Clan (aired as The Out-Laws in the United Kingdom[1] and Australia[2]) is a Belgian [1] miniseries created by Malin-Sarah Gozin and directed by Kaat Beels and Nathalie Basteyns.
The show aired during fall of 2012 on the Belgian channel VTM, after six months of filming from August 2011 until January 2012.
Gradually, the four sisters see Goedele transform into a submissive housewife, living in the shadow of her loathsome husband.
The following episodes work with flashbacks and flashforwards, ranging between the end of October 2012 (the burial of "De Kloot") and the preceding months, unraveling the mystery of his death.
Episode 4 Bekka, the youngest sister, joins the club and proposes death by electrocution.
Moments later, they realize that he had stepped out of the tub to kick the meowing cat out of the house, avoiding his electrocution.
Episode 5 Birgit, a former crossbow champion, comes up with a plan to shoot "De Kloot" during the family trip to a paintball area.
Veerle, who works as a nurse at the local hospital, knows that "De Kloot" has a scar on his head, under which there's no skull.
Episode 8 Rebekka finds out that "De Kloot" keeps his dead father in the freezer in the basement of his mother's (Hermin) house.
If only Hermin had stayed in bed, instead of checking on her frozen husband, she wouldn't have ended up trapped in the freezer.
Veerle ended up collecting strychnine in the hospital where she works, a poison that acts quickly and leaves no traces.
Amidst the squad stands a sobbing Goedele, who reveals "De Kloot" died that night.
After putting the motorcycle against a tree, and wrapping a scarf she just knitted around his neck and into the spokes of the wheel, she turns on the ignition and opens full throttle: In episode seven we learned Goedele was fascinated by a film about Isadora Duncan.
Because of Rebekka's and Mathias' (not so) secret relationship, her sisters told her to poison him, fearing she's going to ruin the whole plan.
Mathias then reveals he's liable for fraud, since the insurance claim of "De Kloot" wasn't constructed correctly.
[8] Gozin discussed the remake in a 2016 interview with The Guardian, in which she stated, "At one point, they wanted it to be a real-crime series and turn the insurance inspectors into criminals.