![]() ![]() ![]() I highly recommend this new Netflix docuseries, House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths, which documents the mysterious deaths of 11 family members in India. A sociologist in the panel would’ve added more value to the analysis tho. The way Burari case documentary subtly comments on patriarchy, mental health and how media always ends up creating sensationalism instead of being sensitive when it comes to such cases is phenomenal. It reinforces how the widespread unawareness of mental health leads to extremely unexpected disasters. House of secrets: Burari deaths on is a good recap of the 2018 event. For the doc has reignited the discourse on mental health again and it’s unmissable. The many adjectives used to describe the show certainly point out that the makers achieved what they wanted to do. Needless to say, the internet is all invested and is revisiting the shocking case. The makers including director Leena Yadav also manage to unveil the culture of silence that permeates in most Indian families and the voyeurism that mainstream broadcast media sells and cashes in. Titled House of Secrets: The Burari Deaths, the limited series is a sordid yet eye-opening watch that not only documents graphic details of suicide but also the lack of mental health awareness and the dire consequences of the same. Years later, a Netflix docu-series tries to answer a few of them. The horror gripped the country with speculations and assumptions about murder because why would a seemingly happy family hang themselves? But without any suspects or survivors, it was hard for the forces to find answers to questions. 11 people 2 generations and all dead in what seemed like a case of mass suicide. It was even more shocking and bizarre because all of them belonged to one family in Delhi’s Burari area. In 2018, the entire nation woke up to the grisly crime that resulted in the death of 11 people. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |