Quartile rating: 6/10 · 1 rating
The line between justice and revenge blurs when a devastated family uses social media to track down the people who killed 24-year-old Crystal Theobald.
A true-crime documentary that gains distinction from its early focus on MySpace as a hunting tool for justice—an unusually specific and time-capsule detail. The story is genuinely gripping and morally complex, blurring vigilante revenge with grief. However, the cinematography is standard Netflix true-crime fare with talking heads and reconstructions, nothing visually distinctive. Acting/interview subjects are compelling but uneven in presentation. The ending delivers some resolution but the moral ambiguity lingers without full payoff, keeping it solidly average overall.