- Network: HBO
- Series Premiere Date: Jun 6, 2023
Critic Reviews
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The story proves persistently unpredictable until the end. True crime is a genre that often lives in the black-and-white, but Burden of Proof exists largely in the grey, as a compelling and poignant portrait of the unsolvable mystery of grief.
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For those who have the patience the series demands – and even makes a subject of – this is an engrossing piece of work about what it means to want life to hurry up, only to have life laugh bitterly in return.
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Burden of Proof offers a different way to do true crime storytelling, emphasizing the toll that uncertainty takes on those experiencing it in the wake of an unsolved disappearance. It offers no easy answers to the kidnapping of Jennifer Pandos nor the strife left behind in her absence. But it uses that lack of conviction as a compelling plea for compassion.
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True crime documentaries can be manipulative in how they withhold information, but Hill threads that needle just enough to make us feel as exhausted by this case as Stephen. She also clearly earns Stephen’s trust, and we come to share her obvious compassion for him.
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Their [Stephen Pandos and Cynthia Hill's] tunnel vision results in an airless series, one that isolates the Pandos case from its sociological, psychological, and criminal-justice contexts, which are bound up in generational trauma and the patterns of domestic abuse. Exploring those contexts—even acknowledging them—might have made “Burden of Proof” into more than an overlong, inconclusive whodunnit.
User score distribution:
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Positive: 1 out of 3
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Mixed: 0 out of 3
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Negative: 2 out of 3
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Jun 8, 2023Incredible docuseries, a must watch! Gorgeous production and score. Would recommend.