371 opiniones
- Calicodreamin
- 2 feb 2022
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- SneakyWasabi
- 2 feb 2022
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My heart goes out to the young women who were used by this swindler. Losing money through fraud is hard enough, but the man broke their hearts. Also, because he was a professional thief, the fear of being more victimized will never leave them.
Conmen have always been with us, but never in history has it been so easy for them to find their marks. They don't need to find a Doris Duke or Kim Kardashian. With the internet providing all the background they need on potential victims and dating applications proving a pond of lonely victims, they just have to pull the same con again and again.
This film does a great job of showing who the victims are, who the conman is, and how the con works. It underscores the complication of trying to prosecute the criminals across the world, and how police are hampered by language, law, and the intimacy of the relationships. It shows that the conman has the upper hand, and will keep doing it again and again.
Please, look behind the profiles of people you meet on social media. Romcoms are not real. There is no Prince Charming, and you aren't Cinderella. Do a background check, and, if he asks for money, run (don't walk) in the opposite direction. Do not lend money.
And, again, a conman is a sociopath. And a conman who gets his own Netflix show is a conman who is really good at it.
This show is less "shocking" than "predictable." Dogs bark. Conmen steal.
Conmen have always been with us, but never in history has it been so easy for them to find their marks. They don't need to find a Doris Duke or Kim Kardashian. With the internet providing all the background they need on potential victims and dating applications proving a pond of lonely victims, they just have to pull the same con again and again.
This film does a great job of showing who the victims are, who the conman is, and how the con works. It underscores the complication of trying to prosecute the criminals across the world, and how police are hampered by language, law, and the intimacy of the relationships. It shows that the conman has the upper hand, and will keep doing it again and again.
Please, look behind the profiles of people you meet on social media. Romcoms are not real. There is no Prince Charming, and you aren't Cinderella. Do a background check, and, if he asks for money, run (don't walk) in the opposite direction. Do not lend money.
And, again, a conman is a sociopath. And a conman who gets his own Netflix show is a conman who is really good at it.
This show is less "shocking" than "predictable." Dogs bark. Conmen steal.
- aarpcats
- 1 feb 2022
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The first 30 minutes of this documentary was more than enough, but I stayed with it til the end in order to write this review. I feel sorry for those women swindled, but HOW can one not see that there is something wrong with this guy and situation from the first story of "enemies after me" and "I need money".
If it seems too good to be true, it IS too good to be true.
The delusion of "love" after only a couple of luxury dates is at its core the blind allure of a windfall life of riches, jet-set luxury, lavish lifestyle, and financial security.
Like all Ponzi scams, getting-rich-quickly is the bait used to scam people, whether it's investments or the possibility of finding love with a rich "prince"...but like the Tina Turner song, "what's love got to do with it".
It's an outrageous over-the-top example of scamming, and one hopes this will give women pause before jumping into too-good-to-be-true scenarios, (especially off dating sites), and learn to head for the exit as soon as obvious red flags pop up.
The sad truth is it probably won't make enough of a dent to prevent this type of thing from happening again...the desire for a rich lifestyle is always going to bait some people into bad scenarios via denial - "it's a tale as old as time". 😑
If it seems too good to be true, it IS too good to be true.
The delusion of "love" after only a couple of luxury dates is at its core the blind allure of a windfall life of riches, jet-set luxury, lavish lifestyle, and financial security.
Like all Ponzi scams, getting-rich-quickly is the bait used to scam people, whether it's investments or the possibility of finding love with a rich "prince"...but like the Tina Turner song, "what's love got to do with it".
It's an outrageous over-the-top example of scamming, and one hopes this will give women pause before jumping into too-good-to-be-true scenarios, (especially off dating sites), and learn to head for the exit as soon as obvious red flags pop up.
The sad truth is it probably won't make enough of a dent to prevent this type of thing from happening again...the desire for a rich lifestyle is always going to bait some people into bad scenarios via denial - "it's a tale as old as time". 😑
- Instant_Palmer
- 1 feb 2022
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There's lots here, as a woman, I can't understand. Maybe I've watched too many of these shows, but the "Hurry up, I need it now" is such a classic old school con. Especially after a month. Too many questions with answers that didn't exist or didn't make sense. Couldn't he just go to his family, for money and/or protection? And if he wasn't doing anything illegal, the police would have protected him. And the credit card statements would show what he was doing. I can see online things as they appear.
I do feel bad for the victimes, all of them, not just on the show. I know how the "be nice and help everyone" is sometimes ingrained in us.
Worst part of the show is the end. Five months in jail for 10 million dollar scams, that are still ongoing. Big deal.
I do feel bad for the victimes, all of them, not just on the show. I know how the "be nice and help everyone" is sometimes ingrained in us.
Worst part of the show is the end. Five months in jail for 10 million dollar scams, that are still ongoing. Big deal.
- manonlemieux
- 23 feb 2022
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- rws_20
- 1 feb 2022
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Be careful who you fall for, the story of young women who have fallen in love with the son of a wealthy diamond trader, Simon Laviev, however all is not as it seems.
Originally I thought this was going to be a movie, the content and format came as a real surprise, I didn't get into it straight away, it all seemed a little wishy washy, however as it develops, and you learn the actual content, it becomes a great, shocking watch.
You may we'll be like me, and screaming at the screen, how on Earth could these women have fallen for his story, it is just baffling. You have to chuckle about the comments about Tinder being a place to find love, but this isn't the place for that conversation.
Very well made, it looks great, beautifully filmed, with such powerful interviews and insight.
9/10.
Originally I thought this was going to be a movie, the content and format came as a real surprise, I didn't get into it straight away, it all seemed a little wishy washy, however as it develops, and you learn the actual content, it becomes a great, shocking watch.
You may we'll be like me, and screaming at the screen, how on Earth could these women have fallen for his story, it is just baffling. You have to chuckle about the comments about Tinder being a place to find love, but this isn't the place for that conversation.
Very well made, it looks great, beautifully filmed, with such powerful interviews and insight.
9/10.
- Sleepin_Dragon
- 8 feb 2022
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I watched in disbelief. I know that there are swindlers and schemers out there. What amazed me was that the first woman that was interviewed agreed to fly on the perpetrator's private jet within hours of meeting him. She slept with him the same night. Subsequently, their relationship is mainly through calls and texts, and she believes that she is in a relationship. I believe if she had exercised some discretion, she wouldn't have been swindled from hundreds of thousands of dollars. Was she so quick to throw caution to the wind simply because he seemed like he had lots of money? Of course it's sad that people are being duped this way, but I'm having a hard time feeling sorry for these women.
- DVK1234
- 19 feb 2022
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- sarah-508-649421
- 2 feb 2022
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As "The Tinder Swindler" (2022 release from the UK; 114 min.) opens, we are introduced to Cecilie, a 29 yr. Norwegian living in London who has been on the Tinder dating app for 7 years. She LOVES Tinder. One day, she right-swipes on the profile of a certain Simon LeViev, a guy from Israel who embodies the "life style of the rich and famous", and before you know it, literally within days, Cecilie and Simon are tight, super tight. At this point we are 10 min into the movie.
Couple of comments: this is the directing debut of UK documentary producer Felicia Morris. Here she brings us the story of, as the movie's title implies, how a slick guy uses the Tinder dating app to prey on women for money. He is not the first guy to do this, and surely also not the last guy. What makes this documentary so surprisingly entertaining is that the 3 victims who bring their story (Cecilie, Swedish woman Pernilla, and Dutch woman Ayleen) turn out to be master story tellers. Indeed, much of the movie is simply letting them talk, albeit backed up by (i) their iPhone communications which all were stored for posterity, and (ii) scene re-enactments. I typically am put off by scene re-enactments but for whatever reason I wasn't here. Add a layer of slick and pure eye-candy photography (Oslo!, London!, Stockholm! Amsterdam!, Prague!, Mykonos! It's like a James Bond movie), and the end result is quite tasty. Kudos to the three ladies for stepping forward and sharing their story. I cannot even begin to imagine what it must have been like to live through this. As for the Tinder swindler himself, may he get what he deserves.
"The Tinder Swindler" premiered on Netflix this past week. If you are a fan of true crime documentaries, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
Couple of comments: this is the directing debut of UK documentary producer Felicia Morris. Here she brings us the story of, as the movie's title implies, how a slick guy uses the Tinder dating app to prey on women for money. He is not the first guy to do this, and surely also not the last guy. What makes this documentary so surprisingly entertaining is that the 3 victims who bring their story (Cecilie, Swedish woman Pernilla, and Dutch woman Ayleen) turn out to be master story tellers. Indeed, much of the movie is simply letting them talk, albeit backed up by (i) their iPhone communications which all were stored for posterity, and (ii) scene re-enactments. I typically am put off by scene re-enactments but for whatever reason I wasn't here. Add a layer of slick and pure eye-candy photography (Oslo!, London!, Stockholm! Amsterdam!, Prague!, Mykonos! It's like a James Bond movie), and the end result is quite tasty. Kudos to the three ladies for stepping forward and sharing their story. I cannot even begin to imagine what it must have been like to live through this. As for the Tinder swindler himself, may he get what he deserves.
"The Tinder Swindler" premiered on Netflix this past week. If you are a fan of true crime documentaries, I'd readily suggest you check this out, and draw your own conclusion.
- paul-allaer
- 6 feb 2022
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Listen... I always feel bad for people that get scammed but man... some of these women... they kinda got lucky all he did was stealing "their" money
The very first woman decides to "go on a trip to Bulgaria" with a guy she met for coffee... that day... for the first time...
That could've gone SO much worse... and no it's not "hindsight is 20/20". Pretty sure everybody's parents told their kids at some point not to get in a car with strangers... well how's that any different really? Oh he's rich? I guess we can forego logic then...
I honestly was worried that she would end up as a sex slave or dead in a ditch with her kidneys missing
Hate to be that guy but these girls got lucky... it could've been so much worse.
The very first woman decides to "go on a trip to Bulgaria" with a guy she met for coffee... that day... for the first time...
That could've gone SO much worse... and no it's not "hindsight is 20/20". Pretty sure everybody's parents told their kids at some point not to get in a car with strangers... well how's that any different really? Oh he's rich? I guess we can forego logic then...
I honestly was worried that she would end up as a sex slave or dead in a ditch with her kidneys missing
Hate to be that guy but these girls got lucky... it could've been so much worse.
- alexandrejouan
- 6 feb 2022
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My question with all these women was, why didn't they say, "Ask your rich family for the money!"
My mother really did tell me to run the other direction if a guy ever asked to borrow money from me. Boy was she right! So this is my gift to all you women out there - don't lend any guys money.
So - these women did and this documentary shows how it happens and why and how to spot a swindler.
Too many reviewers call the women gold diggers. Stop it. If the roles were reversed, you'd jump on that plane as fast as a woman, so pot/kettle.
As one reviewer put it - it is disturbing (and it is) and wait until you see the ending. Holy crap.
My mother really did tell me to run the other direction if a guy ever asked to borrow money from me. Boy was she right! So this is my gift to all you women out there - don't lend any guys money.
So - these women did and this documentary shows how it happens and why and how to spot a swindler.
Too many reviewers call the women gold diggers. Stop it. If the roles were reversed, you'd jump on that plane as fast as a woman, so pot/kettle.
As one reviewer put it - it is disturbing (and it is) and wait until you see the ending. Holy crap.
- thejdrage
- 3 feb 2022
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A cautionary tale about not trusting online Romeos who seem too good to be true. Depraved serial scammer Shimon Yehuda Hayut is the ideal man for women intent on realizing a Disney fairytale life.
As hideous as Hayut is, the women are also a bit cringey. They all have experience (7 years) looking for love on dating apps but none seem to have ever gained wisdom. They are all very attractive and accomplished, yet they come across as stunted human beings. I still don't know what they want in a mate except money, global travel and gushy cut and paste texts professing love.
Not impressed.
As hideous as Hayut is, the women are also a bit cringey. They all have experience (7 years) looking for love on dating apps but none seem to have ever gained wisdom. They are all very attractive and accomplished, yet they come across as stunted human beings. I still don't know what they want in a mate except money, global travel and gushy cut and paste texts professing love.
Not impressed.
- kaykenney-92413
- 10 feb 2022
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Would they have swiped right if he didn't claim to be a billionaire's son, flash money, etc? Were they really on Tinder to find love... I have some questions. Idk how you can be this naive in your 30's, or how you think Prince Charming is on Tinder. If he's a catch, he's taken! Period. If he asks for money, he's a bum. Run! These are not hard to figure out.
- staciarose20
- 13 feb 2022
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I think the most fascinating part of this story is that of Cecilie Fjellhøy. 1,500 Tinder men scrolled through, lots of dates, and the one man she happens to fall in love with within 5 seconds happens to be a billionaire. I mean, what are the odds of that happening!
- Finalreminder
- 5 feb 2022
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- aevaughn-77305
- 3 feb 2022
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- Lejink
- 13 feb 2022
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This is a really interesting social study. Because the dynamic of the simping male and the exploiting succubus is observable everywhere and well documented. Just head on to OnlyFans or Instagram or any social media platform where swathes of women are making a comfortable living exploiting the male gaze. Whereas, the dynamic of the simping woman and the exploiting incubus is perhaps much less observed and less studied. This seemingly has something to do with the nature of the feminine fantasy which is directed towards a much smaller tier of men at the top of the social structure. So it is far more difficult for a predatory man to create the illusion of being rich and famous in order to trap gullible women than it is for predatory women to create the illusion of being naked and available in order to trap gullible men. So it is very interesting to see what happens when one man had the gall to try it. The documentary itself isn't that well made it is just a number of conversations with the victims. But intriguing nonetheless.
- mickman91-1
- 24 feb 2022
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- ravenclaw_girlrules
- 2 feb 2022
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- arungeorge13
- 1 feb 2022
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- helengracebirdsall
- 3 feb 2022
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- elrknr
- 2 feb 2022
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An entertaining documentary, yet an eye-rolling experience to watch these gullible women chasing all that glitters. Conscious decisions were made in chasing "a rich, successful man" which ended with buyer's remorse.
A man of that wealth, stature, and access would never have the need to be on a dating app.
This documentary should be watched by both men and women as a reminder of the age old saying, "If it seems too good to be true, it probably is."
A man of that wealth, stature, and access would never have the need to be on a dating app.
This documentary should be watched by both men and women as a reminder of the age old saying, "If it seems too good to be true, it probably is."
- cmconnexion
- 4 mar 2022
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I guess this is what can happen to people who swipe past all those poor, but genuine schmucks, who's profile pictures don't contain private jets, yachts and luxury hotels, and choose the ones that do. The irony is that these gormless, vacuous, superficial women lose everything to the person who, if he genuinely had all the trappings he claimed, would NEVER risk losing it all on a punt on Tinder.
- neilcrossland
- 1 feb 2022
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Sorry but I have no sympathy for these women, as they are all in for the money that they actually already had but wanted more and in this case marry the super rich guy who could take care of them. Loaning tens of thousands of dollars to a guy they dated for only a month is pathetic and not worth this story! This is not MeToo, this is MeStupid!
- tomperuhawaii
- 12 feb 2022
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