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Hugo Pop! | The doctor who makes hearts beat faster – La Presse

While Inès (Nour Belkhiria) died on a rotting mattress in a moldy Indéfensible basement, Dr. STAT's Davis (Thomas Beaudoin), with his symmetrical face of an international model, practically brings the very maganistic Éric Perron (Stéphane Rousseau) to life. who has been battling ricin poisoning for several episodes.

Published at 1:07 am. Updated at 8:15 a.m.

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The military doctor's super square jaw – should we rename him McArmy? – got Eric out of the woods significantly faster than the experimental antibody carefully stored at the base in Trenton, Ontario.

Even Emmanuelle St-Cyr (Suzanne Clément) felt the strong electric shock caused by the good, sexy doctor with the confused accent. Beyond that, the question arises. Is Dr. Davis Acadian? Or British? Or aphasic? Well well well. Deep blow, sorry.

With such a perfect face you have to think of this Dr. Davis find a mistake. And her remarkable appearance in STAT won't end with the recovery of Françoise Lalonde (Chantal Baril), who finally speaks her first lines after waking from a pre-Christmas coma. Dr. Davis will return for a few more episodes, spies whisper to me.

Several medical cases progressed this STAT week, triggered by adultery, the third eye, and venous gas. The case of Victor Muller (Arthur Holden), aka Mr. Pillbox, has been solved. Author Marie-Andrée Labbé linked Mr. Müller's case to that of a suicidal patient, Noémie Gauthier, who threw herself from the third floor of Saint-Vincent in 2018 and was his daughter.

In addition, Françoise Lalonde's three fake grandchildren were excluded from the investigation into the threats and attempted poisonings against the Canadian prime minister. It was the grandmother herself who orchestrated the conspiracy and created the deadly poison. Cleverly played by the screenwriter who fooled us well.

We have a feeling that this conspiracy is heading towards a case of assisted suicide. Françoise would rather go off alone than languish in prison and has enlisted Xavier's (Thomas Delorme) help to carry out her plan.

Now let's talk about Rosalie (Marine Johnson). This irritating character had tested every conceivable limit of our patience. And too much stupidity would have destroyed the last remaining empathy of the audience.

Luckily there are miracles (and medicine?) and Rosalie is back in touch with reality. She has thrown out Francis (Antoine Desrochers) and rebuilt bridges with her psychiatric father Philippe (Patrick Labbé), who spins bad cotton like that of her stiff white coat.

A return to the past with Julie Faubert (Isabelle Brouillette) this week suggested that Philippe could be the father of emergency room doctor Jacob (Lou-Pascal Tremblay). I think this is hard to believe and this important information was shared too casually. Marie-Andrée Labbé trained us to work harder to receive such an important message.

On the other hand, I believe in the prophecy of the clairvoyant Édith O'Neil (Marie-France Marcotte), my favorite patient in the hospital, who saw clearly before losing her gift in the scan, about the mysterious Jacob. “You don’t know who you’re dealing with,” Edith insisted, reminding me of Jacob’s psychopathic attitude in STAT’s first season finale last April.

Speaking of medical shows, I enjoyed the first episode of the third season of Bracelets Rouge on TVA, which aired Tuesday at 8 p.m. The scene in which Félix (Anthony Therrien) temporarily joins Flavie (Audrey Roger) between two worlds was extremely touching. She recalled a similar moment from first year, when Kim (Léanne Désilets) passed little Albert (Malick Babin) in an imaginary swimming pool before letting go of the edge and drifting to her death.

After a weak and ordinary second season, we feel like we're reconnecting with the kindness and mutual help that this television series exuded upon its release. Apparently everything was bad last year. Flavie killed himself while Justin (Antoine L'Écuyer) and Félix's health deteriorated dangerously.

As Félix left the intensive care unit and Justin showed the red bracelets hanging on his arm, we felt solidarity and emotion recombine. Just a little nod from Justin and we knew the gang would come together despite the painful surgeries and discouraging test results. Welcome back, bracelets!

I'm floating

With Monique and Fred from 5e rank

Grandmother Monique Lacombe (Sophie Clément) and her grandson Fred Longpré (Maxim Gaudette), the police chief of Valmont, formed an impressive pair in the hunt for the madman Marc Trempe (Marc Béland) in the 5th rank. Clumsy Monique first hits the deranged shoe salesman with her shotgun, then Fred finishes the job before Trempe stabs him and causes the explosion in his mummified mother's house. Bonus: Fred and Gladys (Julie Roussel) finally gave in to their Eros, which fans had been predicting since the first episode. The smoothies finally had their effect.

I avoid it

Marie Paule from 5e rank

We want to believe in his childlike naivety. We want to find them fun, spontaneous and just edgy enough. But no. Visual artist Marie-Paule (Ève Duranceau) gives us a dirty talk about cabbage (which is not grown on the Goulet farm). After being beaten, kidnapped, held at knifepoint and doused with gasoline by the madman Marc Trempe, the same man who dismembered his own sister, Marie-Paule once again found excuses to avoid the memory of the serial killer and fugitive from Valmont to restore local asylum. How can we describe the behavior of the distraught Marie-Paule without resorting to insults? Impossible. So I will abstain.