Missing 411

6.4
2017 1 hr 38 min Documentary

Based on the book series by David Paulides, an investigation into the many disappearances that have occurred in National Parks and Forests of the United States and elsewhere over several decades.

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Reviews

Exoticalot
2017/05/13

People are voting emotionally.

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Actuakers
2017/05/14

One of my all time favorites.

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Bluebell Alcock
2017/05/15

Ok... Let's be honest. It cannot be the best movie but is quite enjoyable. The movie has the potential to develop a great plot for future movies

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Derrick Gibbons
2017/05/16

An old-fashioned movie made with new-fashioned finesse.

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billweb
2017/05/17

Wish I could get my money back. Nothing like what I heard on the Coast to Coast show. Those kids in the documentary could have gone missing under many different circumstances, not as a big mystery presented on Coast to Coast. David Paludes talked more about adults who were "missing" when he was on Coast to Coast. Only one adult presented in the movie, and he had no recollection regarding what happened. Very disappointing

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radulykan13
2017/05/18

Wonderful documentary about this very real and truly heartbreaking phenomena.Thank you David,George and everyone on the team for making this and bringing the Family's and their stories to the public's eye to raise this much needed awareness about it.God Bless.

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kishaheena
2017/05/19

The research by David Paulides and the profile points established regarding these unexplainable disappearances is extremely needed and important.Something is going on and something is covered up by authorities. David Paulides presents facts from thousands of cases in his Missing 411 book series and focus on some selected cases here in his movie. He does not speculate or draw any conclusions. There are thousands of heart broken families who have no clue as to what happened to their relative. Please support this cause. Next can be your child or relative or you or me disappearing without a trace. Please read the books and watch this excellent and very important movie.

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transientdreams
2017/05/20

1. Yes, I DO recommend people see this documentary! 2. It deserves high marks for attempting what no others ever have before. 3. The camera work is truly stellar. 4. I'm going to be painfully honest about why it really missed it's mark.In all fairness, it does great justice to the Deorr Kunz case, and it's a good vehicle to fully feel and understand the powerful sense of loss that Jaryd Atadero has had to cope with all these years. What might be the issue here for a lot of people(Me included) is that it tries too hard to emphasize those 2 cases ALONE(especially Deorr's) at the expense of other, extremely important cases that are not only similar, but also as poignant. I believe I understand the 'style' of documentary that Michael and Ben were trying to put together here, but it simply falls a bit flat throughout, and tends to also ramble in places where it should be moving on to other cases rather than backtracking with the same depth and heartfelt emotion. I also do NOT think adding voice-overs from C2C shows brought anything worthwhile of relevance to this project. Going back over and over and returning to a subject that has seemingly been covered already is also distracting and often frustrating to watch. Personally, I believe documentaries that do that tend to lose people's interest quickly because it takes you back rather than moving you progressively forward.Nonetheless, it's important enough that people should take the time to see it. And I DO hope the next one, assuming there will be one, will hit people in the gut like Paulides' interviews often do. Bullet-point facts back-to-back, less mellow-drama and over-emphasis than we saw here,and a lot more emphasis on the MYSTERY, the boulder fields, the extreme similarities of cases, the possible paranormal aspects(as in the kid who refused to poop for his robot grandma), the international cases, and Mr. David Paulides himself in front of the camera speaking to us directly occasionally. That would REALLY do it for me...

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