Mini-series - 8 episodes
Buy Manhunt: Unabomber on Amazon
Watch Manhunt: Unabomber on Netflix
Created by: Andrew Sodroski, Jim Clemente, Tony Gittelson
Directed by: David Ayer
Starring: Sam Worthington, Jeremy Bobb, Ben Weber, Chris Noth, Paul Bettany, Mark Duplas
Rated: TV-14
Plot
Faced with few clues and an increasingly panicked public, the FBI calls on a new kind of profiler to help track down the infamous Unabomber with this in-depth look at how the FBI tracked him down.
Verdict
An engrossing look at a historical event. The true story part gives this terrorism story a lot of intrigue as we see the successes and failures of the investigation. While this falls into the oft used protagonist who everyone discounts, that doesn't take much away from the story. We even get into the history of the Unabomber, and the series tries to make us feel sympathy for him. The scale of the pursuit is astounding, and the break in the case is facinating. While the FBI got their man, they sacrificed a few people in the pursuit.
Watch it.
Review
The opening monologue, presumably from the unabomber, is effective. It's amazing how the mail operates and by the same turn dangerous, revealing insight into how he worked. This is cross cut with Sam Worthington's character Agent Fitzgerald's first starting the case and after the unabomber was caught. Fitzgerald is a profilers, constantly ridiculed as not real police and his ideas are dismissed despite being accurate. It's nothing we haven't seen before, but I do give the FBI credit, they have years of profiles with top profilers telling them each time they need to start over, so a brand new agent telling them the same thing is easy to dismiss.
Agent Jim Fitzgerald and Kaczynski. |
Everyone in this image was a suspect until proven otherwise. |
A young Kaczynski at Harvard. |
I also felt bad for Kaczynski's brother. The FBI sold him out to catch the unabomber, destroying the brother's life. Ultimately the ends justify the means, but more than a few people were thrown off the burning bridge that was this investigation.
Kaczynski eventually accepts a plea bargain. He's aware enough that he would be perceived as crazy during a trial, but somehow doesn't think he's doing anything wrong. I don't know how that reconciles. Did he just want to be heard, to get attention? Maybe it was all revenge for the experiments at Harvard. It was Kaczynski's need for attention that got him caught. That and analyzing his writings and speech patterns. Fitzgerald may not have been "real police," but he caught his man.
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