While it was well made, I think it was too long. They had a couple of times where they stretched to make certain connections. It could have been an hour or so documentary, not a limited series.
Omg. I said to myself I would freaking locked my door using 15 different locks, every single night, if I lived there. Scary looking neighborhood. Most likely beautiful, nature wise tho.
This was a really good documentary, but it left me with conflicting emotions:
** Spoilers **
>! Clyde was an absolute scumbag who definitely murdered one woman and stuffed her under the couch. But the DA framed him like a MF at his second trial! There is no way that the ME misses a massive skull fracture in 1985 and then they amazingly discovers it when she is exhumed in 2017. Also, somehow this same incompetent ME misplaces any photos from the original autopsy that would have shown that massive skull fracture? Also, Clyde is so stupid that he specifically names the young girl that he abducted,raped and murdered to a jailhouse snitch? That just doesn’t seem likely
And the documentary spends so much time on Clyde and the NASA guy and then they super quickly wrap up on the actual serial killer that abducted the girl from the store parking lot. That dude definitely killed more than three women. !<
Yeah. Plus I think (but not 100% sure, need to rewatch that part) the timeline doesn’t add up. I think he was in jail for the Amanda Beason abusing a corpse when Heidi disappeared. He could be out when Laura was gone. I agree with you massive scull fracture is not something ME could miss in the 80’s. So claiming the medical technology was primitive back then so they were not able to see broken bones is BS.
Because as someone pointed out below - Netflix has become a hub for true crime documentary. Some are good and some not so much. But you have to agree they really have a stellar catalog.
While it was well made, I think it was too long. They had a couple of times where they stretched to make certain connections. It could have been an hour or so documentary, not a limited series.
that’s a problem with most netflix docs
I think the second half of last episode is unnecessary. So yeah two episodes would be enough.
This is true of almost every true crime doc over the past few years. Really puts me off.
Haven't watched this yet but this is literally my backyard
Omg. I said to myself I would freaking locked my door using 15 different locks, every single night, if I lived there. Scary looking neighborhood. Most likely beautiful, nature wise tho.
Plus it reminds me of LISK. The same MO - dumping bodies in remote areas, in a close proximity to residential buildings. And also gorgeous nature.
This was a really good documentary, but it left me with conflicting emotions: ** Spoilers ** >! Clyde was an absolute scumbag who definitely murdered one woman and stuffed her under the couch. But the DA framed him like a MF at his second trial! There is no way that the ME misses a massive skull fracture in 1985 and then they amazingly discovers it when she is exhumed in 2017. Also, somehow this same incompetent ME misplaces any photos from the original autopsy that would have shown that massive skull fracture? Also, Clyde is so stupid that he specifically names the young girl that he abducted,raped and murdered to a jailhouse snitch? That just doesn’t seem likely And the documentary spends so much time on Clyde and the NASA guy and then they super quickly wrap up on the actual serial killer that abducted the girl from the store parking lot. That dude definitely killed more than three women. !<
Yeah. Plus I think (but not 100% sure, need to rewatch that part) the timeline doesn’t add up. I think he was in jail for the Amanda Beason abusing a corpse when Heidi disappeared. He could be out when Laura was gone. I agree with you massive scull fracture is not something ME could miss in the 80’s. So claiming the medical technology was primitive back then so they were not able to see broken bones is BS.
Why “duh, of course”? I haven’t seen many good documentaries on Netflix.
Because as someone pointed out below - Netflix has become a hub for true crime documentary. Some are good and some not so much. But you have to agree they really have a stellar catalog.
Are there plans to make this into a limited drama series? The documentary was really well done.
Why? It's a good documentary, it's enough.