The Staircase.
This is the next in what's becoming a long line of true crime television series. This one, produced by Netflix, is interesting in that most of this is actually an old movie. It was released a few years back; I actually rented it from our Blockbuster store in 2010 or so. It details the death of Kathleen Peterson in 2001 and whether or not her fall was an accident or if she was beaten on the staircase by her husband, novelist and professor Michael Peterson.
The series can be tedious. It's similar to Making a Murderer in that the filmmaker was privy to a lot of information, but much of that information is pretty technical. There are long sections in this where you just see the family reminiscing and talking about their next legal strategy. But when the twists and turns do come, they're pretty spectacular.
The last three or four episodes of the series focus on new information put together after the original documentary was released. Much of this new stuff focuses on Michael Peterson's continuing appeals and how those turn out, and also on his family, who mainly sticks beside him through the ordeal. The most interesting part of this is Peterson's family and how they have both been tortured by tragedy and yet have remained by their father's side, even as more and more evidence comes out against him.
Recommended for true crime buffs, but an edge-of-your-seat thrillride this isn't.
This is the next in what's becoming a long line of true crime television series. This one, produced by Netflix, is interesting in that most of this is actually an old movie. It was released a few years back; I actually rented it from our Blockbuster store in 2010 or so. It details the death of Kathleen Peterson in 2001 and whether or not her fall was an accident or if she was beaten on the staircase by her husband, novelist and professor Michael Peterson.
The series can be tedious. It's similar to Making a Murderer in that the filmmaker was privy to a lot of information, but much of that information is pretty technical. There are long sections in this where you just see the family reminiscing and talking about their next legal strategy. But when the twists and turns do come, they're pretty spectacular.
The last three or four episodes of the series focus on new information put together after the original documentary was released. Much of this new stuff focuses on Michael Peterson's continuing appeals and how those turn out, and also on his family, who mainly sticks beside him through the ordeal. The most interesting part of this is Peterson's family and how they have both been tortured by tragedy and yet have remained by their father's side, even as more and more evidence comes out against him.
Recommended for true crime buffs, but an edge-of-your-seat thrillride this isn't.
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