A person watching this "documentary" with no knowledge of the case, might be very surprised when Depp wins.
The production values of this film make the low budget crime shows look good. There are reenactment scenes where two shadow people (who hardly resemble Depp or Heard) wave their arms around and mime shouting. There is almost no video from inside trial. Outside court videos are more often from London than Virginia, despite the movie being about Virginia verdict. Stock images are used repeatedly.
The production effort seems to have been in selecting of information to be anti-Depp. For one example, the testimony of Isaac Baruch is summarized as he fell in love with Heard like Johnny Depp did and that he was told by Heard that Depp had thrown a phone at her. People who watched the trial would likely remember Baruch emotional testimony for his description of "phony pictures ... the fake narrative .. a fraudulent DV claim to extort and blackmail a man" and that he looked closely at Heard who had no marks on her face. The film ends with interviews with women who say this verdict turned back the clock for women.
The production values of this film make the low budget crime shows look good. There are reenactment scenes where two shadow people (who hardly resemble Depp or Heard) wave their arms around and mime shouting. There is almost no video from inside trial. Outside court videos are more often from London than Virginia, despite the movie being about Virginia verdict. Stock images are used repeatedly.
The production effort seems to have been in selecting of information to be anti-Depp. For one example, the testimony of Isaac Baruch is summarized as he fell in love with Heard like Johnny Depp did and that he was told by Heard that Depp had thrown a phone at her. People who watched the trial would likely remember Baruch emotional testimony for his description of "phony pictures ... the fake narrative .. a fraudulent DV claim to extort and blackmail a man" and that he looked closely at Heard who had no marks on her face. The film ends with interviews with women who say this verdict turned back the clock for women.