It’s also all there is to this ill-conceived documentary. The fear, either captured on the five-year-old faces of frightened concertgoers or heard in the voices of those remembering their shared experience, is palpable, unnerving, and deeply, deeply disturbing. Using their recollections of the traumatizing event as narration over turbulent, grainy shots of the night’s chaos, “11 Minutes” is undeniably horrific. Told over four gut-wrenching hours, the Paramount+ series sticks to two primary frameworks: first-person footage from the shooting itself (recordings from bystander’s cell phones, police officers’ body cams, security cameras, etc.) and new interviews with the victims, law enforcement agents, paramedics, and parents. The Latest ‘Barry’ Is as Funny as Hopeless Desperation Can Getĭirector and executive producer Jeff Zimbalist’s documentary sporadically and unsuccessfully attempts the same.
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