
- MMW Rating 🌙 9/10 • 2025
- 1 Season • 3 Episodes • Avg 45 min • ~ 2.5 hrs
- Disponible con subtítulos en español.
- Available on: netflix
Description (No Spoilers)
Should I Marry a Murderer? on Netflix is the kind of true crime documentary that starts off feeling like a simple love story… and slowly turns into something much darker.
The series follows a woman who meets a man on Tinder and quickly forms a deep connection with him. He lives a quiet, almost isolated life in the countryside, and everything about him seems calm, stable, and trustworthy. Their relationship moves fast — the kind of fast that feels exciting at first… but also raises questions.
She’s a pathologist, someone who deals with death professionally and understands how important truth and detail really are. He, on the other hand, is a hunter — which creates an unexpected parallel between them. They’re both comfortable around death, but in very different ways. That contrast becomes part of what draws them closer.
When he proposes, she asks for complete honesty. No secrets. But that moment — instead of bringing them closer — opens the door to something from his past. What begins as a simple conversation quickly turns into a deeper investigation, revealing details that feel increasingly unsettling.
With only 3 episodes and a total runtime of around 2.5 hours, this is a quick but gripping watch. It’s not just about what happened… it’s about how easily trust can be built — and how quickly it can fall apart.
Why I Recommend It
This is one of those documentaries that hooks you because it feels so normal at the beginning — and that’s exactly what makes it unsettling.
I like how the story unfolds slowly instead of giving everything away upfront. It lets you experience the same confusion and doubt as the person at the center of it, which makes it more engaging than a typical true crime recap.
It’s also a very easy binge. Three episodes, short runtime, and each episode gives you just enough to keep going.
• Starts like a love story… ends like a true crime case
• Short, bingeable, and surprisingly unsettling
