American Manhunt: Osama bin Laden | Official Trailer | Netflix

preview_player
Показать описание
This three part docuseries from directors Mor Loushy and Daniel Sivan gives an in-depth look at how the world mobilized to hunt down Osama Bin Laden after his orchestrations of the September 11th, 2001 attacks on the United States. Featuring interviews with key people within the US government who helped in the global chase, this series focuses on the decade-long mission to capture one of the world’s most notorious terrorists.


About Netflix:
Netflix is one of the world's leading entertainment services, with 300 million paid memberships in over 190 countries enjoying TV series, films and games across a wide variety of genres and languages. Members can play, pause and resume watching as much as they want, anytime, anywhere, and can change their plans at any time.

American Manhunt: Osama bin Laden | Official Trailer | Netflix
Рекомендации по теме
Комментарии
Автор

It took netflix 9 years and 11 months to think about this kind of documentary

astonlastimado
Автор

Wasn't that drama created by US government itself?

aimadnessbaby
Автор

Why don't you make a documentary about what you did in Iraq and Afghanistan?

BothinaHabashy
Автор

In our childhood, we used to place our books in someone else's bag, & then mock him for stealing the books... Everyone in the school believed us, but that was our childhood... America is a grown up country.

mairajsiddiqui
Автор

I was a kid when 9/11 happened. All the way up to my early twenties. I was always led to believe that America was the good guys. We were the force of good. Cause of God and America values.
Looking back at it now. Looking at our country now….. God, I was so naive and dumb back then.

keystorm
Автор

Title should be: Manhunt by the USA for a Man Created by the USA

awaisahmad
Автор

Nice... Now Make a documentary about The "dancing Israelis" :)

quotesparadise
Автор

I was born and raised in Karachi before moving to Canada. Post 9/11 after Pakistan got involved with the US in fight of terror, our city was a target of retaliatory suicide bombings by the extremists for almost a decade. People in the comments calling this drama have never lived through the horrors these terrorists put their own people through. No religion justifies violence.

kamransaeed
Автор

I was six years old when the world broke open.

That morning, my dad wore his favorite blue tie — the one he called his “power tie” — and my mom made me cinnamon toast, even though we were running late. She always made mornings feel warm. Safe. Ordinary.

Dad kissed the top of my head and said, “Be good today, champ.” I didn’t know that would be the last thing he ever said to me.

He worked in the North Tower.

Mom dropped me off at school with a smile that didn’t reach her eyes — she had that nurse’s intuition, that quiet sense that something was coming. Before I walked through the school doors, she pulled me back into a hug. Long. Tight. The kind of hug you never forget.

She went to the hospital right after — just a few blocks from the towers.

I remember the sirens first. Then the way the teachers’ faces changed when the news came in. Some kids were pulled out of class in a rush. Others cried. I waited, small and confused, clutching my Spider-Man lunchbox.

No one came for me.

Hours passed. And then days. People spoke in hushed tones. "We can't reach them." "Still missing." "Maybe they got out."

But they didn’t.

For years, I lived in the in-between — between the child I had been and the weight of a world that had crumbled. I moved in with my aunt, who tried her best to hold together what was left of our little family. She taught me to pray. She held me when the nightmares came.

Every year on September 11th, I visited the memorial. I traced their names with my fingers — Miguel and Lucia — and tried to remember the way their laughter sounded in our old apartment. Sometimes I could. Sometimes I couldn’t.

Grief doesn’t go away. It just grows quieter. Becomes part of your shadow.

But here’s the thing: I didn’t break. I grew.

I kept their photos beside my bed. I studied hard. I lived for both of them — not just to make them proud, but to prove that love outlives loss.

And on the day I stood at the reflecting pool as an adult, the sky above me was the same perfect blue as that morning long ago. But I was different. I was still standing.

Because even when the towers fell, I didn’t.

darkaep
Автор

I love how all of us come together to roast Netflix in the comments

MrLoserTree
Автор

Are there any documentaries from the Afghan and Iraqi perspective? America learned from its mistakes with Vietnam. Don’t let the enemy tell their side of the story. The Vietnamese had a voice. That’s why the war was so short. Afghan voices were silenced & that’s why the war lasted for 20 years.

FirstDraft-xp
Автор

In the movies and documentaries, America shows itself as a country which has got the highest order of integrity and has the best intelligence in the world. In reality after 911, the kind of torture that people, rather innocent people have suffered is insane and someone should make documentary on that as well.

manchandasahil
Автор

it was an inside job... nice try, diddy!! i mean Netflix!!!

awonddy
Автор

When the villain directs the sequel. Irony level: 100. 😂

faisal.fs
Автор

Fact - Osama bin Laden took an English-language course in Oxford, England in 1971.
😂

infinityboy
Автор

Shoutout to the comment section. It’s crazy how you will learn a lot through others and open your mind of what isn’t disclosed in da documentary 💯

darrylwashington
Автор

"Tell me Lies tell me sweet little lies..."🤣

guidox
Автор

Even USA people here knows what really happened 😂😂😂

hafuzu
Автор

But they not going to tell you they trained him!

chromeheatta
Автор

"If you ever feel useless, remember it took 20 years, trillions of dollars and 4 US Presidents to replace the Taliban with the Taliban"

— Norman Finkelstein

peterpeter
welcome to shbcf.ru