The vanishing at the Cecil hotel
The vanishing at the Cecil hotel
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Bucksspeedyboy

Original Poster:

142 posts

77 months

Saturday 13th February 2021
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Anyone else watched this on Netflix yet? We binge-watched all 4 episodes last night. Quite interesting but at least one episode too long. The way people who only knew about the facts of the case from the internet but then thought they knew more than the police and coroner involved with the case was amazing. But it showed how social media can distort the facts and start a witch-hunt.

BadOrangePete

860 posts

67 months

Saturday 13th February 2021
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Yeah felt for that Morbid guy. It was obvious he's just was playing up to the SCARY-DEATH-METAL image. Didn't help himself with the weird 'I'm innocent' video though

Wacky Racer

40,647 posts

270 months

Saturday 13th February 2021
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Watched the Cecil hotel one last night, shocked by the poverty on skid row. A seedy hotel that was beautiful pre 1920.


Se7enheaven

1,965 posts

187 months

Saturday 13th February 2021
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Have to say it’s one of the worst Netflix crime documentaries I’ve seen. Persevered to the end ,but it’s about 3 episodes too long IMO. And does nothing to show compassion to the poor girls family. Just highlights some narcissistic tossers on youtube.

4Q

3,595 posts

167 months

Sunday 14th February 2021
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Watched the first episode today and couldn’t bare any more. What a poor excuse for a documentary, especially one spread over 4 episodes. I expected better from Netflix given their recent output.
A poor young girl with bipolar disorder can’t get an elevator to work because she’s pressed the door hold button by mistake in her agitated state and then for some reason goes to the roof, climbs in a water tank and drowns. A load of weirdos on the internet then try and spin it in to something more sinister (or even supernatural) when the police found no evidence of foul play. Coroners verdict - accidental drowning perhaps caused by her mental health issues.

Edited by 4Q on Sunday 14th February 09:25

Eric Mc

124,788 posts

288 months

Sunday 14th February 2021
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I made it through three episodes the other night. I thought it was stretched a bit over three programmes - let alone four. It was interesting enough but a bit thin - and way too much silly speculation about the paranormal.

The poor girl had mental health issues and that explains her fate - whether someone else was involved or not.

I wonder if the Cecil Hotel's business has picked up as a result of the programme. It has a very interesting, if rather macabre history.

Back in 1984, a friend of mine and myself took a Greyhound bus tour of the northern part of the USA, staying at cheap hostels and hotels. One place we stayed was at the Erie Hotel in Cleveland, Ohio. It had a lot of similarities with the Cecil - weird guests, strange goings on outside etc etc. We stayed just the one night and legged it to Cincinnati.

I reckon most American cities have at least one hotel like the Cecil.

595Heaven

3,136 posts

101 months

Sunday 14th February 2021
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We got about 75% through the first episode last night before giving up. Far too much filler material to pad things out

Tom1312

1,173 posts

169 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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Definitely the worst of the true crime docs on Netflix as already stated.

Watched it with my wife who immediately said, she thought the girl would be bipolar and having a mental health crisis after watching her behaviour in the lift...

Lo and behold poor thing had not been taking her medication, had a crisis and ended up climbing into the tanks to escape whatever she had convinced herself was after her.

I though the most interesting part of the documentary was how narcissistic and odd some of the 'investigators' were and the lack of empathy for the family.

I think they went into filming thinking they may find a lot more to talk about than they actually did? Seemed to have an awfully large amount of filler.


tejr

3,423 posts

187 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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It was typical Netflix.. Take a 1hour story and spread it over 4...

It wasn't too bad overall, but the whole time it felt as though they were being vague about the tank lid being closed and didn't follow up on it properly. And it was obvious why by the end because it would have given the game away straight away.

I did feel bad for morbid too, especially as the time stamps in his YouTube video must have shown people with half a brain cell that he had posted the video of the Cecil a year before.

Eric Mc

124,788 posts

288 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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Tom1312 said:
Definitely the worst of the true crime docs on Netflix as already stated.

Watched it with my wife who immediately said, she thought the girl would be bipolar and having a mental health crisis after watching her behaviour in the lift...

Lo and behold poor thing had not been taking her medication, had a crisis and ended up climbing into the tanks to escape whatever she had convinced herself was after her.

I though the most interesting part of the documentary was how narcissistic and odd some of the 'investigators' were and the lack of empathy for the family.

I think they went into filming thinking they may find a lot more to talk about than they actually did? Seemed to have an awfully large amount of filler.
Yep - it was the internet "sleuths" who turned out to be the more interesting aspect of the programme - even if most of them came over as weird in their own ways.

P-Jay

11,249 posts

214 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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tejr said:
It was typical Netflix.. Take a 1hour story and spread it over 4...

I can't disagree. We've seen 2, and will probably watch the last 2 this week.

I did find myself wondering, if viewers pealed away all the sort-of-hinting-at supernatural stuff, and the conspiracy theory because was a virial video for a few months years ago bits, it's a pretty short, not overly exceptional, sad tale that would, yep, make for a great one-hour programme.

Last years "you don't fk with cats" had a similar vibe, but all the Social Media warrior stuff was at least interesting to a point, even if, it had little to do with the investigation and ending.

Night Stalker however is well worthy of 4 hours of anyone's time



mick987

1,769 posts

133 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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Worst thing I have watched on Netflix for a long time. Gave up after 2 episodes.

FunkyNige

9,718 posts

298 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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tejr said:
It was typical Netflix.. Take a 1hour story and spread it over 4...
Totally agree, it's an interesting story looking back at a viral video from a few years back, what the internet sleuths were thinking, who it affected but they didn't half stretch it out a lot.

oobster

7,575 posts

234 months

Monday 15th February 2021
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P-Jay said:
tejr said:
It was typical Netflix.. Take a 1hour story and spread it over 4...

I can't disagree. We've seen 2, and will probably watch the last 2 this week.

I did find myself wondering, if viewers pealed away all the sort-of-hinting-at supernatural stuff, and the conspiracy theory because was a virial video for a few months years ago bits, it's a pretty short, not overly exceptional, sad tale that would, yep, make for a great one-hour programme.

Last years "you don't fk with cats" had a similar vibe, but all the Social Media warrior stuff was at least interesting to a point, even if, it had little to do with the investigation and ending.

Night Stalker however is well worthy of 4 hours of anyone's time
Completely agree, Night Stalker is a very good documentary. Night Stalker is as good as the Cecil Hotel docu is bad. A one hour story - absolutely.

Oakey

27,969 posts

239 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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tejr said:
It was typical Netflix.. Take a 1hour story and spread it over 4...

It wasn't too bad overall, but the whole time it felt as though they were being vague about the tank lid being closed and didn't follow up on it properly. And it was obvious why by the end because it would have given the game away straight away.

I did feel bad for morbid too, especially as the time stamps in his YouTube video must have shown people with half a brain cell that he had posted the video of the Cecil a year before.
The handyman literally said in the first episode (at least I think it was the first) "I climbed up on to the tank and the hatch was open and I looked in and there was the girl, then I closed the hatch and told the manager". Cue the web sleuths asking "How could she have closed the lid?!" for the next 3.5 episodes.

Percy.

1,083 posts

97 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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There is a version of this story in the "Horror at the Cecil Hotel" series, however it has a different 'crime' / 'mystery' in each episode, much better than the Netflix series in my opinion.


Bam89

645 posts

124 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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Agree with much of the comments here, but I have to say that the parts about the LAM-ELISA test for tuberculosis and the bookstore having a domain name that matched to the zip code of the cemetery where she was buried did raise a few eyebrows in our house! Some very weird coincidences

happie33

289 posts

158 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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+1 in agreement - worst true "crime" doc on netflix by a mile.
Internet sleuths -- as posted before - how do they think they know more that the coroner, the police and the staff at the hotel.....

Night stalker is excellent ,
American family next door (or something like that) --- most shocking ending -- still sends shivers.

Suppose netflix are allowed 1 shoddy documentary compared to the mostly excellent stuff they churn out.

Dr Jekyll

23,820 posts

284 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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If she'd been found in the first search it would barely have made the papers. It was the three month gap that caused all the strange theories, plus the police not broadcasting her mental state. But the theorists just wouldn't drop it once the body was found.

I don't even blame the internet sleuths particularly. As far as they knew she had behaved oddly for no apparent reason then vanished from the hotel without anyone seeing her leave. So on the face of it genuinely intriguing. They just should have been willing to recognise when all their speculations had become unnecessary hypotheses.


BobsPigeon

749 posts

62 months

Tuesday 16th February 2021
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Agree with most of the above, Neflix need to learn just because they can do 4 hours on a story didn't mean they should and this is from someone who watched all of "Making a Murderer".

Felt cheated at the end of this, they deliberately hid the true nature of the narrative.