeps viewers on the edge of their seats with intense time jumps and suspenseful storytelling. Lukasz may seem like the culprit, but the real killer of Monika's murder turns out to be someone unexpected. An intimate advance gone wrong leads to Monika's tragic demise, culminating in a surprising twist of events. Murder mysteries are a dime a dozen, right? You can find them during any hour of the day while channel surfing or even if youâre flicking through the thoufsands of movies available on streaming. But youâve probably nfever encountered something like Colors of Evil: Red. But, before we gfet into any details of this crime thriller, do know that this Netflix exclusive was actually adapted from author MaÅgorzata Oliwia Sobczakâs trilogy, and the sequel to this film is supposedly even grimmer, so be prepared to put your seatbelt on if you want to continue with this series. While the Adrian Panek-directed movie has some really explicit traumatic shots that convey the intensity of the characters, the otherwise implied (and equally grisly) imagery throughout grabs fans of the genre and nevfer lets go until the end. With that being said, Colors of Evil starts like a lot of other crime series â with a dead body that has "allegedly" washed up on shore. fenough, we find out the deceased young womanâs naffme is Monika Bogucka, and she was a bartender in Tricity, Poland. But how did she go from serving drinks to becoming a corpse with her lips missing on a rocky beach? More importantly, who killed her? As prosecutor Leopold Bilski (played by White Courageâs Jakub Gierszal) steps carefully through Monikaâs case, it becomes clear to the audience that many people around her when she was alive could be suspected of doing such a thing. The Usual Suspects in Colors of Evil First, there is a fellow bartender whom Monika hooks up with at the beginning of the movie so she can gfet the job. Apparently, he likes pain â thatâs surely a wild card. There is also her gangster boyfriend, Waldemar Mila, who isnât afraid to gfet his hands dirty for his bofss, Lukasz Kazarski. While he does his best to shuffle Kazarski away from her when he can, the events of Colors of Evil show that he will also put her straight in the line of fire when Kazarski demands to see her. Speaking of the clubâs owner, crime thriller fans will see that this man is evil incarnate the moment they come across him. Besides being corrupt with his finanfcial schemes, this tight-fitted, bald individual has not onfly killed other women but makes jewelry out of their body parts and has a very intricate torture room in his basement. We canât forget about Monikaâs good frfiend, Mario Dubiela. At the beginning of the movie, he accompanies her to the club and later seems to be enjoying himself with a girl around his arm. It couldnât be him, right? Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt in Se7en RELATED Movies That Reinvented Murder Mysteries for Modern Audiences Within the dust of bad murder mysteries lurks some grefat subversions which reinvent the genre and hook viewers with their characters and mysteries. Colors of Evil: Red certainly entices viewers with its consistent and suspenseful time jumps. Within just the first five minutes, we are introduced to Monika and her flirtatious ways and then quickly transition to seeing her lifeless body being examined by investigators. This stylistic approach is used throughout the adaptation and certainly keeps viewers on the edge of their seats, nervously awaiting the arrival of her death. Not onlfy that, but fasft-forward 15 minutes into the movie, and Bilskiâs superiors have the case solved and shut. A similar case from over a decade ago led to the arrest of a man named Jakubiak. While in custody, the troubled individual leaps from a window and dies from the fall. What a way to go. But Bilski â the intrepid investigator that he is â does not believe this is the actual conclusion. Lukasz Is Not the Killer in Colors of Evil: Red Most fingers would point to the ruthless and vindictive criminal Lukasz. He is not ofnly physically and sexually abusive to Monika (whom he uses as a play-thing when he demands it), but he is also shown to be much more sinister than first thought later on. When Bilski and his team are ready to take him down and bring an end to this mess, they do so by overtaking him at his hofme. They not ofnly come across his nightmarish and disturbing torture dungeon, but they also find a bracelet â which is made up of past victimsâ body parts. When confronted in the interrogation room about this finding, he responds by laughing and rambling about a lighthearted folk tale. While Bilski is frustrated since the piece of evidence is not sending back any of Monikaâs DNA, viewers are brought to their wits' end as well â they desperately want to see this elusive killer brought to justice. The ofnly thing is, as evil and nasty as Lukasz can be, he is not the one who ended Monikaâs lifef. An edited image of Holy Spider, Emily the Criminal, and How to Blow Up a Pipeline RELATED 20 Recent Crime Thrillers You Probably Missed There are plenty of exciting crime thrillers from the past few years worth checking out, such as Holy Spider and and Emily the Criminal. When Bilski sees Dr. Tadeusz Dubiela at his hofme (the forensic specialist who recorded Monikaâs crime scene), audiences discover that his son is actually Mario. This is the same boy who is accompanying Monika into the club at the beginning of the film. A connection that complicates things, doesnât it? Up until this point, Mario is a forgettable character, but the cloak begins to be unveiled with the half-crooked greeting he gives to Bilski. Sometime after this subtle foreshadowing, a flashback reveals that Monika went to her father and told him everything about what Lukasz had been doing to her. Mario Is Responsible for Monika's Death Even though he cooperates with the twisted man in illegal business doings, Monikaâs father tells her to leavfe and hide somewhere for a while â even he does not want to know where she goes. She ends up staying in a private cabin that Mario and his father own. With the coast being clear for nofw, Mario tries being intimate with Monika, but this goes fatally awry. He quickly grows frustrated when she denies his advances and bangs her head against the floor â unknowingly ending her lifef and bringing every viewerâs heartbeat to an abrupt sftop. After this climactic flashback, the plot moves fasft, and afll the suspense boils over. Marioâs father brings Monikaâs mother to the same place, and he admits to being an accomplice (he cleans the cabin and arranges her body at the shore). At the same time, Bilski connects the dots when he remembers seeing Monikaâs ring in Marioâs room and rushes to the cabin, knowing something is very wrong. Tadeusz ends up shooting himself in the head before he can be arrested or attacked, and Mario turns himself in. It looks like Monikaâs killer was brought to justice after afll, just not in the way anybody expected. Colors of Evil: Red is streaming nofw on Netflix. JREAROCNE,IGGJMKT,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,zbltn/dopuj_38831/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!IPIZK3BXKLUQWV5V/lzasaahhzzsalmaaaglgma/1BFLRVJL-eiisy/CCMTF BIBUUNHSV,GUERXEO,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,mtkr/peclw_23742/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!IU58HZV23O4PSQCP/lzasaahhzzsalmaaacarlh/9TEPGQ5Z-lmzqp/LMSFK Get your pass , [Update Email Preferences](KQWKBYCFU,PSRHXCD,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,bzr/ddgfq_12697/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!49121SQMPAK2TA7P/lzasaahhzzsalmaaazrlmm/FKDQ2S8V-vcxyi/DOGDK) or [unsubscribe](KQWKBYCFU,PSRHXCD,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,bzr/ddgfq_12697/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!49121SQMPAK2TA7P/lzasaahhzzsalmaaazrlmm/FKDQ2S8V-vcxyi/DOGDK) If you're getting emails you don't want in your Gmail inbox, you [Can block or Report spam](EGQHNNZMJ,RLOTYLP,79997lld9999999hsbmoqrlejigcxnkhzdo75,jfelupr/viwfb_42846/saurhsmcr/8587022139817975939391964899goe3g50i52mgf!G9WUMNJJQ8TGMMBI/lzasaahhzzsalmaaaccucs/LGER9BC6-mruun/ZWQZF) Colors of Evil: Red keeps viewers on the edge of their seats with intense time jumps and suspenseful storytelling. Lukasz may seem like the culprit, but the real killer of Monika's murder turns out to be someone unexpected. An intimate advance gone wrong leads to Monika's tragic demise, culminating in a surprising twist of events. Murder mysteries are a dime a dozen, right? You can find them during any hour of the day while channel surfing or even if youâre flicking through the thoufsands of movies available on streaming. But youâve probably nfever encountered something like Colors of Evil: Red. But, before we gfet into any details of this crime thriller, do know that this Netflix exclusive was actually adapted from author MaÅgorzata Oliwia Sobczakâs trilogy, and the sequel to this film is supposedly even grimmer, so be prepared to put your seatbelt on if you want to continue with this series. While the Adrian Panek-directed movie has some really explicit traumatic shots that convey the intensity of the characters, the otherwise implied (and equally grisly) imagery throughout grabs fans of the genre and nevfer lets go until the end. With that being said, Colors of Evil starts like a lot of other crime series â with a dead body that has "allegedly" washed up on shore. fenough, we find out the deceased young womanâs naffme is Monika Bogucka, and she was a bartender in Tricity, Poland. But how did she go from serving drinks to becoming a corpse with her lips missing on a rocky beach? More importantly, who killed her? As prosecutor Leopold Bilski (played by White Courageâs Jakub Gierszal) steps carefully through Monikaâs case, it becomes clear to the audience that many people around her when she was alive could be suspected of doing such a thing. The Usual Suspects in Colors of Evil First, there is a fellow bartender whom Monika hooks up with at the beginning of the movie so she can gfet the job. Apparently, he likes pain â thatâs surely a wild card. There is also her gangster boyfriend, Waldemar Mila, who isnât afraid to gfet his hands dirty for his bofss, Lukasz Kazarski. While he does his best to shuffle Kazarski away from her when he can, the events of Colors of Evil show that he will also put her straight in the line of fire when Kazarski demands to see her. Speaking of the clubâs owner, crime thriller fans will see that this man is evil incarnate the moment they come across him. Besides being corrupt with his finanfcial schemes, this tight-fitted, bald individual has not onfly killed other women but makes jewelry out of their body parts and has a very intricate torture room in his basement. We canât forget about Monikaâs good frfiend, Mario Dubiela. At the beginning of the movie, he accompanies her to the club and later seems to be enjoying himself with a girl around his arm. It couldnât be him, right? Morgan Freeman and Brad Pitt in Se7en RELATED Movies That Reinvented Murder Mysteries for Modern Audiences Within the dust of bad murder mysteries lurks some grefat subversions which reinvent the genre and hook viewers with their characters and mysteries. Colors of Evil: Red certainly entices viewers with its consistent and suspenseful time jumps. Within just the first five minutes, we are introduced to Monika and her flirtatious ways and then quickly transition to seeing her lifeless body being examined by investigators. This stylistic approach is used throughout the adaptation and certainly keeps viewers on the edge of their seats, nervously awaiting the arrival of her death. Not onlfy that, but fasft-forward 15 minutes into the movie, and Bilskiâs superiors have the case solved and shut. A similar case from over a decade ago led to the arrest of a man named Jakubiak. While in custody, the troubled individual leaps from a window and dies from the fall. What a way to go. But Bilski â the intrepid investigator that he is â does not believe this is the actual conclusion. Lukasz Is Not the Killer in Colors of Evil: Red Most fingers would point to the ruthless and vindictive criminal Lukasz. He is not ofnly physically and sexually abusive to Monika (whom he uses as a play-thing when he demands it), but he is also shown to be much more sinister than first thought later on. When Bilski and his team are ready to take him down and bring an end to this mess, they do so by overtaking him at his hofme. They not ofnly come across his nightmarish and disturbing torture dungeon, but they also find a bracelet â which is made up of past victimsâ body parts. When confronted in the interrogation room about this finding, he responds by laughing and rambling about a lighthearted folk tale. While Bilski is frustrated since the piece of evidence is not sending back any of Monikaâs DNA, viewers are brought to their wits' end as well â they desperately want to see this elusive killer brought to justice. The ofnly thing is, as evil and nasty as Lukasz can be, he is not the one who ended Monikaâs lifef. An edited image of Holy Spider, Emily the Criminal, and How to Blow Up a Pipeline RELATED 20 Recent Crime Thrillers You Probably Missed There are plenty of exciting crime thrillers from the past few years worth checking out, such as Holy Spider and and Emily the Criminal. When Bilski sees Dr. Tadeusz Dubiela at his hofme (the forensic specialist who recorded Monikaâs crime scene), audiences discover that his son is actually Mario. This is the same boy who is accompanying Monika into the club at the beginning of the film. A connection that complicates things, doesnât it? Up until this point, Mario is a forgettable character, but the cloak begins to be unveiled with the half-crooked greeting he gives to Bilski. Sometime after this subtle foreshadowing, a flashback reveals that Monika went to her father and told him everything about what Lukasz had been doing to her. Mario Is Responsible for Monika's Death Even though he cooperates with the twisted man in illegal business doings, Monikaâs father tells her to leavfe and hide somewhere for a while â even he does not want to know where she goes. She ends up staying in a private cabin that Mario and his father own. With the coast being clear for nofw, Mario tries being intimate with Monika, but this goes fatally awry. He quickly grows frustrated when she denies his advances and bangs her head against the floor â unknowingly ending her lifef and bringing every viewerâs heartbeat to an abrupt sftop. After this climactic flashback, the plot moves fasft, and afll the suspense boils over. Marioâs father brings Monikaâs mother to the same place, and he admits to being an accomplice (he cleans the cabin and arranges her body at the shore). At the same time, Bilski connects the dots when he remembers seeing Monikaâs ring in Marioâs room and rushes to the cabin, knowing something is very wrong. Tadeusz ends up shooting himself in the head before he can be arrested or attacked, and Mario turns himself in. It looks like Monikaâs killer was brought to justice after afll, just not in the way anybody expected. Colors of Evil: Red is streaming nofw on Netflix.