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‘Making a Murderer’ keeps the fight alive

True crime docu-series on Steven Avery and Brendan Dassey is back for season two

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Three years ago, few had heard of Steven Avery.

But the Netflix true crime docu-series Making a Murderer, a surprise sensation when it was released in December 2015, turned Avery, a Wisconsin man who was cleared of a sexual assault charge only to be imprisoned on a murder charge, into something like a household name. His case was debated and dissected in various media outlets, turning many viewers into amateur sleuths. Part of a wave of true-crime hits including the podcast Serial and the HBO limited series The Jinx, Murderer establishe­d Netflix as a home for breakout docuseries (Wild Wild Country, The Keepers) and helped inspire its own satirical take on the genre, American Vandal.

Now it’s back, with 10 new episodes that continue the story of Avery and his nephew Brendan Dassey, both of whom were convicted of the 2005 murder of Teresa Halbach in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin. Both are still in prison.

With Making a Murderer Part 2, new players are introduced, like Avery’s new star lawyer, Kathleen Zellner, who joined the case after Avery became famous, bringing an arsenal of creative tactics. Laura Nirider and Steven Drizin, Dassey’s post-conviction lawyers, are also prominent.

Because of the success of Murderer, the show’s creators, Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, had more resources at their disposal for Part 2. In an interview, they talked about how they refined their filmmaking approach and why they’ve stayed with this story.

Why did you decide to continue with the story of Steven Avery for new episodes, rather than look at a new case?

Moira Demos: When we were making Part 1, we were certainly not thinking there might be a Part 2. But once we finished, it was clear that the story wasn’t over. Steven Avery is a fighter and he’s saying right at the end of Part 1, ‘I’m going to keep on fighting.’ So then the questions became to us, as filmmakers, What exactly is happening next? Is there something to cover? Is there something to point a camera at?

What convinced you that there was indeed something more to point a camera at?

Laura Ricciardi: By the spring of 2016, we came to learn that Kathleen Zellner had decided to represent Steven and we thought that we would reach out to her and see if she would give us access to her process. We also spoke with Brendan Dassey’s attorneys Laura Nirider and Steve Drizin, whom we introduced in Episode 10 of Part 1 when they filed a federal habeas petition on Brendan’s behalf. So we thought that both cases would be very active.

Demos: Part 2 is taking you into a new phase of the criminal justice process, the post-conviction phase, which for most people is a big black hole, not a part we have a very good understand­ing of. With Part 1, there were so many twists and turns, and nobody’s really there helping you understand what’s happening as you go through item.

In the credits this time is a full screen showing the names of the many people who didn’t respond to you or declined interviews. Were there comparativ­ely more people this time who wouldn’t talk to you?

Demos: The list would have been more or less the same if we had put a card up in Part 1. It just never occurred to us that people would have thought we hadn’t reached out to people... So we thought, let’s just put it out there, and then we can get over it and talk about the work.

 ?? Photos by Netflix and New York Times ?? Dolores Avery and lawyer Kathleen Zellner. Steven Avery (right) with his parents Allan and Dolores Avery in a still from ‘Making a Murderer’. Brendan Dassey (centre) with his mother Barb Tadych and step-father Scott Tadych. Zellner, who joined the case after Avery became famous.
Photos by Netflix and New York Times Dolores Avery and lawyer Kathleen Zellner. Steven Avery (right) with his parents Allan and Dolores Avery in a still from ‘Making a Murderer’. Brendan Dassey (centre) with his mother Barb Tadych and step-father Scott Tadych. Zellner, who joined the case after Avery became famous.
 ??  ?? Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, the creators of ‘Making a Murderer’.
Moira Demos and Laura Ricciardi, the creators of ‘Making a Murderer’.

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