Desaparecida: O Caso Lucie Blackman
Título original: Keishichô sôsaikka rûshî burakku man jiken
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
6,4/10
4,1 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Julho de 2000. A jovem britânica Lucie Blackman desaparece em Tóquio, dando início a uma investigação internacional e uma busca incansável por justiça.Julho de 2000. A jovem britânica Lucie Blackman desaparece em Tóquio, dando início a uma investigação internacional e uma busca incansável por justiça.Julho de 2000. A jovem britânica Lucie Blackman desaparece em Tóquio, dando início a uma investigação internacional e uma busca incansável por justiça.
Lucie Blackman
- Self
- (cenas de arquivo)
Sophie Blackman
- Self - Lucie's Sister
- (cenas de arquivo)
Tony Blair
- Self - Former Prime Minister of England
- (cenas de arquivo)
Graham Norton
- Self
- (cenas de arquivo)
Avaliações em destaque
Extremely biased story telling, eluding many important facts of the story, including the father receiving 450k£ from the killer to limit his sentence, or the existence of her friend and colleague who had received a phone call from the killer on day one.
Only the father and cops are giving testimonies to re-write History, and skip all the aspects that could hurt Japanese police.
When you check who the director is, you understand the story is told in a way to clean Tokyo police image only.
Netflix should be ashamed of producing such content, without any fact checking, and depicting an absolutely misleading representation of the actual story.
Go on YouTube or listen to podcasts, you will have better quality content to understand the full story instead of wasting your time with this piece of propaganda.
Only the father and cops are giving testimonies to re-write History, and skip all the aspects that could hurt Japanese police.
When you check who the director is, you understand the story is told in a way to clean Tokyo police image only.
Netflix should be ashamed of producing such content, without any fact checking, and depicting an absolutely misleading representation of the actual story.
Go on YouTube or listen to podcasts, you will have better quality content to understand the full story instead of wasting your time with this piece of propaganda.
There is a movie called the "earthquake bird" that takes a really similar tone and everything to this story and even worst because this is real life, the story of lucie was tragic indeed but there are so many others with stories similar to this one and no voice to speak up i think netflix should be doing more documentaries like this so we know about those sad cases there is a similiar active case about a 21 year old girl that flew to japan 16 years ago with a one way ticket and never return to this day no one knows anything about her i there are thousands stories like this we need more, but i agree that we needed to know more about lucie who she was.
Has everything you'd want in a true crime documentary: a fascinating case, tons of archival footage, linear storytelling, very little (if any) re-enactments, a beautiful score and some stunning photography (Tokyo is a beautiful city). Not to mention interviews with the actual people involved. So many docs these days fail in at least one of these areas so it's nice to see one that does it all right for a change.
Obviously it's a sad case and a terrible situation for her family, so you can't fault her father for wanting answers. And that's another fascinating element to this case is the dynamic between her family (father, generally) and the Japanese police who handle things a bit differently than we're used to in the West.
Overall, one of the best true crime docs I've seen this year. Definitely recommend.
Obviously it's a sad case and a terrible situation for her family, so you can't fault her father for wanting answers. And that's another fascinating element to this case is the dynamic between her family (father, generally) and the Japanese police who handle things a bit differently than we're used to in the West.
Overall, one of the best true crime docs I've seen this year. Definitely recommend.
This is a very well done and compelling true crime documentary about the disappearance of a British foreign National in Japan who becomes the linchpin for the investigation into sexual deviance and sexual crime in Japan. The case unveiled a look at how The Japanese police treated sex crimes and crimes against foreigners. The show features archival footage, contemporary interviews, and documents associated with the case. Jake Adelstein, the subject of HOB's Tokyo Vice, is featured as a Western reporter with intimate knowledge of Japan and the Japanese police. The show is good. It is sad, but good. The show has a lot of cultural undertones, and it is tight as far as documentaries go.
Shamelessly disregarding the clumsiness and stupidity of the Japanese police, never talking about the phone calls Philippe recieved on the first day of Lucie missing and police not bothering to trace ,nor about the £450,000 (in 2006) Tim Blackman received to "forgive" Obara. Why was no one else from Lucie's friends and family interviewed? Why was Caritas liver biopsied 15 years later? Why only the people that walked over her blood were there? Why was there no mention of the phone calls Lucie made on the day to inform her friend of her whereabouts which the police decided to ignore? Utterly biased and shamelessly fooling!
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- CuriosidadesNetflix's first documentary film from Singapore.
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- How long is Missing: The Lucie Blackman Case?Fornecido pela Alexa
Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- Países de origem
- Central de atendimento oficial
- Idiomas
- Também conhecido como
- Missing: The Lucie Blackman Case
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração
- 1 h 23 min(83 min)
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
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