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Inspired by the true story of Richard Scott Smith, an attractive man that utilizes the web to prey on women that look for adoration. He takes them and evaporates. So, his all victims cooperate to sue him.
Love Fraud hangs together much better than any of 2020's popular docu-series. There's barely any flab in these four hours as the story takes progressively weirder, more surprising turns.
The work of collage artist Martin O'Neill and the animation by Andrew Griffin help to create an atmosphere of surrealistic fantasy around the hard facts of the case.
...a portrait of a sociopath whose villainy is so obvious that spending over three hours studying his scams and assaults feels akin to dissecting a rotten piece of fruit to understand why it isn't juicy.
There's a fun kind of justice rolling across the American Midwest in this four-part documentary... Stunning graphics add to the slightly hyperreal feel.
At best it's an odd confluence of true crime, documentary tropes, and visual artistry. The familiarity of this situation that makes Love Fraud watchable if not indispensable.