AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,5/10
2,3 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Um documentário que analisa o conhecido caso, em grande parte considerado o maior roubo não resolvido da história dos Estados Unidos.Um documentário que analisa o conhecido caso, em grande parte considerado o maior roubo não resolvido da história dos Estados Unidos.Um documentário que analisa o conhecido caso, em grande parte considerado o maior roubo não resolvido da história dos Estados Unidos.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Prêmios
- 1 indicação no total
Duane Weber
- Self - Suspect Number 1
- (cenas de arquivo)
Barbara Dayton
- Self - Suspect Number 2
- (cenas de arquivo)
L.D. Cooper
- Self - Suspect Number 3
- (cenas de arquivo)
Richard Floyd McCoy
- Self - Suspect Number 4
- (cenas de arquivo)
Avaliações em destaque
The film is made decently enough, nothing to complain.
However, it features a series of misleading statements (e.g. The stairs story) and omissions (Cooper wasn't the gentleman he's always said to be, and many other things are simply untrue).
Most, if not all, of these suspects have conclusively been ruled out long ago.
Watch it for entertainment but don't take it for gospel. If you want to research the case you are better off on YouTube (I hate to recommend that), and forums dedicated to the case.
Like a lot of movies, they just took whatever they could to tell "a story", not more, not less.
However, it features a series of misleading statements (e.g. The stairs story) and omissions (Cooper wasn't the gentleman he's always said to be, and many other things are simply untrue).
Most, if not all, of these suspects have conclusively been ruled out long ago.
Watch it for entertainment but don't take it for gospel. If you want to research the case you are better off on YouTube (I hate to recommend that), and forums dedicated to the case.
Like a lot of movies, they just took whatever they could to tell "a story", not more, not less.
This documentary has some interesting cases. Out of the four suspected DB Cooper suspects two seem very credible, while the other two, especially the sex change operation one...are very laughable. The most credible story with sound evidence is Richard McCoy. He pulled off a stunt identical to DB Coopers months after the heist and even looked just like the FBI description of DB Cooper. They went into good detail on why McCoy would have done a second stunt and explained how he was tied to what little evidence the FBI had on DB Cooper.
The other credible story is the woman from Florida who supposedly was married to DB Cooper. He was on his death bed when he admitted to her he was DB Cooper. He lied to her about his identity and it goes into great detail on events in her life with him that pointed out he very well could have been the real Cooper. She also had a compadre who was interested in the Cooper story who did some serious sleuthing to pin point her details and memory while living with him that really did add up to the Cooper case.
The other two lousy stories consist of a woman who claims her uncle was DB Cooper and the other of a man who had a sex change operation and just claimed he was DB Cooper. The woman who claims her uncle was DB Cooper was going off on memory about her childhood of an event where her uncle showed up bloody and bruised with claims of having hijacked an airplane. Yet, he disappeared and was just forgotten about by the family for some reason? It was all really shoddy information and didn't seem legit. Then she forget about this seemingly very profound event in her life until her father was close to his death when he brought up about the time her uncle hijacked a plane. She also claimed her uncle was her favorite relative and liked spending time with him. So after he shows up bloody and bruised and disappears you just forgot about him? Seems really bizarre and none of it really added up. They did a polygraph test on her and she passed...take that for what you will.
The man with the sex change operation didn't even seem like it should have been included on this documentary. It seemed like a story you'd find in a fan fiction tv forum board versus anything the FBI would have taken seriously. Bobby Dayton was a man who knew airplanes and flew them on a regular basis. Further on in his life he decided to get a sex change operation and became Barbara Dayton. During this transitional period a couple who were into planes as well met Barbara and became friends. During a visit at this couples house she out of the blue says she is DB Cooper. Thats basically it, thats the entire story. Other then the fact he/she was well versed with airplanes nothing else is included for evidence. Other than a diary that Barbara kept but for whatever reason around the time of the Cooper hijacking didn't write much down during that period. If my memory serves me right it was the only one out of the four suspects where it mentioned nothing about the FBI looking into it and for good reason.
Over all use your own judgement on it. It's a documentary with two good cases that kept me entertained.
The other credible story is the woman from Florida who supposedly was married to DB Cooper. He was on his death bed when he admitted to her he was DB Cooper. He lied to her about his identity and it goes into great detail on events in her life with him that pointed out he very well could have been the real Cooper. She also had a compadre who was interested in the Cooper story who did some serious sleuthing to pin point her details and memory while living with him that really did add up to the Cooper case.
The other two lousy stories consist of a woman who claims her uncle was DB Cooper and the other of a man who had a sex change operation and just claimed he was DB Cooper. The woman who claims her uncle was DB Cooper was going off on memory about her childhood of an event where her uncle showed up bloody and bruised with claims of having hijacked an airplane. Yet, he disappeared and was just forgotten about by the family for some reason? It was all really shoddy information and didn't seem legit. Then she forget about this seemingly very profound event in her life until her father was close to his death when he brought up about the time her uncle hijacked a plane. She also claimed her uncle was her favorite relative and liked spending time with him. So after he shows up bloody and bruised and disappears you just forgot about him? Seems really bizarre and none of it really added up. They did a polygraph test on her and she passed...take that for what you will.
The man with the sex change operation didn't even seem like it should have been included on this documentary. It seemed like a story you'd find in a fan fiction tv forum board versus anything the FBI would have taken seriously. Bobby Dayton was a man who knew airplanes and flew them on a regular basis. Further on in his life he decided to get a sex change operation and became Barbara Dayton. During this transitional period a couple who were into planes as well met Barbara and became friends. During a visit at this couples house she out of the blue says she is DB Cooper. Thats basically it, thats the entire story. Other then the fact he/she was well versed with airplanes nothing else is included for evidence. Other than a diary that Barbara kept but for whatever reason around the time of the Cooper hijacking didn't write much down during that period. If my memory serves me right it was the only one out of the four suspects where it mentioned nothing about the FBI looking into it and for good reason.
Over all use your own judgement on it. It's a documentary with two good cases that kept me entertained.
Highly entertaining if you watch it as fun entertainment and not as a science show with die hard facts, because some of the people are obviously lying.
Recommend strongly , 8/10
Recommend strongly , 8/10
How do you make such an interesting subject this boring?
The "who" is less interesting when it's something that can never be resolved. The better approach would have been focusing on what drives these people to obsess about the case, and hold onto the theories that they do; something like the documentary on The Shining fan theories (Room 237).
It's presented decently enough, and didn't offend or anger me... it was just dull, really.
There's a 30-minute YouTube video by Lemmino on DB Cooper that's an hour shorter than this and far more interesting.
The "who" is less interesting when it's something that can never be resolved. The better approach would have been focusing on what drives these people to obsess about the case, and hold onto the theories that they do; something like the documentary on The Shining fan theories (Room 237).
It's presented decently enough, and didn't offend or anger me... it was just dull, really.
There's a 30-minute YouTube video by Lemmino on DB Cooper that's an hour shorter than this and far more interesting.
Greetings again from the darkness. Nearly 50 years have passed and it remains the only unsolved Air Piracy case in America. For HBO, documentarian John Dower (MY SCIENTOLOGY MOVIE, 2017) chronicles the investigation and four main suspects in the mystifying D.B. Cooper case. It's a case that has fascinated people and frustrated authorities for five decades.
On November 24, 1971 - Thanksgiving Eve - a man using the name Dan Cooper (a communication mix-up caused him to be later identified as D.B. Cooper) boarded a Northwest Airlines flight in Portland. Once in the air, he handed Flight Attendant Tina Mucklow a note informing that he had a bomb and was hijacking the plane. His demands were simple: $200,000 in cash and 4 parachutes. In Seattle, his demands were met. He released the passengers, keeping only the crew on board. At an altitude of 10,000 feet, Cooper jumped from the Boeing 727 under the cover of darkness and rain over a heavily forested area. As far as authorities are concerned, he's never been seen again.
Some presume he died on the jump, while others turned him into a folk hero. He was credited with an act of defiance during times of economic hardships for many. The "Cult of Cooper" was born, as was one of the great mysteries of the 20th century. Director Dower interviews some key folks and shows clips of interviews and statements of interested parties who have since passed. The structure of the film revolves around the four main suspects ... those who have not been ruled out. Segments are devoted to each of the four: Duane Weber, Robert/Barb Dayton, LD Cooper, and Richard McCoy.
Personal testimony and recollections from relatives and associates of these four leave us with little doubt that a case can be made for each, and those going on camera absolutely believe "theirs" is the infamous DB Cooper. We hear from Duane Weber's wife who states her husband confessed, "I'm Dan Cooper" on his death bed. Robert/Barb Dayton was one of the first me to have a sex change operation, and his neighbors provide details on Dayton's own confession, "I am Dan Cooper". Marla Cooper was 8 years old when the hijacking even took place, and she recalls specifics of her Uncle LD Cooper, and being told "We hijacked the plane" and "We're rich!" Lastly, Richard McCoy was arrested 5 months later for a copycat hijacking. His pattern was quite similar and his facial features almost identical to the DB Copper sketch.
Tina Mucklow was the flight attendant on the hijacked flight and she provides details of that fateful event, as do other members of the flight crew, a passenger who observed most of what happened on the first flight, and a retired FBI agent who worked the case. Two authors, Bruce Smith ("DB Cooper and the FBI: A Case Study of America's Only Unsolved Skyjacking", 2016) and Geoffrey Gray ("Skyjack: The Hunt for DB Cooper", 2011) provide significant insight into the research they have conducted into the investigations. There seems to be plenty of criticism of the FBI in regards to lost evidence (cigarette butts from the flight, fingerprints), and a delayed ground search that gave Cooper a 40 hour head start.
Some reenactments are used here, but a significant portion is filmed interviews with those who have something to say about the investigation, or who DB Cooper might be. The 1980 discovery of 3 bundles of cash with matching serial numbers on the banks of the Columbia River is discussed, and a possible explanation is provided in one of the segments. It's likely you'll come away from this as baffled as the authorities have been for 50 years, but also loaded with some good fodder for holiday conversation (via Zoom, of course).
On November 24, 1971 - Thanksgiving Eve - a man using the name Dan Cooper (a communication mix-up caused him to be later identified as D.B. Cooper) boarded a Northwest Airlines flight in Portland. Once in the air, he handed Flight Attendant Tina Mucklow a note informing that he had a bomb and was hijacking the plane. His demands were simple: $200,000 in cash and 4 parachutes. In Seattle, his demands were met. He released the passengers, keeping only the crew on board. At an altitude of 10,000 feet, Cooper jumped from the Boeing 727 under the cover of darkness and rain over a heavily forested area. As far as authorities are concerned, he's never been seen again.
Some presume he died on the jump, while others turned him into a folk hero. He was credited with an act of defiance during times of economic hardships for many. The "Cult of Cooper" was born, as was one of the great mysteries of the 20th century. Director Dower interviews some key folks and shows clips of interviews and statements of interested parties who have since passed. The structure of the film revolves around the four main suspects ... those who have not been ruled out. Segments are devoted to each of the four: Duane Weber, Robert/Barb Dayton, LD Cooper, and Richard McCoy.
Personal testimony and recollections from relatives and associates of these four leave us with little doubt that a case can be made for each, and those going on camera absolutely believe "theirs" is the infamous DB Cooper. We hear from Duane Weber's wife who states her husband confessed, "I'm Dan Cooper" on his death bed. Robert/Barb Dayton was one of the first me to have a sex change operation, and his neighbors provide details on Dayton's own confession, "I am Dan Cooper". Marla Cooper was 8 years old when the hijacking even took place, and she recalls specifics of her Uncle LD Cooper, and being told "We hijacked the plane" and "We're rich!" Lastly, Richard McCoy was arrested 5 months later for a copycat hijacking. His pattern was quite similar and his facial features almost identical to the DB Copper sketch.
Tina Mucklow was the flight attendant on the hijacked flight and she provides details of that fateful event, as do other members of the flight crew, a passenger who observed most of what happened on the first flight, and a retired FBI agent who worked the case. Two authors, Bruce Smith ("DB Cooper and the FBI: A Case Study of America's Only Unsolved Skyjacking", 2016) and Geoffrey Gray ("Skyjack: The Hunt for DB Cooper", 2011) provide significant insight into the research they have conducted into the investigations. There seems to be plenty of criticism of the FBI in regards to lost evidence (cigarette butts from the flight, fingerprints), and a delayed ground search that gave Cooper a 40 hour head start.
Some reenactments are used here, but a significant portion is filmed interviews with those who have something to say about the investigation, or who DB Cooper might be. The 1980 discovery of 3 bundles of cash with matching serial numbers on the banks of the Columbia River is discussed, and a possible explanation is provided in one of the segments. It's likely you'll come away from this as baffled as the authorities have been for 50 years, but also loaded with some good fodder for holiday conversation (via Zoom, of course).
Você sabia?
- ConexõesReferenced in Film Junk Podcast: Episode 777: Mank + The Queen's Gambit (2020)
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- Storyville: The Hijacker Who Vanished
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- US$ 4.218
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 25 min(85 min)
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