Many handkerchiefs must have been used by TF1 viewers this Monday, October 10… The private channel offered the final episode of his series The fighters, following four weeks of broadcast. For the record, this historical saga plunges us into the heart of the First World War, in the small village of Saint-Paullin. This is where the destinies of four women, who will become heroines, intersect: Mother Agnès, played by Julie de Bona, a nun whose faith will be shaken; Suzanne, alias Camille Lou, a nurse wanted following a clandestine abortion that went wrong; Caroline, played by Sofia Essaïdi, forced to take over the family business following the departure for the front and then the death of her husband; and Marguerite, played by Audrey Fleurot, a prostitute who arrived in Saint-Paullin to find traces of her son…
Mother Agnès confronts Vautran, Suzanne finds Joseph, Caroline flees…
Over the course of the episodes, the destinies of the four women will intersect (or rather intersect once more in the case of Caroline and Marguerite) in this small village in the Vosges threatened by the Germans. And this Monday, October 10 marks the epilogue for each of them. Thus, Mother Agnès will confront Father Vautrin (tremendously embodied by Laurent Gerra), following discovering his actions on the nuns of the convent. For her part, Suzanne will stay at the convent alongside Joseph (Tom Lee, whose character finally got away with it), with whom a beautiful love story is looming. Caroline for her part fled with her stepmother (Sandrine Bonaire) and her daughter. The fate of Marguerite remains…
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The fighters (TF1): Is Marguerite (Audrey Fleurot) really dead in the series finale?
In the final episode of the evening, the latter will go to the front, where her son, Colin de Régnier (Maxence Danet-Fauvel) is mobilized. On the spot, the flamboyant redhead will find herself face to face with many corpses and will eventually find her child, injured, lying in a river. As she approaches to save him, Marguerite takes a bullet and collapses… As she is dying, she reaches out her hand to her child, in a particularly moving scene. Found later by her paramedics, she is taken away for treatment. Did she succumb to her injuries or were Joseph and Suzanne able to save her? The debate raged at the editorial office, where two journalists imagined that she was doing well. Another, she raised a point: the distance that separates the front from the convent where the doctors are, coupled with the fact that medicine, at the time, did not allow the same miracles as today, does not leave little hope for Marguerite’s survival.
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