Amy Lynn Bradley, de 23 años, desaparece durante un crucero familiar el 24 de marzo de 1998. Un documental de 3 partes explora teorías y sigue la búsqueda familiar de respuestas.Amy Lynn Bradley, de 23 años, desaparece durante un crucero familiar el 24 de marzo de 1998. Un documental de 3 partes explora teorías y sigue la búsqueda familiar de respuestas.Amy Lynn Bradley, de 23 años, desaparece durante un crucero familiar el 24 de marzo de 1998. Un documental de 3 partes explora teorías y sigue la búsqueda familiar de respuestas.
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This is an interesting yet sad true story of a young woman who went missing on a cruise ship.
It is in 3 parts.
The events occurred more than 25 years ago.
The family who was together with her on the cruise ship have never stopped grieving and hold out beliefs that she is still alive.
One theory is she went overboard unintentionally or otherwise.
Another theory is that she was taken from the ship and used for sex trafficking.
A spotlight falls on one of the crew members.
There are some witnesses claiming to have seen her after she disappeared.
So what happened and is she still alive or dead?
My own view is: with all the publicity over this case can one really believe that she is still with us?
The family are clinging to the view its' better not to lose hope.... ...so good luck to them....
A well presented production.
7/10.
It is in 3 parts.
The events occurred more than 25 years ago.
The family who was together with her on the cruise ship have never stopped grieving and hold out beliefs that she is still alive.
One theory is she went overboard unintentionally or otherwise.
Another theory is that she was taken from the ship and used for sex trafficking.
A spotlight falls on one of the crew members.
There are some witnesses claiming to have seen her after she disappeared.
So what happened and is she still alive or dead?
My own view is: with all the publicity over this case can one really believe that she is still with us?
The family are clinging to the view its' better not to lose hope.... ...so good luck to them....
A well presented production.
7/10.
Like all Netflix documentaries this was a sensationalized overview of what happened to Amy Bradley. Though it does a good job with the basic facts it glosses over questions that are obvious to the viewer in favor of sensationalized "gotcha" interviews.
Amy was a passenger on a cruise ship. The interesting thing is that she went missing from her room. She was seen at 5:30 am by her father on the balcony and then she was gone by 6:00 am. Her shoes were still there and the table was moved close to the railing. The room was tiny with three other people sleeping in it. So there is no chance anyone took her forcibly out of the room.
Over the course of 20+ years a few people have claimed to see Amy. But most are not credible. (ironically Netflix next showed me a documentary on how identifications in criminal cases are wrong). What was most pathetic for me was this documentary highlighting that some guy who runs an Amy Bradley website has someone from Barbados clicking on photos of the family. They treat that as evidence Amy is there clicking... but, in this day and age... never contacting anyone?
It is sadly obvious. Twenty years of disappearance without any contact means dead. They do go into the facts concerning Amy being a lesbian in 1998 and how that could have played into a decision to end her life... but this is Netflix and I am pretty sure they are glossing that over.
If you don't know anything about the case I would watch.
Amy was a passenger on a cruise ship. The interesting thing is that she went missing from her room. She was seen at 5:30 am by her father on the balcony and then she was gone by 6:00 am. Her shoes were still there and the table was moved close to the railing. The room was tiny with three other people sleeping in it. So there is no chance anyone took her forcibly out of the room.
Over the course of 20+ years a few people have claimed to see Amy. But most are not credible. (ironically Netflix next showed me a documentary on how identifications in criminal cases are wrong). What was most pathetic for me was this documentary highlighting that some guy who runs an Amy Bradley website has someone from Barbados clicking on photos of the family. They treat that as evidence Amy is there clicking... but, in this day and age... never contacting anyone?
It is sadly obvious. Twenty years of disappearance without any contact means dead. They do go into the facts concerning Amy being a lesbian in 1998 and how that could have played into a decision to end her life... but this is Netflix and I am pretty sure they are glossing that over.
If you don't know anything about the case I would watch.
Why didn't anyone,go knocking down doors? Especially after any sightings.
Talk to hospitals,schools,businesses.
Nothing significant happened either,when that website got repeated location hits.
If she did get pregnant based on witness testimony about Amy mentioning kids,that would mean some health/child provider or even an educator might have information.
If the kids Amy mentioned weren't hers it still means,there is kids she was around or even their families.
Was like nobody really looked past certain ship distance,due to this excuse or that.
Netflix did seem to drag things out more for sensationalism than anything,however maybe fresh eyes on the case might bring closure good or bad.
Who knows.. If Amy has kids & with technology now,anything could finally be possible.
Lastly who cares about influencers,has creditable reporting died?
Talk to hospitals,schools,businesses.
Nothing significant happened either,when that website got repeated location hits.
If she did get pregnant based on witness testimony about Amy mentioning kids,that would mean some health/child provider or even an educator might have information.
If the kids Amy mentioned weren't hers it still means,there is kids she was around or even their families.
Was like nobody really looked past certain ship distance,due to this excuse or that.
Netflix did seem to drag things out more for sensationalism than anything,however maybe fresh eyes on the case might bring closure good or bad.
Who knows.. If Amy has kids & with technology now,anything could finally be possible.
Lastly who cares about influencers,has creditable reporting died?
Netflix's three-part documentary on Amy Bradley grips with emotion but fails as investigation. Instead of cutting implausible theories, it indulges them. Witness accounts are treated as fact, though any detective knows memory under fatigue, alcohol, and hindsight is unreliable. Hard evidence is what matters, and the series barely touches it.
The "crew conspiracy" theory collapses immediately. Twenty-seven years, no anomalies, no leaks, no history of criminal activity among the staff. A smuggling plot would have required multiple conspirators, sustained silence, and operational risk that simply never happened. The idea she walked off is equally implausible: Amy was young, attractive, and would have been noticed-especially barefoot at dawn, carrying no bag, after a sleepless night. Male crew in particular would have seen her. She did not disembark unseen.
She was also safe on her balcony. Extraction from there was not possible without family or nearby passengers hearing or seeing. What remains, after eliminating noise and fantasy, is the only plausible explanation: Amy, overwhelmed, in acute distress but without a planned suicide, went overboard. No attempt to swim, carried out by currents, never recovered. Painful, but parsimonious.
Netflix could have told that disciplined story-constraints, timelines, elimination of the impossible. Instead, it served speculation. Compelling television, yes, but not forensic truth.
The "crew conspiracy" theory collapses immediately. Twenty-seven years, no anomalies, no leaks, no history of criminal activity among the staff. A smuggling plot would have required multiple conspirators, sustained silence, and operational risk that simply never happened. The idea she walked off is equally implausible: Amy was young, attractive, and would have been noticed-especially barefoot at dawn, carrying no bag, after a sleepless night. Male crew in particular would have seen her. She did not disembark unseen.
She was also safe on her balcony. Extraction from there was not possible without family or nearby passengers hearing or seeing. What remains, after eliminating noise and fantasy, is the only plausible explanation: Amy, overwhelmed, in acute distress but without a planned suicide, went overboard. No attempt to swim, carried out by currents, never recovered. Painful, but parsimonious.
Netflix could have told that disciplined story-constraints, timelines, elimination of the impossible. Instead, it served speculation. Compelling television, yes, but not forensic truth.
Back in 1998, a family set off for a holiday on board a cruise ship. One evening, their daughter, Amy Bradley, vanished without a trace. Efforts to find her proved fruitless, and over the years, Amy has apparently been spotted regularly.
This is such a chilling and incredibly sad story; her poor family is clearly haunted by her disappearance, and the lack of closure must be the worst thing.
This is a very well-made documentary. Three episodes were about right; it explores some interesting ideas and some fairly baffling conspiracy theories.
It makes you aware of one thing: if you go missing on a ship, you are in serious trouble; international waters, etc. You are very much in the hands of the captain, and if they don't want to know...
Several powerful interviews, primarily from her friends and loved ones, as well as an eye-opening one from Kirk Detweiler, a staff member whose attitude is somewhat remarkable.
Judy Maurer came across as the most sincere of the witnesses, all I could think think of, was why didn't she fall the Police?
Decades on, we can hope she's living well somewhere; it just seems so unlikely. People love a conspiracy theory, but she seemed to have a closeness with people at home, especially her brother, she'd have made contact somehow.
7/10.
This is such a chilling and incredibly sad story; her poor family is clearly haunted by her disappearance, and the lack of closure must be the worst thing.
This is a very well-made documentary. Three episodes were about right; it explores some interesting ideas and some fairly baffling conspiracy theories.
It makes you aware of one thing: if you go missing on a ship, you are in serious trouble; international waters, etc. You are very much in the hands of the captain, and if they don't want to know...
Several powerful interviews, primarily from her friends and loved ones, as well as an eye-opening one from Kirk Detweiler, a staff member whose attitude is somewhat remarkable.
Judy Maurer came across as the most sincere of the witnesses, all I could think think of, was why didn't she fall the Police?
Decades on, we can hope she's living well somewhere; it just seems so unlikely. People love a conspiracy theory, but she seemed to have a closeness with people at home, especially her brother, she'd have made contact somehow.
7/10.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- Amy Bradley Is Missing
- Locaciones de filmación
- Curacao(location)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 45min
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.35 : 1
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