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When it comes to the case of Adnan al-Sayed, it seems that there are many files that will be opened in that case. The series, which explores the killing of 18-year-old Hae Min Lee in 1999, begins with the condemnation of people. It seems that the subsequent conviction was to her former friend Adnan Sayed, as it was this young man's case that attracted the attention of the world to a large extent in a period.
Comprehensive yet still incomplete, "The Case" gets entangled in the underbrush and can't quite seem to find its way to either a conclusion or the truth.
This docuseries has a sprawling cast of people, each providing further shading of the emotional and personal truths they carry due to the devastation of this case.
The four-part series most notable contribution to the saga is how it reckons with so many of the ethical questions that most true-crime media avoids in order to keep feeding our insatiable appetites for more real-life horror.
The docuseries's investigative work is top-notch: more nuts and bolts than Serial, but also able to profit off of the wide-ranging fact-finding the podcast inspired.
The Case Against Adnan Syed suffers from a lack of specificity. Pick an argument and thoroughly make it - as it is, it's just retelling the story briefly and catching us up to the appeal.
The four-part series proves a powerful mystery documentary in its own right while providing tremendous service to further ascertaining culpability of Syed.