Eps 84: the motive

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Ronnie Shaw

Ronnie Shaw

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Yossi Arnon is the closest the Creators come to looking like a smoking gun, someone who knows something much bigger -- the real motivations of the 14-year-old. Aside from giving an idea as to just how calm, cool, and bright this guy is, the most we are given from Yossi Arnon as an audience are vague cliches such as If you are thinking the way I am thinking, it is totally fine, and that re-wording of his statements is used throughout The Motive in order to build to the reveal that does not come.
Shemesh and Sudri obviously wanted to establish the 13-year-old as an uncanny presence who would be carried over to the next three episodes -- through the probable shot re-enactment in which he turns around to face the window right back at the camera -- but it is characterised entirely by Avi Samuel, rendering the boys frightened testimony dilute and ineffective. When Avi Samuel, a young detective with the Jerusalem police, interviews the murderer, he quickly confesses, though no motive has ever been established -- hence, the title of Netflixs latest drama.
Other suspects believe that the boys attorney knew more than was revealed, particularly since he is still in contact with the murderer to this day, according to the documentary. One theory suggests that the boys lawyer was not digging deeply enough, or knew more than he was telling, because he knew that he would be helping his case if the motive was not there.
Through The Motive, the boys lawyer has stepped up and given some of the reasons and motivations for the shooting. The boys lawyer comes forth in The Motive and makes the massive statement that the boys told a lie about the Green Monster, which is not real.
The boys lawyer comes forward in The Motive and makes a huge claim that the boy told a lie about a green-colored monster and there was no such thing. Tali Shemesh cannot, unfortunately, offer any answers about the core issue, and it is telling how much this has frustrated them, particularly given the fact that Yossi Arnon, the boys lawyer, has said, in a new interview, that the green-creature narrative is false, that he knows the reason for the shooting - and, further, that, had anyone else known what a member of a massacred family did, he agrees the boys were only guilty of involuntary manslaughter. The problem is in finding out what motives were involved, when the members of his family were happy families. The main motivation of the filmmakers was to understand the dissonance, and they tried by interviewing Yossi Arnon, a defense attorney on the case, and others, such as a fourteen-year-old boys chronicler, Ruthie Yovel, and the people who knew the rest of his family.
According to The Motive, a younger member of the murdered family was taught to use the M16 the week before he was shot by his 44-year-old father, who was on leave from his reserve army duties. The Motive told us a story about a 14-year-old who had been given a shotgun. The Israeli documentary series looks at the true-life murder of a Jerusalem family, where their teenage son wakes up in the middle of the night, takes his fathers M-16 assault rifle, and murders him.
Netflixs latest true-crime docuseries, The Motive, examines the 1986 murders of four members of a Jerusalem family by a then-14-year-old boy. The Israeli docuseries examines the 1986 killings of a Jerusalem family in Jerusalem, the crime of which their teen-aged son is suspected to have committed. A 13-year-old Israeli boy killed his family of four with cold blood, and no one was able to discover the motivation for the killing. The 13-year-old Israeli boy told them that he remembered a scene in a film called "Papillion" in which a convict killed his entire family.
Professor Shmuel Tiano, the psychiatrist who had the meeting with the 13-year-old Israeli boy, believes he was unprepared for a situation like this, if this were today, things would have been different, and he would have had an entirely different outlook. Nissim and Leahs 14-year-old son, He, claims he was told by the Green Monster to kill His. The 14-year-old at the time, who was never named, was featured in the latest true-crime Netflix documentary. Motive talks with cops, psychologists, teachers, classmates, colleagues, and prosecutors, trying to uncover the murderous motivations of the youngest family member who was killed, and comes up empty, except that before the shooting, he was a supremely smart, analytical child, but afterward, an appallingly cool, careless one.