'Manhunt: Unabomber' Season Review: Check Out This Brilliant 8-Part Drama, It's Now On Netflix!


⭐ Manhunt: Unabomber ⭐ Season Review ⭐ 8.5/10 ⭐

Moving back in forth in time and bringing a complicated investigation to life, this brilliant eight-part drama based on true events, paints a gripping picture of men obsessed. Ted Kaczynski’s (Paul Bettany) obsessions, of course, were explained in long media accounts of the criminal and his crimes, as well as his letters and manifesto. James Fitzgerald (Sam Worthington), one of the profilers the FBI hire, emerges as a complicated and tortured man. The same insight and leaps of reasoning that allow him to understand the Unabomber are what connects him too closely to the case. We see at the beginning of the series that he has become a Unabomber-like figure himself: a recluse in the woods. What changed the loving family man and cop (who we soon meet in one of the drama's time jumps) into this rough mountain man?

The answers are teased out intriguingly slowly, as we meet the cops on Kacynski's case and see how the FBI closed in on him. One thing this long-form treatment offers that a one-hour procedural can't: We see the grinding effort that building a case requires -- mountains of evidence, dozens of people picking through it, thousands of leads investigated and discarded. And then, ironically, the case's biggest break turns out to be Kacynski's brother, David (Mark Duplass), turning him in (in a roundabout fashion).

The strength of Manhunt: Unabomber is that you don't just see the effort and the irony -- you feel it. This is one crime yarn that deserves its running time.

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