The Keepers

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Template:Short description Script error: No such module "about". Template:Use mdy dates Template:Infobox television The Keepers is a seven-episode American documentary series that explores the unsolved murder of nun Catherine Cesnik in 1969. Cesnik taught English and drama at Baltimore's all-girls Archbishop Keough High School, and her former students believe that there was a cover-up by authorities after she suspected that a priest at the high school, A. Joseph Maskell, was guilty of sexually abusing students.[1][2] The series was directed by Ryan White and released on Netflix in 2017.[3][4][5]

Cast

  • Gemma Hoskins – former student and investigator
  • Abbie Fitzgerald Schaub – former student and investigator
  • Joseph Maskell – former priest and counselor
  • Jean Hargadon Wehner (a.k.a. Jane Doe) – former student
  • Teresa Lancaster (a.k.a. Jane Roe) – former student
  • Randy Lancaster – Teresa Lancaster's husband
  • Donna Von Den Bosch – former student
  • Juliana Farrell – former student
  • Deb Silcox – former student
  • Lil Hughes – former student
  • Chris Centofanti – former student
  • Mary Spence – former student
  • Marilyn Cesnik Radakovic – Sister Catherine's sister
  • Gerry Koob – former priest and Sister Catherine's former boyfriend
  • Tom Nugent – journalist and writer for the Baltimore City Paper
  • Bob Erlandson – journalist
  • Beverly Wallace – attorney for former students
  • Alan Horn – investigator
  • John Barnold – former captain, Baltimore City Police Department
  • James Scannell – former captain, Baltimore County Police Department
  • Brian Schwaab – former detective, Baltimore City Police Department
  • Gary Childs – detective, Baltimore County Police
  • Sharon A. H. May – former State's Attorney for Baltimore City
  • Edgar Davidson – possible suspect in the murder of sister Catherine
  • Deborah Yohn – Davidson's niece, who suspects her uncle's involvement in the murders based on anecdotes from her aunt, who is referred to as "Margaret" in the series.
  • Sharon Schmidt – daughter of Ronnie Schmidt and niece of Billy Schmidt, who suspects the involvement of both men in the murders.
  • Barbara Schmidt – mother of Sharon Schmidt, former wife of Ronnie Schmidt and sister-in-law to Billy Schmidt, who suspects the involvement of her husband and brother-in-law in the murders.
  • C. T. Wilson – Maryland state delegate
  • Charles Franz – former student at St. Clement's Church
  • Werner Spitz, MD – forensic pathologist

Episodes

Template:Episode table

Reviews

The Keepers was met with critical acclaim upon its release. The review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes gives the series an approval rating of 97% based on 30 reviews, with an average rating of 8.47/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "The Keepers draws on riveting, real-life terror to expose long-buried secrets—and tells an inspiring, brilliantly assembled story along the way."[6] Pilot Viruet of Vice wrote of the series, "It's harrowing and upsetting, and it will haunt you for a long time, which is part of what makes it necessary viewing."[7]

In Time magazine, Daniel D'Addario compared The Keepers with another Netflix true-crime series, Making a Murderer, stating that The Keepers does not lead its viewers to a definite conclusion about what happened. "While Sister Cathy Cesnik's death remains a mystery, its aftereffects include both crushing heartbreak and, for the amateur sleuths who seek to crack her case, a sense of making a difference... This isn't just more respectful to the victim than other true-crime stories, with their breathless delight at new clues. It's also more effective."[8] According to Jack Seale in The Guardian, "Where other true crime hits have followed a linear chronology, The Keepers hops between 1969, the 1990s and today, striking a fine balance between narrative structure – a wow moment at the end of every episode – and respect for a subject that doesn’t need or deserve sensationalism."[9]

Church response

The Archdiocese of Baltimore declined when asked by Netflix producers to comment on sexual misconduct allegations within the church. Later, the Archdiocese responded to the series by adding a FAQ page to its website, in which it stated allegations that the archdiocese knew of Maskell's sexual abuse prior to 1992 were false speculation.[10]

References

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External links

Template:Sexual abuse in the Catholic Church Template:Ryan White Template:Netflix original ended series (2012–2018)