Missing-Dead or Alive Season 2 Review: In this true crime investigative series, officers from a South Carolina sheriff’s department search for missing individuals to hopefully bring them back to their worried families.
Missing-Dead or Alive 2 Director
Alex Irvine-Cox
Missing-Dead or Alive Netflix Producers
Meghan Just-Truelove, Graeme McAulay (Executive Producer), Stuart Froude (Co-Executive Producer)
Original Title
Missing: Dead or Alive?
The series has 4 episodes, each with a runtime of around 45 minutes.

Missing-Dead or Alive Season 2 Review
In the second season of this Netflix true crime series, we don’t just focus on missing persons cases; we delve deep into the psyche of the police officers who put their everything into figuring out the truth behind some truly disturbing situations. Showing their motivations, doubts, and emotional stakes, Missing-Dead or Alive Season 2 continues to go deep into various mitigating factors and tense mysteries that result in people vanishing as the officers try to understand the situation and work accordingly.
These are real-life missing persons cases that add authenticity and a ton of tension to the show. The deliberate pacing, the structured narrative, all add to the mystery and tension as we see the story unfold slowly, rather than rushing to cover the facts. It uses real-time updates, phone logs, surveillance footage and reconstructed timelines to its benefit, leaving viewers to get a fuller and more immersive picture that ties them to the story emotionally.

However, I will say that the show feels a bit too dramatic sometimes, especially because we know these are real cases. The show uses real-life incident footage and dramatic reenactments with the actual police officers to tell the story, and it’s quite odd to watch it at times because it feels a bit tone-deaf to recreate something tragic and heartbreaking like this.
Either way, the stories are relatable and hard-hitting and will get under your skin. Even though how the stories are brought forth might feel forced at times, the emotions that the victims’ families face are real, and that leaves you on edge throughout. Every episode brings forth something different, and the wide range of emotional turmoil will leave viewers looking forward to figuring out what comes next. Moreover, the show brings out its revelations gradually, which sometimes works in the story’s favour.

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That being said, the biggest problem is that the series isn’t really a documentary, nor is it an all-out drama. As a result, you are left a bit confused about where you stand with the show. It tries to recreate situations from actual cases that don’t always go over well and leave you a little confused, taking you out of watching an actually immersive documentary that lays it all bare in front of the viewers.
Final Thoughts

Missing-Dead or Alive Season 2 is an odd little cookie that doesn’t commit to being a documentary or a fictional crime drama show and thus ends up giving viewers a mixed bag of emotions while watching it. In the end, you don’t feel immersed because the performative moments feel rather insulting and take you out of the experience thoroughly. It has some good moments, but I don’t see why you should watch this instead of a traditional documentary that can deliver better thrills.
Also Read: Missing-Dead or Alive Review: True Crime Series With Multiple Possibilities, That’s Not Exaggerated!

