CLATTERED
An icky documentary that feels like a seasoned Dateline episode with a little more panache. Yeah I'm talking about 2026's The Crash, not to be confused with that 2004 Oscar winner or David Cronenberg's moot Crash from the mid-90s. The Crash, well it's a product of a certain streaming service and it exploits those annoying social media platforms like TikTok and Insta and Twitch and gosh knows what else. So OK, did 17-year-old Mackenzie Shirilla really kill her boyfriend by way of a staged car accident? And was this girl really traveling 100 mph into a darn brick wall? And uh, what's up with the potty mouthed pandering Mackenzie? "That split second changed all of our lives forever." True dat.
Anyway The Crash is numbingly shot by TV director Gareth Johnson, he of Shark Week and See No Evil fame. There's slight archives that look nearly like bodycam footage reenactments (even though you know they weren't), interviews from parents and the po-po that might have been coached up (and they probably were), and a certain Mayberry flavor that seems straight from the annals of Maury ("that is a lie" hint hint). "It didn't add up." Oh but it does boss. It truly does.
Trashy talk show hosts and Podunk Americana-s aside, The Crash has its moments in terms of pacing, brisk editing, and mien when it comes to its overall slickness. I mean it appears that good old Netflix definitely put their fingerprints on this thing no matter who's behind the camera. The problem however is the vehicle's subject, a teenage Shirilla who is allowed to chew on some soggy, 15 minutes of fame mind you. She is as unlikable as any convicted, enigma-like killer in any reality, legal cinematic endeavor. And it also doesn't help that Mackenzie's parents have a weird, unconditional love for their dope-smoking, felonious felon. "Crash test dummy."
Written by Jesse Burleson