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One of the most disgusting documentaries is to crush it on the best Netflix rankings





There is nothing like a shipwreck, that is to say a disaster so unhappy that it draws massive attention-after all, it is the human nature of Gawk. It is the draw behind a series of Netflix documentaries on the various metaphorical trains in our recent history, with entries on the two individual writers, such as the former mayor of Toronto “Mayhem” Rob Ford, and the catastrophes of the crowd, like the violence that broke out in Woodstock ’99 or on the tragedy of the Astroworld Festival in 2021 has led to several dead. These “Trainwreck” documents can also really go in tone, because something like the excellent documentary “Astroworld” is a deep heartbreaking dive in the way a fun and exciting moment can become fatal in an instant. Just say that Doc Rob Ford is much more salted.

Now there is a brand new “Trainwreck” on Netflix, and it is certainly the coarse to date. In fact, it could be one of the coarse documentaries available in streaming in general. It all depends on how you treat scatological stories, because it has the scoop on many poop (literally).

According to FlixPatrol, the 10 best films in Netflix in the United States currently house “Trainwreck: Poop Cruise”. The doc tells the true story of the Carnival Triumph, a cruise ship that has undergone engine fire in the middle of the Gulf of Mexico, which means that the ship stops completely dead in the water. He also caused electricity and plumbing problems on board, which led to the toilets of the ship overflowing in the corridors with raw wastewater. (Consequently, “Poop Cruise”.) Of course, as fun as it can say “Poop Cruise”, and as humorous as in theory and retrospective, the real test was a heartbreaking nightmare, and Doc Netflix has all the coarse and coarse details.

Trainwreck: Poop Cruise is as entertaining as disgusting

This means that most of these “shipwreck” documentaries are convincing are the interviews with various ordinary people who have been involved in these extraordinary situations, and “Pop Cruise” is not different. Although it is one thing to see the wastewater video spreading in the corridors, the first -hand accounts of events strike stronger because it is easy to sympathize with the disbelief and the shock of people. Although it is far from the depressing horrors of something like “The Last Cruise” (the documentary on the cruise ship Diamond Princess which was quarantined at the sea at the start of the cocovide pandemic), “Pop Cruise” still has enough wickedness to convince a certain audience to never set foot on a cruise ship. (Me, for my part, I will never go up to mount one unless the doctor of the ship is called Odyssey, thank you.) Vacationers and the crew were nervous to be trapped at sea in increasingly uncomfortable conditions, trying to fight against boredom as well as the ship becoming a large bathroom. When someone responsible decided that the solution was to start serving alcohol for free to try to calm the guests, things have become even more uncontrollable, with some guests who even threw pacs of poop over board to bring them back to the ship and land on one of the lower bridges.

Perhaps none of the people interviewed from “Poop Cruise” is distinguished only than Abhi, a chef who describes everything in a very colorful way, his general tone more perplexed than anything else. He seems to be a very easy to live and friendly man, and when he describes seeing something he describes as a “poop lasagna”, it is easily the biggest and funniest moment of the DOC. “Trainwreck: Poop Cruise” will really teach you something or change the world? Absolutely not, but it’s an interesting way to spend an hour … as long as you have your stomach for that.



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