31 reseñas
- xwzqqttt
- 12 jun 2023
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This should be called A Case Study of Denial and Bad Decisions. From the beginning, this family was slated for disaster. It demonstrates the tragic results of ignoring glaring warning signs and blaming others. After all they have been through, they end the documentary placing the blame fully on everyone but themselves. If anything good comes from it, I hope that others can learn what they did not from their own mistakes. It was very frustrating to watch bad decision follow bad decision, but certainly provides insight into how this happened and many ways it could have been avoided from the beginning.
- woman-654-117823
- 9 mar 2019
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- OneAnjel
- 29 ene 2024
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- melissanelson
- 20 oct 2019
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When he was thirteen, Paris Bennett murdered his four year old sister. Ella was stabbed no fewer than seventeen times. The kid who did this is said to have an IQ of over 140. Why did he do it? As an act of revenge on his mother. Revenge for what? Go figure. One might expect his mother to disown him, but a mother's love is unconditional, at least in this case. Paris Bennett's mother has led what might be called an unusual life, partly by fate, partly by design. Married twice very briefly both times, her own mother is quite wealthy; the source of that wealth was one of her husbands, Charity's father, who was gunned down in mysterious circumstances. Charity's mother was not only said to have hired the hit-man but was actually tried for murder, and acquitted. In this documentary she makes what can only be taken as a confession, although if pushed she would undoubtedly claim it was a joke.
The documentary makers speak at length with Charity and her mother who are free to tell their respective stories without questions; there is lots of archive footage of the delightful young girl who was denied the chance to grow up, and face-to-face encounters with the monster who killed her.
If you take away anything from this, it should be that some people are just evil. True, a 13 year old is not to be judged by the same standards as a 23 year old, but ultimately, words like psychopath and sociopath are precisely that, words, descriptions of behaviour, not diagnoses of some elusive chimera known generically as mental illness.
The documentary makers speak at length with Charity and her mother who are free to tell their respective stories without questions; there is lots of archive footage of the delightful young girl who was denied the chance to grow up, and face-to-face encounters with the monster who killed her.
If you take away anything from this, it should be that some people are just evil. True, a 13 year old is not to be judged by the same standards as a 23 year old, but ultimately, words like psychopath and sociopath are precisely that, words, descriptions of behaviour, not diagnoses of some elusive chimera known generically as mental illness.
- a_baron
- 31 oct 2019
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- juliahairchick
- 12 dic 2020
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It was very interesting but I think it should've been longer I wanted to know why Paris did what he did to Ella what provoked him at such a young age to do such a thing, what provoked him in general because I couldn't imagine doing such a thing.
- passionfashion-86218
- 16 sept 2020
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- gabriellekatz
- 21 may 2020
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I try not to give spoilers so others can get an idea by reading the review. Placing spoilers within a review seems pointless to review it as people like myself look at reviews for the content and overall opinion how a film comes across.
In this documentary I did enjoy it to an extent. I feel so much more could have been put into this. A lot of it is basically the same things being talked about. There are soooo many questions, theories, even people, neighbors, friends, family, etc...left out. Law enforcement left out. Many questions regarding this horrible tragedy need to be answered and if NETFLIX would have done it, O believe it would have shown so much more detail AND been an entire 10 episode docuseries. Real shame as the subject matter is well worth digging further into
In this documentary I did enjoy it to an extent. I feel so much more could have been put into this. A lot of it is basically the same things being talked about. There are soooo many questions, theories, even people, neighbors, friends, family, etc...left out. Law enforcement left out. Many questions regarding this horrible tragedy need to be answered and if NETFLIX would have done it, O believe it would have shown so much more detail AND been an entire 10 episode docuseries. Real shame as the subject matter is well worth digging further into
- nickareid
- 24 ene 2021
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I see that some of the reviews rate this film a bit low, but they are only making judgements on the people being profiled. They are not reviewing film.
The documentary is very-well put together. There is not a wasted shot, no repetition, and no filler material. The bridging animation is relevant and apt - utilizing the artwork of the main subject. The story is compelling, tragic, and so coldly horrifying that it would not be accepted as a work of fiction. It's just too awful.
- MChesser1971
- 28 jun 2020
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It centers around a horrific event and the aftermath of it. If you were a parent would you still love your child despite knowing what they are capable of. The documentary brings to question the whole nature versus nurture question. What causes someone to be evil? Are they born that way or is it because of the circumstances they are born into? The documentary leaves a lot unanswered and I wish they would have delved more into the why. So we only got surface level explanations as to why things went left for this young man. I give the mom props to be able to allow us into her live and listen to the scrutiny I'm sure she received .
- thebimp
- 23 mar 2023
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- phelix-josie
- 16 mar 2020
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- hazangel-89910
- 18 ene 2025
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- brffvypmd
- 6 mar 2025
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- shizustopit
- 2 jul 2023
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This is a haunting and thought-provoking documentary that provides insight into an impossible situation a family is placed in after a tragic murder of one underage sibling by another. The documentary, in my opinion, is all the more interesting because it does not fall into the trap of trying to provide concocted closure where there can be none. I highly recommend it. Thank you to the family for sharing such awful and difficult thoughts.
- nielsenjeannette
- 29 ene 2018
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- bordcutee
- 24 ago 2021
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Head to the TV, no blinking recommended. Just when I thought I've heard it all. I mean I've watched numerous docu drama TV's series such as FBI files, Forensic Files etc. in my past and the family dynamics & circumstances under which the horrific act occurred still astounded me.
- campoli-s
- 16 sept 2018
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While the story itself may be of interest, the documentary itself skips over all substance and emotion. The viewer doesn't even get all the facts. If you search online, the crime is more gruesome than what is depicted. There is just no real depth in this depiction.
- laragi
- 30 ene 2022
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Great story, but please do further research like I did. Charity relapsed a lot more than she states in the documentary. On top of that she blames all these guys and her mother for her issues, but she goes out an looks for men like that. She minimizes everything, and sets up foundations and plays a role like an actress , so as to hide who she really is. Hopefully I never meet anyone like her in my life, because she's the definition of toxic. Feel bad for the children they never had a chance at a good life.
- heaze
- 6 nov 2019
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This documentary film jumps around in time which is difficult for me to follow. The entire time watching this I was frustrated by the lack of awareness each person showed for common sense and, while I try not to be judgemental, I feel like I was poorly judging everyone in the film. How can you make a film where I can't root for anyone? I know it's a documentary but c'mon.
Also, I became confused at times because it was hard follow what was being said. For example Charity would say something like this, "Paris' Dad came to visit and you could tell he wasn't right and then we found out his dad was diagnosed with a hallucination disorder." So, Paris' Dad or Paris' Dad's Dad?!?!
Anyway, when it ended I had a TON of questions that were not answered in the film and while some were easy to find with quick searches, others I don't think I will ever know.
There were no conversations with law enforcement, medical professionals, neighbors, friends, or anyone really. Other than a quick snippet of a one person that talked quickly about then churches, I don't really remember anyone else outside the family sphere.
In the end, if you make it past the first 20 minutes, stick it out, but it doesn't get any better.
Also, I became confused at times because it was hard follow what was being said. For example Charity would say something like this, "Paris' Dad came to visit and you could tell he wasn't right and then we found out his dad was diagnosed with a hallucination disorder." So, Paris' Dad or Paris' Dad's Dad?!?!
Anyway, when it ended I had a TON of questions that were not answered in the film and while some were easy to find with quick searches, others I don't think I will ever know.
There were no conversations with law enforcement, medical professionals, neighbors, friends, or anyone really. Other than a quick snippet of a one person that talked quickly about then churches, I don't really remember anyone else outside the family sphere.
In the end, if you make it past the first 20 minutes, stick it out, but it doesn't get any better.
- U2bum
- 17 sept 2024
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- mangisleah
- 14 sept 2023
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Begins by telling how Paris killed her sister Paris then does nothing but point fingers. Charity blames her mother for her drug addiction, Charity's mother blames Charity for wanting too much attention and Paris is blamed for being jealous of Ella. Messed up family to say the least.
I turned it off while Paris was complaining in prison how he won't be eligible for parole until he's in his mid-thirties and isn't it awful he's never had a girlfriend, gone to prom, gotten his drivers license or driven a car, etcetera etcetera. Dude, you MURDERED your sister by stabbing her more than 17 times!!! Are we supposed to feel sorry for you? He never apologized, said he was sorry or showed one ounce of regret.
Don't waste your time. If this documentary was made so we'd feel sorry for those involved, it did't. I hope Paris never sees the light of day. Another case of rage and violence when boys/men don't get their way or the attention they demand.
I turned it off while Paris was complaining in prison how he won't be eligible for parole until he's in his mid-thirties and isn't it awful he's never had a girlfriend, gone to prom, gotten his drivers license or driven a car, etcetera etcetera. Dude, you MURDERED your sister by stabbing her more than 17 times!!! Are we supposed to feel sorry for you? He never apologized, said he was sorry or showed one ounce of regret.
Don't waste your time. If this documentary was made so we'd feel sorry for those involved, it did't. I hope Paris never sees the light of day. Another case of rage and violence when boys/men don't get their way or the attention they demand.
- kokowheeze
- 23 ene 2025
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- darylnisi
- 25 jul 2022
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They made Parrish out to be the victim and blamed him killing his sister on being mentally ill.just a boring documentary that I kept hoping would end.got tired of listening to the mother and grandmother glaze Parrish who if he gets out will kill again.parrish himself is your typical sociopath who doesn't believe he's mentally ill.but they basically justified why he did what he did and it felt like the actual victim was an after thought.also the fact that Parrish sexually molested his sister.yes you gotta search it up online this documentary doesn't talk about that they were trying to make Parrish look like a confused kid.and he was suing his mother while in prison and his mother accepts him.pareish should be given prison justice and if he gets out I believe someone will be looking for him.esoecially after seeing this documentary.parrish is an ego maniac.i wouldn't recommend but I would search up the story online to get the truth. That they don't tell you.
- cmpresador
- 19 jul 2025
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