Aaron Hernandez and the Untold Murders of Bristol
- Especial de TV
- 2025
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
6.9/10
135
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaAn approach to the circumstances in Bristol, Connecticut, that bred a community of dangerous men, including three former high school football teammates who went on to become murderers.An approach to the circumstances in Bristol, Connecticut, that bred a community of dangerous men, including three former high school football teammates who went on to become murderers.An approach to the circumstances in Bristol, Connecticut, that bred a community of dangerous men, including three former high school football teammates who went on to become murderers.
Fotos
John Anderson
- Self
- (material de archivo)
Aaron Hernandez
- Self
- (material de archivo)
Terri Hernandez
- Self - Aaron's Mother
- (material de archivo)
Urban Meyer
- Self
- (material de archivo)
Shayanna Jenkins-Hernandez
- Self - Aaron's Fiance
- (material de archivo)
Ursula Ward
- Self - Odin Lloyd's Mother
- (material de archivo)
Opiniones destacadas
This documentary was vile. It can be summed up as what Paul Solotaroff says in the last 5 minutes or so, '...they were victims of circumstance far beyond their control'.
This documentary is a horrible waste of 85 minutes of your life. The Netfix Aaron Hernandez documentary is far better, and here's why. This one tries to paint three murders are angels and victims just because they played football. In this misogynistic display of no accountability, the documentary rehashes old information. The only interesting new details are that related to Aaron's teammates murders, but the documentary spends not more than 10 minutes going over two murders. They do not honor the victims and hardly mention them at all. They have the nerve to bring in one of Aaron's foolish enablers who swears Aaron never killed Odin Lloyd even though there's video and forensic evidence that makes it clear as day he did it.
The only interesting thing we hear is Aaron's reaction to one of his teammates murderous actions, and Aaron is completely unsurprised. Aaron said he always say the aggression in this person. That's the nugget of gold there, Aaron knew. They all knew. But just because they could catch a stupid ball. They were heroes who could never do such a thing.
Patriarchy and misogyny is at it again, trying to coddle and baby grown males who commit horrible crimes. It was all their ex wives' faults. She made him 'snap'. Oh please! This was vile nonsense! Shame on the producers and those who participated in this for a check.
This documentary is a horrible waste of 85 minutes of your life. The Netfix Aaron Hernandez documentary is far better, and here's why. This one tries to paint three murders are angels and victims just because they played football. In this misogynistic display of no accountability, the documentary rehashes old information. The only interesting new details are that related to Aaron's teammates murders, but the documentary spends not more than 10 minutes going over two murders. They do not honor the victims and hardly mention them at all. They have the nerve to bring in one of Aaron's foolish enablers who swears Aaron never killed Odin Lloyd even though there's video and forensic evidence that makes it clear as day he did it.
The only interesting thing we hear is Aaron's reaction to one of his teammates murderous actions, and Aaron is completely unsurprised. Aaron said he always say the aggression in this person. That's the nugget of gold there, Aaron knew. They all knew. But just because they could catch a stupid ball. They were heroes who could never do such a thing.
Patriarchy and misogyny is at it again, trying to coddle and baby grown males who commit horrible crimes. It was all their ex wives' faults. She made him 'snap'. Oh please! This was vile nonsense! Shame on the producers and those who participated in this for a check.
As a singular documentary, this could be considered a good entry point to someone who knows virtually nothing about the cases, but should not be the only reference point for viewers. Aaron Hernandez is the main focus and, despite the mentions of his other teammates, they do not take up as much time in this documentary.
I would implore anyone watching this who wants to know the full story to look elsewhere, as this doesn't delve nearly as deep as other documentaries have. It is also worth noting that some of the input included in this documentary was more subjective and didn't include as many objective facts.
I would implore anyone watching this who wants to know the full story to look elsewhere, as this doesn't delve nearly as deep as other documentaries have. It is also worth noting that some of the input included in this documentary was more subjective and didn't include as many objective facts.
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