Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • officially, your name is Nicholas Patrick Barclay, that you're born December 31st 1980 Welcome to watch Mojo.

  • And today we're counting down our picks for the top 10.

  • Documentaries about creepy mysteries were no extension till Atran ocarina Lieutenant.

  • That image forced a lot of people to say that is the killer, that is, That man is not right.

  • Look at him there drooling.

  • Steve had 22 witnesses, at least, and there was one of them right there.

  • And there were one of us were called fabricators.

  • Liars.

  • For this list, we'll be looking at documentaries that examine unsettling or unsolved enigmas that send shivers down your spine.

  • We will only be looking at films for this list, so docuseries like making a murderer won't be included.

  • What's the creepiest documentary you've seen?

  • Let us know in the comments below Number 10, killing Jimmy Hoffa trying to help you e no you.

  • But nobody threatens.

  • Often.

  • Years before Martin score says, he made the Irishman a film that dramatizes the final days of Jimmy Hoffa.

  • This documentary explored the union leaders mysterious disappearance At 2 30 half a called his wife.

  • He said, Hey, you know, nobody showed up here.

  • I'm waiting.

  • Have you heard from anybody?

  • And she replied in the negative.

  • And that was the last time she heard from him.

  • Killing Jimmy Hoffa delves into the many questions surrounding the still officially unsolved case.

  • They tried toe have, ah, meeting in Miami, too.

  • Mend Fences.

  • And at that meeting, Tony Pro threatened to kidnap Jimmy's granddaughter.

  • It also provides an insight into the character of the man himself through a number of different interviews.

  • A poll of the major Truck Driver magazine in those days at least, uh, showed that 83% of the respondents would vote for Jimmy Hoffer immediately if he were able to run for the presidency.

  • While some people praise Hoffa, others demonize him.

  • Jimmy Hoffa's dream was to consolidate the trucking industry.

  • He wanted to control everything on wheels, which he man should do.

  • To a great extent, the documentary ties everything together by presenting a number of conspiracies that draw on both his connections to the Mafia as well as his dispute with the Kennedy family.

  • People who hold responsible positions in your union come before this committee and take the Fifth Amendment because an honest answer might tend to incriminate them.

  • Number nine.

  • The Life and Death of Marsha P.

  • Johnson, E O.

  • Marsha P.

  • Johnson was a hero for l G B T Q Plus Causes Marsha Johnson E Wherever.

  • When her body was found in the Hudson River in 1992 plenty of suspicions were raised.

  • The autopsy results suggested that she took her own life.

  • However, many of Johnson's friends and loved ones were incredibly skeptical of this ruling and believed it was foul play at four AM in the morning on 22nd Street.

  • He said that Marcia was kind of terrified and was being followed by two guys going west to the river.

  • Was that reported to the police Academy Award nominated director David France decided to tackle this mystery by following activist Victoria Cruz's attempts to smooth out the truth.

  • She relentlessly went after any new details about the case she could find then that would tie in about Randy taking on the mob.

  • The call that you got off Marcia being followed in her death.

  • Well, those pieces certainly fit together.

  • No matter what kind of opposition she faced.

  • Crews kept moving forward.

  • Number eight There's something wrong with Aunt Diane was Diane Schuler, a perfect suburban mother or a reckless addict.

  • This documentary follows her family's attempts to answer that question.

  • Their Children are on their way home from a camping trip with their aunt.

  • They just called my friends out, distressed, saying that the answer is driving erratically throughout the film.

  • They try to uncover the truth behind why she drove the wrong way down the highway until she had a fatal crash.

  • The toxicology from that autopsy shows that Diane Schuler had a blood alcohol content of 0.19%.

  • Was the tragedy that led to her passing and the loss of several other lives a result of addiction, negligent behavior?

  • Or was it something more mysterious?

  • Danny doesn't want the other families to think that a drunk driver killed their families.

  • That's why we are out to prove that you try to prove that she wasn't drunk.

  • Diane's husband and sister in law set out to uncover more information about what led up to the fatal crash by hiring a private investigator.

  • A soon as we paid him, he disappeared.

  • But one question remains throughout.

  • Are they onto something, or just desperate to explain the motive behind their sisters.

  • Tragic actions Diane Schuler drives against traffic for 1.7 miles in the fast lane.

  • Never veers.

  • Um seems to have a serene, almost oblivious look on her face.

  • Number seven.

  • The Fear of 13.

  • A good story is made even better by a good storyteller.

  • In the blink of an eye you could look and 10 years they're gone.

  • After watching fear of 13, we can confidently say that Nick Harris is one of the best we've ever seen.

  • You've just been put here.

  • The door was just still ringing in your ears cause of the slam and you're just left there and you're like the way he delivers the tail is as compelling as someone telling an urban legend around a campfire.

  • Yaris spends the hour and a half of the documentary recounting a story of lost lives, false accusations and redemption.

  • I can't believe I had the key to myself in my hands because I know I didn't kill that woman.

  • I know none of my biological materials anywhere near her, but unlike a tall tale, fear of 13 is the story of his own life.

  • Yaris tells us how he spent 22 years in prison after he was accused of a crime he didn't commit.

  • It took me from 1993 to 1997 to finally get court approval for the foremost authority of DNA in America to do the DNA testing.

  • Hallelujah.

  • All the while, the mystery of who committed the act he was proven innocent of hangs over the grim story.

  • If you're going to take everything from me, okay, then instead, I think I'll give myself everything.

  • Number six Missing Mom filmmaker Rob McCallum invites viewers into his quest to solve the highly personal mystery of what happened to his mother.

  • I never believed the word, she said.

  • She could tell me anything.

  • I wouldn't believe it.

  • So basically the last we saw her, the better.

  • It waas.

  • 25 years after she disappeared, he and his brother decided to try and find out where she went and why she left.

  • The film addresses the feelings of abandonment that the brothers felt when they were left to be raised by their grand parents.

  • I always wish I knew what happened to her because she was important, too.

  • I really don't think she wants to be found.

  • The brothers navigate through false leads and sudden turns to piece together.

  • What really happened was the reason for her sudden and unexplained departure something sinister or just sad?

  • Family drama.

  • You'll have to watch the film to find out how I leave.

  • I think you're my mom, times that number five out of thin air.

  • The thing that makes the crime featured in this documentary so creepy isn't just the fact that two men disappeared.

  • What really makes this case unsettling is how and why.

  • Police manipulated six people into believing they had committed the crime.

  • Most of them had been in prison for a petty crime.

  • See, very there were violent.

  • Icelandic police were pressured to solve the cases of gerrymander, Anderson and Gear Finner Anderson, who both vanished in 1974 out of thin air, chronicles how the police pulled this off despite a lack of physical evidence.

  • Here.

  • We take it quite early next year.

  • Wait up from drop in agreement we have.

  • We have commented us.

  • The officers used barbaric methods to get six people to confess to the disappearances.

  • He had been interrogated 180 times for 340 hours.

  • This documentary ultimately examines how corrupt authorities can abuse power and create whatever narrative they want while making us doubt what we believe to be true.

  • Number four.

  • Biggie and Tupac This documentary investigates the unsolved mystery of how two of the most famous rappers of the nineties lost their lives.

  • Former detective Russell Poole has filed suit against the department.

  • Full says he uncovered dirty cops while investigating the murders.

  • The feature heavily suggests their final moments were orchestrated by one man.

  • When Tupac Shakur lost his life in a drive by in Las Vegas, suspicions fell on his rival, Biggie Smalls.

  • Pockets of strong Dude, you know I know Duke, you know what I'm saying?

  • He's really strong.

  • So when they was like he got shot, I was just more like again.

  • But just six months later, Biggie's life came to an end in an eerily similar way on that shall There was There was a hit taken out on Notorious B.

  • I.

  • G documentary firmly points the finger at Death Row Records producer Suge Knight E.

  • I mean, if you get a guy that constant getting in trouble, never gonna come to prison just because he's in a form, he's a rat.

  • According to the theory, the producer colluded with the LAPD to take out Tupac and then went after Biggie to cover up the first crime.

  • Another example of how incomplete the investigation is and how they have tried everything or done everything tow.

  • Avoid the truth in the matter.

  • While the claims made in the documentary are debatable, the movie definitely makes for an interesting watch.

  • Number three Brothers Keeper.

  • There are two sides to every story.

  • Brother's Keeper shows how these two competing narratives competed in the twisted story of the Ward Brothers.

  • But life for Delbert Ward changed on June 6 when a 64 year old brother, William, died of suffocation after one of the four brothers allegedly took the life of another.

  • The media descended on the small town.

  • The family was portrayed as illiterate recluses.

  • Meanwhile, they're small community rallied around the brothers as local heroes.

  • After they had previously ignored them.

  • They minded their own business.

  • They were different a za long as they didn't step on your feet.

  • In one version of the story, Delbert Ward ended his sickly brother's life as an act of mercy.

  • Another take on this tale has the police creating a scapegoat out of a man who couldn't read.

  • State Police officer has the guts tell a national television.

  • I know he did it.

  • All of a sudden he's judge and jury.

  • By showing all angles of the story.

  • The documentary makes viewers consider whose side they would take.

  • Number two.

  • Cropsey.

  • I love my sister very much.

  • It's been 20 years.

  • I think I had to carry credit a long time.

  • I miss her so much on urban legend of a boogeyman like figure called Cropsey, once terrified Children in the northeastern United States.

  • You know, we used to walk through here and you'd find beds and papers and people who have died here.

  • So, you know, it kind of made sense to us.

  • This legend horribly emerged into reality.

  • A homeless man, 43 year old Andre Rand, is under arrest.

  • He is charged with the kidnapping a 12 year old, Jennifer Schweiger.

  • After several Children disappeared in the eighties, a previously convicted criminal named Andre Rand was arrested.

  • That image forced a lot of people to say that is the killer, that is, that man is not right.

  • Look at him there drooling.

  • But there were a number of mystery surrounding the case.

  • Cropsey ultimately asks if the people who accused Rand were simply looking for someone to be a scapegoat or not.

  • He's got the evidence.

  • We just haven't found it in the woods yet.

  • It also investigates the narratives we invent to make ourselves feel safe.

  • Before we continue.

  • Be sure to subscribe to our channel and ring the bell to get notified about our latest videos.

  • You have the option to be notified for occasional videos or all of them.

  • If you're on your phone, make sure you go into your settings and switch on notifications.

  • Number one, The imposter changelings who seemingly become other people, are supposed to be works of fiction.

  • However, the imposter describe someone who did this for real.

  • Ain't Beautiful.

  • Three years after Nicholas Barclay vanished from a San Antonio suburb, he apparently reappeared on the other side of the world.

  • She took me in a harms and she said, Nicholas Oh, and you're afraid I wouldn't recognize you.

  • I would remember that nose.

  • He had different colored eyes, a new accent and was much older than he should have been.

  • However, none of that seemed to matter to Barclays parents or the media.

  • First thing when you open your eyes is officially, your name is Nicholas Patrick Barclay, that you're born December 31st 1980 that every family member is calling me Nicholas.

  • This documentary tells the twisted tale of how a serial impostor managed to trick the world.

  • I said, This guy is a faith.

  • It's not him, I said.

  • The ears don't match.

  • My comment to him was, um, you need to be very careful that you don't intrude on the federal investigation by inventing false narratives.

  • He prayed on the hopes of a bereaved family hoping to solve a tragic mystery.

  • Do you agree with our picks?

  • Check out this other recent clip from Watch Mojo and be sure to subscribe and ring the bell to be notified about our latest videos.

officially, your name is Nicholas Patrick Barclay, that you're born December 31st 1980 Welcome to watch Mojo.

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it