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IMDbPro

Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory

  • 2011
  • Not Rated
  • 2h 1m
IMDb RATING
8.0/10
11K
YOUR RATING
Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory (2011)
A further investigation into the arrest of three teenagers who were wrongfully convicted of killing three young boys in Arkansas and spent nearly 20 years in prison before being released because DNA evidence proved their innocence.
Play trailer1:30
1 Video
23 Photos
CrimeDocumentary

A further followup of the case of the West Memphis Three and the decades long fight to exonerate them that finally gained traction with new DNA evidence.A further followup of the case of the West Memphis Three and the decades long fight to exonerate them that finally gained traction with new DNA evidence.A further followup of the case of the West Memphis Three and the decades long fight to exonerate them that finally gained traction with new DNA evidence.

  • Directors
    • Joe Berlinger
    • Bruce Sinofsky
  • Stars
    • Gary Gitchell
    • Todd Moore
    • Dana Moore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    8.0/10
    11K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Joe Berlinger
      • Bruce Sinofsky
    • Stars
      • Gary Gitchell
      • Todd Moore
      • Dana Moore
    • 30User reviews
    • 27Critic reviews
    • 85Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Nominated for 1 Oscar
      • 5 wins & 6 nominations total

    Videos1

    U.S. Version
    Trailer 1:30
    U.S. Version

    Photos23

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    Top cast60

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    Gary Gitchell
    • Self - Former Chief Investigator, West Memphis Police
    • (archive footage)
    Todd Moore
    • Self - Parent of Michael Moore
    • (archive footage)
    Dana Moore
    • Self - Parent of Michael Moore
    • (archive footage)
    Pam Hobbs
    Pam Hobbs
    • Self - Mother of Stevie Branch
    • (archive footage)
    Terry Hobbs
    Terry Hobbs
    • Self - Stepfather of Stevie Branch
    Melissa Byers
    • Self - Mother of Christopher Byers
    • (archive footage)
    John Mark Byers
    John Mark Byers
    • Self - Stepfather of Christopher Byers
    Damien Wayne Echols
    Damien Wayne Echols
    • Self - Perpetrator
    • (as Damien Echols)
    Jason Baldwin
    Jason Baldwin
    • Self - Perpetrator
    Jessie Misskelley
    Jessie Misskelley
    • Self - Perpetrator
    • (as Jessie Misskelley Jr.)
    John Philipsborn
    • Self - Post-Conviction Attorney for Jason Baldwin
    Don Horgan
    • Self - Post-Conviction Attorney for Damien Echols
    John N. Fogleman
    • Self - Prosecuting Attorney
    • (as John Fogleman)
    Mike Allen
    Mike Allen
    • Self - Detective, West Memphis Police
    • (archive footage)
    Domini Teer
    • Self - Suspect's Girlfriend
    • (archive footage)
    Larry Roberts
    • Self - Neighbor
    • (archive footage)
    Joni Dwyer
    • Self - Jason Baldwin's Neighbor
    • (archive footage)
    Jerry Driver
    Jerry Driver
    • Self - Former West Memphis Juvenile Officer
    • Directors
      • Joe Berlinger
      • Bruce Sinofsky
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews30

    8.011.3K
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    Featured reviews

    8zetes

    Great job!

    The tale of the West Memphis 3 came to an end this past year, and Joe Berlinger's and Bruce Sinofsky's advocacy doc trilogy comes to an end, as well, and quite satisfyingly. Watching this third installment is quite painful, even with the mostly happy ending, because it cuts back and forth between the past and the present, showing us just how long these men spent in jail - literally over half their lives. It's particularly touching to see Damien Echols, the only one of the three who was sentenced to death (a sentence which was never off the table until he was freed), grow from an awkward, certainly skeevy-looking teenager to an intelligent, well-spoken adult. One has to wonder what he would have been like if none of this had ever happened. This doc has a lot to cover (you could probably get the gist of the whole series just by watching this one), and in a way it feels a tad unwieldy and perhaps unfocused. But it still does a great job. I sincerely hope the WM3 can now find some peace.
    chaos-rampant

    Closure, sometimes less

    There are some pretty eyeopening realizations raised by this case of the Memphis Three but for me these are poignantly tucked away in the first film. That one really was a searing depiction of ignorance and delusion worthy of Herzog, in large part because it was unfolding 'now' in some backwoods court that was deciding the lives of kids.

    This has an altogether different aim. It presses a case that had by then garnered wide traction, attempts some investigative journalism about who really did it and offers a summation of a fight that was justly won, however late for these people. It was the third film at this point, everyone by now looks more accustomed to the presence of the camera, more self-conscious about us being there to see. It has closure and a moral.

    So it doesn't feel like we are catching ignorance unawares and seeing it as it mangles lives. I see instead an article about how terrible it is. I'm glad that it documents what it does of course, dismayed at the redneck judge who is now in the state senate, but that's it.
    9wfhbear

    History Keeper

    Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory (2011)

    Excellent use of first person video archives to bring the viewer up to date regarding the crime, it's casualties, and developments. Smashing use of new video interviews, study of involvement and final results of the entire episode surrounding the three accused in this criminal case. The documentary is well put together. Video and sound are excellent.

    This is a true historical document that shows a "Crime in America" from start to bitter end. My twenty six year as a law enforcement officer of which twenty were as a death investigator give me a unique opinion of case facts.

    It was a genuinely interesting experience for me to look at this documentary from an outside perspective using no real explored physical evidence or deduction.

    It intrigued me to follow the case through media coverage, photographic and video graphic statements, as well as personal thoughts, assumptions, and fabrications. This was absolutely what could be expected for the information available to the general public. I have never had to look at information in this manner of privacy and what is available for the average citizen.
    10Quinoa1984

    Hindsight is 20/20, but perception is 9/10th's of the law

    By the end of this series of films by Joe Berlinger and (sadly the late) Bruce Sinofsky, we have gone through a long journey full of missed (or more accurately botched) opportunities by the Arkansas legal system on multiple fronts to find the three men (at the time teenagers) innocent. And it's hard to argue that they were, despite what comes out at the end, but I'll come to that in a moment. There's still Metallica on the soundtrack, though I wonder if 'Bittersweet Symphony' would have been too on the nose.

    Part three is mostly set ten to eleven years after the events of the second 'Paradise Lost' movie, and a lot has changed in the years since the new millennium came around and things like new statutes in the state and new evidence peaks its head into existence (and better legal defenses for the three as well). But there are many surprises; the greatest and most unexpected one is a complete 180 from how one saw John Mark Byers. It may speak to the potential for the filmmakers being manipulative, going from positing him as a villain to something of a redeemed person, but it seems a little more complex than that. One may forget watching this film (it isn't mentioned directly) that at the end of part 2 Byers was off to prison.

    Maybe that changed him. Or just ten years and that monumental press conference with the host of legal experts - one from the FBI and one involved in the Ted Bundy case - can change a person's mind. But one of the things that's so absorbing this time around is how Byers, previously a Character with a capital C (one may or may not think watching part 2 he'd be capable of the crimes, it's left up in the air almost by how forceful he was in it), uses his knack for being outspoken for the side of the innocent, which he believes now they are (the dead wife is not mentioned, but that's another story altogether).

    If there's one small criticism of the film is that there's a lot of footage from the past two films, with the first one shown from the original negatives (hence why they look so scratchy). But I think it's a necessary narrative angle since by this point there may be people coming to this documentary who may have not seen the other films in a while (or, presumably given the nature of channel-flipping TV and ADD) to bring things up and make it a complete narrative. I actually appreciated the use of footage here more than in part 2, and it helped to make a point-counter-point method for the first half of the film; so much time has passed, after all, that the new experts and lawyers and people of that nature could comment on this or that that was presented before, from the alleged occult symbols (basically debunked here as BS) or, most of all, the lack of DNA.

    There's so much that comes down in this film that if one comes away at the end and still thinks Echols, Baldwin and Misskelley killed all three of the boys in 1993 then, well, at the least there's little room for any reasonable doubt in your mind based on ALL of the evidence (and as the chapter heading goes here, All is All). But perhaps the thing that will make me revisit this film over time is the fact that the potential - actual - killer comes up as a *different* father, Terry Hobbs, and while on the surface seeming to be less of a Force of Nature like Mark, he's actually an even more fascinating person to just stare at. Which, by the way, you get a lot of time for; via deposition videos, the audience basically gets to see up front what this guy is all about as far as his actual character. I really loved how the filmmakers didn't have to dig too deep to find moments that revealed this person in a whole new light than one saw in part 1; indeed I want to revisit that first part almost immediately to see if any of the signs were there (those little smirks, the bullish expressions) and if they were hard to miss.

    Ultimately the West Memphis 3 were freed, but it was based in layman's terms on the justice system saying 'eh, get the hell out of here.' The Alford Plea let the men out, all now in their 30's, but the catch is that they can say they're innocent but plead guilty. One of the things that makes the form of documentary filmmaking so unpredictable and so vital and, in moments like these, so highly charged that it would be difficult to possibly take as a drama, are the turns a story could take. And yet in the Paradise Lost series, all the way through the end of this saga, there's this sense that the entire Justice system, from the police to the prosecutors (probably they come off not quite AS bad as everyone else, but close enough), to the jurors (or that one juror for sure) to the unmovable judge himself, it's all set up to say 'we are right, and you are wrong.'

    There are incredible and serious implications and questions that are raised due to what can be read very easily in this story, and a lot of it has to do with class (would these men have been put away if they came from families outside of trailer parks and low-incomes) and status (the 'black-Satan-occult BS). It's a sobering, harrowing, tragic story, and it's all told by these directors with clarity and focus and urgency.
    8SnoopyStyle

    justice?

    The filmmakers return to update the case of the West Memphis Three. In 1993, three boys Steve Branch, Michael Moore, and Christopher Byers were murdered in the woods. In 1994, three older boys Damien Wayne Echols, Jason Baldwin, and Jessie Misskelley were convicted for those crimes. The first half of this movie basically recaps the first two documentaries. John Mark Byers, stepfather of Christopher Byers, makes peace with Echols and is now convinced of their innocence. In turn, Echols apologizes for accusing John. For me, the most damning is the accusation against the jury foreman Kent Arnold. There is new DNA evidence against Terry Hobbs, Steve Branch's stepfather, but it's not that convincing for me. The Three is able to win a legal victory and after their judge moved on as a State Senator, the guys finally accepted an Alford plea essentially guilty but maintaining their innocence.

    Is this justice? It's hard to say. The most obvious problem for the justice system and this movie as a drama is that nobody is in prison for the boys' murders. For a documentary, that's always the limitation. The real world doesn't always have a neat happy ending. They are able to point the finger at Terry Hobbs but the second movie pointed the finger at Byers. There is nothing done against the various people who did harm against justice in this case. It is able to wrap up the odyssey of the West Memphis Three but justice for the murders may never be done.

    More like this

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Todd and Dana Moore, the parents of 8 year-old victim Michael, wrote a letter to the Academy of Motion Pictures Arts and Sciences asking that the film be removed from consideration. In the letter they said that the film glorifies Damien Wayne Echols, Jason Baldwin and Jessie Misskelley. Director Joe Berlinger had in fact acknowledged during an interview with salon.com that he determined Echols was innocent after speaking with him for five minutes prior to the trial. Despite the Moore's request the film was nominated for Best Documentary, Features for the 84th Annual Academy Awards. It lost to Undefeated (2011).
    • Goofs
      Michael's dad says he hopes the West Memphis Three are burned at the stake, like in Salem. He is referring to the Salem witch trials, in which none of the convicted were executed that way. They were hanged. This is a popular misconception, that confuses colonial times with the medieval.
    • Quotes

      Damien Wayne Echols: If I focused on the things I can't change, the things that have hurt me, what people have done to me, then they would have already broken me. They would have killed me inside and out. I can get up in the morning and I don't feel sorry for myself, I don't hate my life. You have a lot of people in here that all they can think about is what they don't have and how much they want out and how much they want something else. But for some reason, this situation has helped me to see more of what I do have and to be thankful for that. You know, I have, in a lot of ways, I have a truly incredible life.

    • Alternate versions
      The directors said that audiences at the Toronto International Film Festival in September 2011 would be the only audiences to see the film in that version. The reason is that events which took place the previous month necessitated a new ending to the film.
    • Connections
      Featured in West of Memphis (2012)
    • Soundtracks
      Welcome Home (Sanitarium)
      Performed by Metallica

      Written by James Hetfield, Lars Ulrich and Kirk Hammett

      Published by Creeping Death Music (ASCAP)

      Courtesy of Elektra Entertainment Corp

      By arrangement with Warner Music Group Film & TV Licensing

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    FAQ15

    • How long is Paradise Lost 3: Purgatory?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 13, 2012 (Brazil)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • 失樂園3:煉獄
    • Filming locations
      • West Memphis, Arkansas, USA
    • Production companies
      • RadicalMedia
      • HBO Documentary Films
      • Home Box Office (HBO)
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 2h 1m(121 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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