Entrevista a Smollett más diálogos con policía, abogados e investigadores que aportan nuevas pruebas. La audiencia juzga la verdad del caso Smollett.Entrevista a Smollett más diálogos con policía, abogados e investigadores que aportan nuevas pruebas. La audiencia juzga la verdad del caso Smollett.Entrevista a Smollett más diálogos con policía, abogados e investigadores que aportan nuevas pruebas. La audiencia juzga la verdad del caso Smollett.
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Opiniones destacadas
Jessie's commitment to the part was impressive.. never broke character and and his true believers that were also interviewed bought it hook line and sinker. Regarding the presentation it gave equal time to the truth and worth watching. Ola and Bola are hilarious and their attorney Gloria was so down to earth.
When Netflix dropped The Truth About Jussie Smollett? On August 22, 2025, it came dressed up as a thoughtful, "multi-perspective" documentary-complete with a question mark poised to signal fair-mindedness. But make no mistake: this film feels more like a cleverly disguised PR vehicle than an honest investigation.
From the get-go, director Gagan Rehill levers the ambiguity of the case-conviction, reversal, competing narratives-to nudge the viewer toward one conclusion: that Smollett's version deserves equal weight. But one can't help but notice the heavy-handed framing. The central tension the doc presents-hate-crime victim or schemer-for-hire-leans uncomfortably toward absolving Smollett, despite the mountain of evidence suggesting otherwise.
Let's be clear on the facts: Smollett was found guilty in 2021 of staging the attack and filing a false police report-convicted on five felony counts and handed a jail sentence. Yes, his conviction was overturned in 2024-but not because the evidence was exonerating. The Illinois Supreme Court reversed the verdict on narrow due-process grounds: prosecutorial misconduct, not innocence.
Yet the film props up Smollett's denial as the moral high ground. One can't help but feel the editing hand gently sets him up as a misunderstood martyr. Meanwhile, you'd expect a fair documentary to weigh the testimonies of the Osundairo brothers-who claimed he hired them to stage the attack-against his increasingly polished defense. Instead, the editing gives Smollett far more sympathy, even as legal documents still imply serious wrongdoing.
And how about that question mark in the title-it smartly deflects criticism. "Oh, it's just asking questions," they'll say. But let's be honest: we all know it's not an open-ended inquiry. It's a Trojan horse for redemption TV.
At the end of the doc, Netflix's armchair detective stance invites viewers to re-evaluate the story of media overreach, police screw-ups, fractured narratives, and institutional bias. Yet what's glaringly omitted in that invitation is the clear line between investigative nuance and sympathy laundering.
Closing Thought (with a wink at Netflix's weakness for edgy doc series): If Netflix is so committed to making every controversial figure "complex," why not go bigger? Maybe they'd like to air Onision's YouTube "documentaries" next-where he claims (with equally persuasive logic and zero evidence) that he's innocent too, because, well... words and feelings.
From the get-go, director Gagan Rehill levers the ambiguity of the case-conviction, reversal, competing narratives-to nudge the viewer toward one conclusion: that Smollett's version deserves equal weight. But one can't help but notice the heavy-handed framing. The central tension the doc presents-hate-crime victim or schemer-for-hire-leans uncomfortably toward absolving Smollett, despite the mountain of evidence suggesting otherwise.
Let's be clear on the facts: Smollett was found guilty in 2021 of staging the attack and filing a false police report-convicted on five felony counts and handed a jail sentence. Yes, his conviction was overturned in 2024-but not because the evidence was exonerating. The Illinois Supreme Court reversed the verdict on narrow due-process grounds: prosecutorial misconduct, not innocence.
Yet the film props up Smollett's denial as the moral high ground. One can't help but feel the editing hand gently sets him up as a misunderstood martyr. Meanwhile, you'd expect a fair documentary to weigh the testimonies of the Osundairo brothers-who claimed he hired them to stage the attack-against his increasingly polished defense. Instead, the editing gives Smollett far more sympathy, even as legal documents still imply serious wrongdoing.
And how about that question mark in the title-it smartly deflects criticism. "Oh, it's just asking questions," they'll say. But let's be honest: we all know it's not an open-ended inquiry. It's a Trojan horse for redemption TV.
At the end of the doc, Netflix's armchair detective stance invites viewers to re-evaluate the story of media overreach, police screw-ups, fractured narratives, and institutional bias. Yet what's glaringly omitted in that invitation is the clear line between investigative nuance and sympathy laundering.
Closing Thought (with a wink at Netflix's weakness for edgy doc series): If Netflix is so committed to making every controversial figure "complex," why not go bigger? Maybe they'd like to air Onision's YouTube "documentaries" next-where he claims (with equally persuasive logic and zero evidence) that he's innocent too, because, well... words and feelings.
I'm embarrassed for Netflix. Jussie can't help himself and it's obvious this is a desperate pitch to resurrect his career. But Netflix is just showing their desperation (and flaunting their politics) with this very weak "documentary". I will seriously consider ending my Netflix subscription once the last season of 'Stranger Things' has ended.
Famous Jussie Smollett is attacked in the small hours, claiming two white men attacked him and put a noose around his neck. A few holes appear in Jussie's story.
I really wanted to believe Jussie's story, I was hoping this would alter my thoughts on it and change the narrative, I'm afraid the lies seem even more evident now.
The story is just all over the place, it's like something out of a comedy farce, if two guys attacked me I don't think I'd be taking my Subway home with me.
After Jussie's failed return last year, that awful holiday movie, this felt like a strong attempt to try and exonerate Jussie and put him back on the market.
There are a couple of interesting people here, I thought the Osundairo brothers seemed like really down to earth and amusing guys, Gloria Schmidt seemed so fun and down to earth, I liked her.
One question though? In Chicago are there no other cameras??
5/10.
I really wanted to believe Jussie's story, I was hoping this would alter my thoughts on it and change the narrative, I'm afraid the lies seem even more evident now.
The story is just all over the place, it's like something out of a comedy farce, if two guys attacked me I don't think I'd be taking my Subway home with me.
After Jussie's failed return last year, that awful holiday movie, this felt like a strong attempt to try and exonerate Jussie and put him back on the market.
There are a couple of interesting people here, I thought the Osundairo brothers seemed like really down to earth and amusing guys, Gloria Schmidt seemed so fun and down to earth, I liked her.
One question though? In Chicago are there no other cameras??
5/10.
Look - some people hate the fact that these kinds of documentaries are on Netflix. I LOVE IT. This further cements the perception of guilt. Comes in handy when enough time has gone by, and enough doting fans have squeaked loudly enough, that people may begin to question what they have heard. Nope. It's true. He's a narcissist who pulled a bad hoax. Others will disagree.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- Países de origen
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Truth About Jussie Smollett?
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h 30min(90 min)
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