CLEVELAND, OHIO – It’s been over a decade since the world learned the full, stomach-churning truth behind 2207 Seymour Avenue, but the nightmare is resurfacing on Netflix with a vengeance.Β Cleveland Abduction, the 2015 Lifetime film directed by Alex Kalyminios, has quietly climbed the platform’s Top 10 in the U.S., U.K., and Australia this week, leaving thousands of viewers physically ill, emotionally shattered, and unable to sleep. Based on the real-life kidnappings of Michelle Knight, Amanda Berry, and Gina DeJesus by monster Ariel Castro, the movie isn’t just β€œdisturbing” β€” it’s a descent into 11 years of hell that many are callingΒ β€œthe most traumatic thing I’ve ever watched on streaming.”

β€œI had to pause at 30 minutes and throw up.β€Β β€œI’m crying so hard I can’t breathe.β€Β β€œThis isn’t entertainment. This is torture.”

These aren’t hyperboles. They’re real-time reactions flooding X, TikTok, and Reddit as viewers stumble into the film expecting a standard true-crime thriller β€” only to be blindsided by graphic depictions of rape, starvation, beatings, forced miscarriages, and psychological annihilation. With aΒ 4.7/10 on IMDbΒ but aΒ 100% audience score surgeΒ in recent days,Β Cleveland AbductionΒ has become the sleeper horror hit no one asked for β€” and no one can unsee.

Netflix viewers have been left horrified by the film Cleveland Abduction, with some particularly dark scenes sickening viewers.

The True Story: 11 Years in a House of Horrors

BetweenΒ August 2002 and April 2004, Ariel Castro β€” a 52-year-old school bus driver and part-time musician β€” lured three young women into his unassuming two-story home in Cleveland’s Tremont neighborhood:

Michelle KnightΒ (21) – abducted August 23, 2002, after leaving a cousin’s house.
Amanda BerryΒ (16) – taken April 21, 2003, the day before her 17th birthday, while walking home from Burger King.
Gina DeJesusΒ (14) – snatched April 2, 2004, while walking home from middle school with Castro’s own daughter.

ForΒ 4,007 days, they wereΒ chained, starved, raped daily, and psychologically brokenΒ in a labyrinth of padlocked rooms, boarded-up windows, and soundproofed walls. Castro usedΒ dog leashes, extension cords, and duct tapeΒ to bind them. He fed themΒ one meal a dayΒ β€” often spoiled scraps. HeΒ beat Knight until she miscarried five times. He forced Berry to give birth to his daughter,Β Jocelyn, in aΒ kiddie poolΒ on Christmas Day 2006 β€” with Knight as the only midwife, usingΒ scissors and no anesthesia.

The women wereΒ allowed outside only twiceΒ in 11 years β€” both times inΒ disguises in the backyard, under threat of death.

The Film: A Relentless, Unflinching Recreation

Cleveland Abduction film.

Directed byΒ Alex KalyminiosΒ (EastEnders,Β Skins),Β Cleveland AbductionΒ isΒ not stylized horrorΒ β€” it’sΒ raw, documentary-style brutality. Shot inΒ grim, claustrophobic close-ups, the film usesΒ real police audio, 911 calls, and court transcriptsΒ to anchor its terror in reality.

Taryn ManningΒ (Orange Is the New Black) playsΒ Michelle KnightΒ with haunting authenticity β€” her screams during assault scenes areΒ so visceral, Netflix added aΒ trigger warningΒ mid-film.
Katie SarifeΒ (Annabelle Comes Home) isΒ Amanda Berry, delivering a gut-wrenching performance as the teen forced into motherhood.
Pam GrierΒ (Jackie Brown) appears asΒ Gina’s mother, her real-life grief mirroring the DeJesus family’s agony.
Raymond J. BarryΒ embodiesΒ Ariel CastroΒ β€” not as a cartoon villain, but as aΒ smirking, Bible-quoting sociopathΒ who calls his victims β€œfamily.”

TheΒ most infamous scene? TheΒ birth of Jocelyn. Viewers reportΒ pausing, vomiting, and turning it offΒ as Knight delivers the baby while chained to a radiator, Castro threatening,Β β€œIf the baby dies, you die.”

β€œI’ve watchedΒ Saw,Β Hostel,Β MartyrsΒ β€” nothing prepared me for this.” – @horrorfanatic99 on X

The Rescue: May 6, 2013 – A Miracle on Seymour Avenue

The escape that ended the nightmare wasΒ pure chance. On May 6, 2013, Castro left the house unlocked. Amanda Berry β€” now 27 β€”Β kicked out the bottom panel of the storm doorΒ and screamed for help. NeighborΒ Charles RamseyΒ heard her cries:

β€œHelp me! I’m Amanda Berry! I’ve been kidnapped for 10 years!”

Ramsey and another neighbor,Β Angel Cordero, broke in. Police arrived within minutes.Β Michelle and Gina emerged blinking into daylight, emaciated, scarred, and clutching 6-year-old Jocelyn. Castro was arrested hours later at a McDonald’s.

TheΒ 911 callΒ β€” played in full in the film β€” isΒ one of the most chilling audio recordings in true-crime history:

Berry (sobbing):Β β€œI’ve been missing for 10 years… I’m free now!” Dispatcher:Β β€œTalk to the police when they get there.” Berry:Β β€œNo, I need themΒ nowΒ β€” before he gets back!”

Cleveland kidnapping victims.

Castro’s End: Suicide in Cell 23

Sentenced onΒ August 1, 2013, toΒ life plus 1,000 years, Castro showedΒ zero remorse. In court, he claimed:

β€œI’m not a monster. I’m sick. I have an addiction to sex and pornography.”

He insisted the womenΒ β€œlived a normal life” and thatΒ β€œmost of the sex was consensual.”

ExactlyΒ one month later, onΒ September 3, 2013, Castro was foundΒ hanged in his cellΒ at the Correctional Reception Center in Orient, Ohio. His suicide note β€” discovered by guards β€” read in part:

β€œGOD LOVES YOU, FOR ALL ARE SINNERS… CHRIST IS MY SAVIOR.”

The women wereΒ not informed until morning. Michelle Knight later said:Β β€œI didn’t cry. I smiled.”

Ariel Castro mugshot.

The Survivors: Reclaiming Life After Hell

Michelle KnightΒ (nowΒ Lily Rose Lee) publishedΒ two memoirsΒ β€”Β Finding MeΒ (2014) andΒ Life After DarknessΒ (2018). She’s aΒ domestic violence advocate, tattoo artist, and mother.
Amanda BerryΒ co-wroteΒ Hope: A Memoir of Survival in ClevelandΒ (2015) with Gina. She works atΒ Fox 8 NewsΒ in Cleveland, hosting missing persons segments.
Gina DeJesusΒ founded theΒ Northeast Ohio Amber Alert Committee. She’s engaged and speaks at schools about abduction prevention.

Jocelyn, nowΒ 18, is aΒ straight-A studentΒ andΒ aspiring journalist. She calls MichelleΒ β€œAuntie” and hasΒ no contact with Castro’s family.

Why It’s Hitting So Hard in 2025

Though released in 2015,Β Cleveland AbductionΒ wasΒ buried on LifetimeΒ until Netflix added it inΒ June 2025. The timing is eerie:

True-crime boomΒ (Dahmer,Β Baby Reindeer) has conditioned viewers for darkness β€” but notΒ this.
#MeToo reckoningΒ makes Castro’s gaslighting hit harder.
TikTok true-crime creatorsΒ are live-reacting, amplifying the trauma.

Netflix now displays aΒ full-screen trigger warning:

β€œContains graphic depictions of sexual assault, physical abuse, and forced childbirth. Viewer discretion advised.”

But many sayΒ it’s not enough.

Viewer Reactions: β€œI Can’t Unsee It”

β€œI’m a paramedic. I’ve seen bodies. This broke me.”
β€œMy daughter is 14. I had to stop at Gina’s abduction scene.”
β€œTaryn Manning deserves every award for that performance.”
β€œWhy is this on Netflix? This isn’t entertainment.”

One viral TikTok (12M views) shows a userΒ sobbing through the final 10 minutes:

β€œI thought I was tough. I was wrong.”

Where to Watch β€” And Should You?

Cleveland AbductionΒ is streaming on:

NetflixΒ (U.S., U.K., Canada, Australia)
Amazon Prime Video
Apple TV
YouTubeΒ (rent/buy)

Content Warning: Rated TV-14 but containsΒ extreme violence, rape, childbirth trauma, suicide.

Support Resources:

U.S.:Β National Sexual Assault Hotline:Β 1-800-656-HOPE (4673)
U.K.:Β Rape Crisis England & Wales:Β 0808 802 9999
Australia:Β 1800RESPECT:Β 1800 737 732

The Final Word: A Story That Should Never Be Forgotten

Cleveland AbductionΒ isn’t just a movie. It’s aΒ testament to survival, aΒ warning about monsters in plain sight, and aΒ reminder that evil can hide behind a smile and a school bus.

Michelle Knight said it best in her 2014 memoir:

β€œI was dead for 11 years. Now I’m alive. And no one will ever take that from me again.”

If you watch β€”Β brace yourself. If you don’t β€”Β remember their names.

Michelle. Amanda. Gina.Β They survived the unsurvivable.