Dangerous Liaisons

Dangerous Liaisons

2016 • Drama, Mystery
Brazilian version of the classic 18th century novel Les Liaisons Dangereuses. Set in the 1920's, this adaptation in 10 episodes takes the story of love, lust and revenge to another era.

Why you should read the novel

Before you stream the 2016 Dangerous Liaisons series, discover Pierre Choderlos de Laclos’s Dangerous Liaisons—the definitive source. This classic novel of intrigue, seduction, and power remains the most authoritative version of the story. Reading the Dangerous Liaisons book lets you experience the plot through its original epistolary form—letters that reveal razor-sharp wit, unreliable narrators, and the intimate psychology of every scheme. No screen version matches the novel’s nuance. Prefer definitive character motivations and unfiltered voices? Choose the book. Find Dangerous Liaisons (Les Liaisons Dangereuses) in paperback, ebook, or audiobook from your favorite bookstore or library and savor the masterpiece as Laclos intended.

Adaptation differences

Structure first: Laclos’s Dangerous Liaisons is an epistolary novel—told entirely through letters—where perspective, bias, and chronology are part of the drama. A TV adaptation typically replaces letters with dialogue, linear scenes, and narration, streamlining the plot but reducing the thrilling ambiguity of who is manipulating whom on the page. Characterization shifts too. On screen, Valmont and Merteuil are often humanized or romanticized to sustain multi-episode empathy, while the novel presents their self-authored masks with chilling clarity. TV versions frequently expand Cécile and Danceny, compress side correspondents, and modernize consent, agency, and consequences to reflect contemporary sensibilities. Tone and theme are adjusted. The novel’s acidic social satire of the ancien régime, its precise moral calculus, and the cold elegance of its cruelty can soften in a series that emphasizes romance, redemption, or spectacle. Visual eroticism may increase, but the book’s intellectual seduction—the strategic rhetoric within letters—remains uniquely potent on the page. Plotting and endings often diverge. To build season arcs, adaptations introduce new subplots, reorder events, or delay decisive outcomes. The book’s infamous, uncompromising reckonings (public disgrace, irrevocable losses) can be altered or postponed on TV to keep characters in play and to invite future episodes, changing the story’s moral weight.

Dangerous Liaisons inspired from

Dangerous Liaisons
by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos

TVSeries by the same author(s) for
Dangerous Liaisons