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This documentary explores more drama and realism that embodies a tragic course in a small American town in the early 1980s. In that small village, a resident was shot dead in a public area and among about 60 residents of the town. There was absolutely no reaction from these people who saw the incident as these witnesses deny they saw anything completely.
Belkin's docu-series could have accomplished much of what it set out to do in roughly half the running time, but it's never boring and often fascinating.
If you remember the Skidmore case, No One Saw A Thing will be a good refresher. If you don't, though, it'll be a good examination of a tiny town that may have taken its ability to protect itself a bit too far.
Captivating but repetitious... Belkin bloats the text by repeating his "weight of sin" thesis ad nauseum. By the end, I was convinced this could have been told with tighter precision in three episodes, not six.