Nathalie Stein, an embittered and exhausted young woman, is currently going through a bitter divorce from her husband Tim.
She immediately informs the police, but when the detective, James Gates, arrives, the body is gone and the site has been cleaned up leaving no evidence that Nathalie is telling the truth.
His story is somewhat different (also depicted in flashback) – that Tim had chanced upon a drug deal that had gone bad and that he had got hold of the two cases entirely innocently before disappearing.
Although under the effects of a local anaesthesia, she head-butts Daniel and is able to plunge a hypodermic into his eye before killing him with a knife.
As Gates was one of the most corrupt cops in the precinct, Tim was ordered to kill Maha and bring him the drugs and money.
Tim slipped some E 605 into the coffee at the diner killing the mafiosi and then shoots the other party when they arrive to make the deal.
Ittenbach travelled to the United States with his wife Martina to take a number of shots throughout the country in San Francisco, Los Angeles, Price Canyon and the Nevada Desert.
Due to the obscurity of the word Dard in the title the English version was retitled Dark Divorce.
[citation needed] Sean Leonard of Horror News criticized the film's sound design and occasionally campy and unrealistic bloodshed, but had an otherwise positive response to it, concluding, "What Dard Divorce might lack in continuity or shocking twists it more than makes up for in gore and brutality, and I think that's what fans of the genre are looking for isn't it?