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Struggling against finding his father, Gary L. Stewart, a youthful aspiring person, whose mother interfaces with him for the first time, revealing to him some data about his biological dad, goes in the rush to find his dad, what challenges him, as he faces the dark secrets of his family.
CRITICS OF "The Most Dangerous Animal of All - Season 1"
TIME Magazine
The Most Dangerous Animal of All examines how Stewart's quest for his true identity never fully satisfies him, and comes at the cost of several relationships, including multiple marriages.
...it turns the entire affair into a critique of both itself and, by extension, the true-crime genre, where sensational claims and pretzel-logic explanations are routinely, and easily, presented as trustworthy.
His (Director Kief Davidson) team also does what Stewart's publisher... apparently never did: fact-check his assertions. It's in those verifications that the documentary justifies its existence.
FX's first true crime series brings a new type of grossness to the genre - one in which the audience feels shameful simply because viewing the docuseries makes us complicit in stroking the ego of its subject, Gary L. Stewart.
Its four-episode counts makes it an easy investment, one whose ultimate turn is bizarre but feels like a perfect fit for this strange case's natural twists.