Füge eine Handlung in deiner Sprache hinzuJeff Jellison launches a new investigation decades after thousands of bones were found in the woods behind Fox Hollow Farms. Using new DNA technology, they work to identify the human remains... Alles lesenJeff Jellison launches a new investigation decades after thousands of bones were found in the woods behind Fox Hollow Farms. Using new DNA technology, they work to identify the human remains, bringing closure to victims' families.Jeff Jellison launches a new investigation decades after thousands of bones were found in the woods behind Fox Hollow Farms. Using new DNA technology, they work to identify the human remains, bringing closure to victims' families.
Folgen durchsuchen
Empfohlene Bewertungen
Extremely sad but informative. The homeowner and the paranormal team in the 2nd & 3rd Ep pissed me off though they just seemed exploitative, but I understand they were there as a way to introduce the suspected accomplice so. They might be a necessary evil as they are people who had interactions with him. I like that the documentary exposed the police departments not caring about the victims because they were gay and the families of the victims telling us who they were. I think it is important to remember them as people, not just victims. Often, victims who are gay are just not cared about, and it's an important topic to discuss. The suspected accomplice is extremely disturbing, but I enjoyed his screen time. I think they did well in cornering him to expose himself espouse because he refused to answer their questions at the end which unfortunately did make it a little anticlimactic.
This series is a total waste of time. It starts off reasonably well but then it drags on and on and on. It is painfully slow and leads nowhere. I do not see the point of this series ever being made. This could've been a two hour documentary at the most. It is so slow that it seems like it is moving in real time. It provides no useful or new information as to the motive behind the killings and no explanation for all of the open questions regarding the case. It's saving grace that it does provide a view of how discriminated against the gay community was in Indianapolis those days and how apparently, the local authorities did not follow up on many open questions and loose ends. Don't waste your time on this series.
Bounces from wall to wall, from hearsay to hearsay, from one version of the truth to another with the main subject witness / suspect being obviously mentally compromised who at times seems to think it's all a big joke, at times lies and at times basically adds nothing to further the investigation or the story.
By the time you get to episode 4 you realise you've been sold a dud and that it's all probably just a show that's put on for television and has very little to do with reality.
Even if you have time to waste you'd probably be better off reading about this online instead of having to sit through some of the most non credible, semi scripted doco footage ever brought to screen.
By the time you get to episode 4 you realise you've been sold a dud and that it's all probably just a show that's put on for television and has very little to do with reality.
Even if you have time to waste you'd probably be better off reading about this online instead of having to sit through some of the most non credible, semi scripted doco footage ever brought to screen.
I'm going to disagree with the negative reviews here. This is a fascinating and shocking case that has been casually swept under the rug because some men like the company of other men - which should never impact "unbiased" investigation and justice. It deserves all of the airtime it can get.
TEN THOUSAND bones, you guys. The nitty gritty details of liking or not liking the production choices shouldn't be the focus here. These families and numerous victims deserve justice and recognition for being treated unfairly by a system that picks and chooses who it wants to support based on their own personal bias and discriminatory views. What the hell, Indiana?! What the actual hell. I sigh in relief that I'm not American. It's blowing my mind that this isn't a bigger deal. Ten THOUSAND bones. Cool, cool, cool.
TEN THOUSAND bones, you guys. The nitty gritty details of liking or not liking the production choices shouldn't be the focus here. These families and numerous victims deserve justice and recognition for being treated unfairly by a system that picks and chooses who it wants to support based on their own personal bias and discriminatory views. What the hell, Indiana?! What the actual hell. I sigh in relief that I'm not American. It's blowing my mind that this isn't a bigger deal. Ten THOUSAND bones. Cool, cool, cool.
I'm unsure why it's three total episodes- there's so many people who only add ridiculous amounts of nothing, adding nothing, frustrating maddening, frivolous excuses, and it goes absolutely nowhere.
I do feel badly for the families with no answers, but this does nothing to get them any closer to answers; they're used only as a means to an end, filling time.
The coroner and his endeavor to put names to remains is admirable, but between law enforcement and the prosecutors who did absolutely nothing close to resembling arresting this monster, despite mountains of evidence, and couldn't even be bothered to watch him, much less gain an arrest warrant to haul him in, allowed this demonstrably horrific criminal to escape to another country and end his own life, on his own terms. The entire county of Hamilton completely dropped the ball and yet, no one was reprimanded, not a single person was held to account.
There's almost an entire episode of what I can only describe as childish scribbling on the wall- the new homeowner seems like quite the insane attention seeker, and brings in psychics, priests, people who can supposedly speak with the deceased, and the whole episode was nothing but fast-forwarding through all of it.
Mark Goodyear was absolutely an accomplice, if not also culpable for the crimes committed. He was in that home numerous times, and somehow law enforcement just let him walk away, despite him being able to just go home.
This is so frustratingly bad, so poorly scripted, so horrendous and hard to watch. Skip it for sure.
I do feel badly for the families with no answers, but this does nothing to get them any closer to answers; they're used only as a means to an end, filling time.
The coroner and his endeavor to put names to remains is admirable, but between law enforcement and the prosecutors who did absolutely nothing close to resembling arresting this monster, despite mountains of evidence, and couldn't even be bothered to watch him, much less gain an arrest warrant to haul him in, allowed this demonstrably horrific criminal to escape to another country and end his own life, on his own terms. The entire county of Hamilton completely dropped the ball and yet, no one was reprimanded, not a single person was held to account.
There's almost an entire episode of what I can only describe as childish scribbling on the wall- the new homeowner seems like quite the insane attention seeker, and brings in psychics, priests, people who can supposedly speak with the deceased, and the whole episode was nothing but fast-forwarding through all of it.
Mark Goodyear was absolutely an accomplice, if not also culpable for the crimes committed. He was in that home numerous times, and somehow law enforcement just let him walk away, despite him being able to just go home.
This is so frustratingly bad, so poorly scripted, so horrendous and hard to watch. Skip it for sure.
Top-Auswahl
Melde dich zum Bewerten an und greife auf die Watchlist für personalisierte Empfehlungen zu.
Details
- Erscheinungsdatum
- Herkunftsland
- Sprache
- Auch bekannt als
- Los asesinatos de Fox Hollow: El reino de un asesino en serie
- Produktionsfirmen
- Weitere beteiligte Unternehmen bei IMDbPro anzeigen
- Farbe
Zu dieser Seite beitragen
Bearbeitung vorschlagen oder fehlenden Inhalt hinzufügen