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The Menendez Brothers

  • 2024
  • TV-MA
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
7.0/10
9.5K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
4,038
1,666
The Menendez Brothers (2024)
Watch Trailer [OV]
Play trailer2:17
2 Videos
13 Photos
Documentary

In 1996, the Menendez brothers faced trial for killing their parents, a case that captivated America. Years later, they share their side through interviews with those involved, offering a fr... Read allIn 1996, the Menendez brothers faced trial for killing their parents, a case that captivated America. Years later, they share their side through interviews with those involved, offering a fresh take on the events.In 1996, the Menendez brothers faced trial for killing their parents, a case that captivated America. Years later, they share their side through interviews with those involved, offering a fresh take on the events.

  • Director
    • Alejandro Hartmann
  • Writers
    • Lucas Bucci
    • Chris Peterson
    • Tomás Sposato
  • Stars
    • Erik Menendez
    • Lyle Menendez
    • Jose Menendez
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.0/10
    9.5K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    4,038
    1,666
    • Director
      • Alejandro Hartmann
    • Writers
      • Lucas Bucci
      • Chris Peterson
      • Tomás Sposato
    • Stars
      • Erik Menendez
      • Lyle Menendez
      • Jose Menendez
    • 43User reviews
    • 14Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer [OV]
    Trailer 2:17
    Trailer [OV]
    The Menendez Brothers (Sneak Peek)
    Clip 1:42
    The Menendez Brothers (Sneak Peek)
    The Menendez Brothers (Sneak Peek)
    Clip 1:42
    The Menendez Brothers (Sneak Peek)

    Photos13

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    Top cast60

    Edit
    Erik Menendez
    Erik Menendez
    • Self - Convicted of Murdering Parents
    • (voice)
    Lyle Menendez
    Lyle Menendez
    • Self - Convicted of Murdering Parents
    • (voice)
    Jose Menendez
    Jose Menendez
    • Self - Murder Victim
    • (archive footage)
    Kitty Menendez
    Kitty Menendez
    • Self - Murder Victim
    • (archive footage)
    Robert Rand
    Robert Rand
    • Self - Journalist and Author, The Menendez Brothers
    Jason Zlatkus
    Jason Zlatkus
    • Older Erik
    Shelley Ross
    Shelley Ross
    • Self - Producer, ABC News
    Pamela Bozanich
    Pamela Bozanich
    • Self - Prosecutor
    Alan Abrahamson
    Alan Abrahamson
    • Self - Journalist, Los Angeles Times
    Joan Vandermolen
    Joan Vandermolen
    • Self - Sister of Kitty
    • (as Joan Vander Molen)
    Betty Oldfield
    Betty Oldfield
    • Self - Juror
    Hazel Thornton
    Hazel Thornton
    • Self - Juror and Author, Hung Jury
    William Vicary
    William Vicary
    • Self - Defense Expert
    • (as Dr. William Vicary)
    Jon Conte
    Jon Conte
    • Self - Defense Expert
    Diane Vandermolen
    Diane Vandermolen
    • Self - Cousin of Lyle and Erik
    • (as Diane Vander Molen)
    Ann Burgess
    Ann Burgess
    • Self - Defense Expert
    • (as Dr. Ann Burgess)
    Stanley Goldman
    Stanley Goldman
    • Self -Veteran LA Public Defender
    Cliff Gardner
    Cliff Gardner
    • Self - Appellate Attorney to Lyle & Erik
    • Director
      • Alejandro Hartmann
    • Writers
      • Lucas Bucci
      • Chris Peterson
      • Tomás Sposato
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews43

    7.09.4K
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    Featured reviews

    7Lejink

    Brothers in Harm's Way

    I came to this Netflix documentary about the Menendez brothers case, probably like a lot of other people, after viewing the same channel's recently broadcast controversial 9-part drama, released under the "Monsters" title. I personally couldn't remember anything about the case before I watched the series, however, what I think is pretty inarguable is that it was slanted in favour of the prosecution case, which eventually prevailed at a retrial, finding the brothers guilty of first-degree murder and sentenced to life imprisonment without parole.

    This two-hour film however was very different. Using extensive recent audio-interviews with them, I believe there's equally little doubt that the film-makers believe that the two were indeed provoked by the alleged incestuous sexually abusive behaviour of their father, to shockingly shoot both him and his wife, their mother, while they watched TV in their palatial family home.

    With access to many of the original participants in the case, including jurors from both trials, also witnesses and representatives for both the defence and the prosecution, including the original female prosecutor, this was highly provocative in the claims it seemed to make. The point is made that in the intervening thirty years, with society's acceptance of parental sexual abuse in particular by fathers on their own children, including their sons, coupled with the emergence of the "#MeToo" movement, that the siblings were incorrectly charged and subsequently sentenced to jail. The claim here is that they should have received the lesser sentence of manslaughter, which would have resulted in much shorter custodial sentences them both, meaning of course they would have long since been freed by now.

    The point is also made that the pair likely caught the backlash of the DA Office's perception that the near-contemporary acquittal of OJ Simpson and before that also of the four policemen who beat up Rodney King, meant that they were determined to this time obtain a high-profile conviction with the notorious brothers fitting the bill. One other interesting fact is that on the original hung-jury, the 50/50 split amongst them was on a gender basis, with the six males voting guilty and the six females accepting the self-defence claim.

    I thought from the TV series that I knew how I'd have voted if I'd been on either jury but this alternative counter-argument, did make me revisit my thoughts on the case.

    That said, I do believe that being kept in jail for over 30 years is certainly long enough, even for the terrible crime they committed and tried to cover up and that I wouldn't argue if their soon-upcoming appeal is upheld and they are freed, as I believe is now probable.

    Time has told and time will tell...
    7monireads

    This is the show to watch if wanting the truth.

    Having watched the other Netflix show on the Menendez Brother in Monsters, I walked away still feeling like I wasn't sure what really happened. We can all have an opinion but I hope not everyone watches that show and thinks they can without a doubt know what happened because they filled in so many wholes with speculation it's marred the true facts.

    This documentary was very good in hearing from the brothers as well as other important figures during the trials. It also highlights without a doubt that the second trial was a farce and that the brothers deserve in the very least an appeal. I believe they were both sexually abused and although this is no means a reason to murder your parents, I feel if they had of had a fair second trial, they would have received a manslaughter conviction. This means, and I agree, they have paid their dues to society and should be released. This is my opinion but the law must make a decision on their outcome, which is in discussion now. I hope this time they hear all the testimonial evidence from the relatives and finally give these boys a fair hearing.
    10edwin-wks

    Justice for the Menendez brothers

    It is bewildering that complex PTSD is still not recognised as a disorder in the DSM-V in 2024, let alone be taken into consideration in the Menendez trials when the concept was in its infancy. This documentary presents a comprehensive overview of the salient details of the Menendez brothers' case from the origins of the killings to the current TikTok movement to emancipate the brothers after 34 years of incarceration and counting, including advances in public awareness of sexual abuse of boys committed overwhelmingly by the men to whom the powerless boys were entrusted.

    Supported by the testimonies of family members and forensic criminal experts in the first trial, it was established that both Lyle and Erik endured years of grooming and violence (physical, emotional and sexual) by their father, while the mother, herself lacking a moral compass, abetted the father through her passivity and silence. She was more distraught over his affairs with other women than his grotesque tampering with her own flesh-and-blood. Also fact was that the prosecution could not obtain character witnesses for either parent because they were such deplorable human beings.

    In the 1990s, trial by media was the new sensation, Judge Weisberg had presided over the acquittal of four police officers of a hate crime (arising in the 1992 LA riots), the six male jurors in the first trial insisted on murder (to exculpate the father and themselves) while the women pressed for manslaughter, and OJ Simpson got off scot-free for murder due to his celebrity status. So Weisberg prevented crucial information from being fairly presented in the second trial to engineer a much-needed win for the DA's office, leading to a 12-0 ruling for first-degree murder within just a week.

    As an outsider in Australia, I find the justice system in America bizarre. There is no neutrality when prosecutors like Bozanich and judges like Weisberg have a huge incentive to pursue certain convictions in order to further their public careers. Bozanich is so blind to her own self-righteousness that she doesn't recognise the hypocrisy when she says of the TikTokers, "their beliefs are not facts". She herself remains convinced of the brothers' intent to murder their parents out of greed despite all evidence presented by the defence. "They were just these dumb jock killers", she says of her first impression of them. She claims that she only agreed to participate in this documentary to show up for the slain mother, but it's a feeble disguise for her self-serving motivations. People like her don't care about justice, only themselves.
    8btzarevski

    Much better than a dramatized docu-series

    I waited to watch this documentary instead of the Monsters series that came before it as I'm generally more fascinated to hear from the actual people involved in the case, rather than actors pretending they were there. This documentary is certainly intended to be more sympathetic to the brothers, however I still like the fact it uses real footage of the trial, the media reporting at the time, that you get to hear from actual jurors and the brothers themselves. You can go back and forth about what the documentary left out; those who don't believe the brothers will criticize it that it's too sympathetic to them, equally those who do believe them can point out to more testimony and evidence of their abuse that the documentary didn't show.

    Regardless which side of the fence you come down on, I find it very difficult one can argue that their second trial allowed them a fair opportunity to put forward a defense. To not allow numerous testimony from family members, doctors, photos, letters etc that could potentially show how they were abused for years which is central to the defense's explanation of what influenced their actions that night feels incredibly prejudicial. Whether the jury then accepts this version of events is a separate matter, but surely the point of the judicial process is that they have the opportunity to hear the evidence for it. Certainly I think there was political pressure to not allow another acquittal of a high profile defendant for murder with OJ Simpson being acquitted just a week prior to much of the public's disgust. These two factors I think greatly taint their second trial and the inevitable verdict from it that they've now served 34 years for.

    The prosecutor Pamela comes off as very unlikable towards the end as well. It's fine if she doesn't believe them, and while I agree TikTok in general is a stain on society, to facetiously joke you'd use a firearm in defense against "TikTok people" as you in the same breath rubbish the Menendez's defence of using a firearm against their alleged abuser is a staggering lack of self-awareness. She also dismisses the social media 'campaigns' for them to be released, which, youthful exuberance and folly aside I'm sure hold little legal grounds, but she does so by acting incredulous that that would make a mockery of the justice process. "Why don't we hold TikTok trials or a poll" she says with indignation, but apparently she's fine with a judge not admitting the majority of a defense's evidence and unfairly influencing the outcome of a trial.

    I'm not sure how much legal basis there is for them to have another trial since they already had an appeal denied. I'm sure there are legal minds already exploring options with this case in the spotlight again, so the saga might yet continue in the coming years. Society today is certainly more acknowledging of sexual abuse victims, and how grooming and power dynamics affects how they react to their abuse. If you accept they were abused, and there's certainly much testimony and evidence to support it, then 34 years in jail from a tainted second trial in the 90s when abuse against boys/men was largely ignored feels like an injustice.
    10seraichyk

    The best doc on the subject

    Finally, a complete revelation of the facts. When children (or anyone) are subjected to systematic psychological and sexual abuse, they are emotionally and mentally dysregulated.

    People asking, "why don't they leave, why don't they tell the police?"...do not understand how psychological control works. Their family was a cult of 4. These brothers were completely irrational, illogical...mentally unwell.

    Of course they were! Anyone who had lived their torturous childhood would be the same.

    This documentary includes corroborating stories to support the disgusting abusive nature of their father, and the lack of care from their mother.

    Sometimes with this type of abuse there is only one way out. If you have not experienced it personally, you wouldn't understand.

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Quotes

      Self - Journalist, Los Angeles Times: It was a murder trial AND a reality show.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Tooney Town TV: MARVIN MOVIE MONSTER: Acolyte Star Melts Down & Calls YOU Racist In New Tantrum (2024)

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • October 7, 2024 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Netflix
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Los hermanos Menendez
    • Filming locations
      • The Henry Levy House, 155 S. G Street, Oxnard, California, USA(Joan Vandermolen interviews)
    • Production companies
      • Campfire Studios
      • Levels Audio
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color

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