A three-part Netflix docuseries will investigate the frightening enigma of flight MH370’s ‘disappearance’ and all the unsolved questions.
On March 8, 2014, a Malaysia Airlines flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing went missing, leaving 239 passengers and crew unaccounted for.
Australia, China, and Malaysia pulled halted a two-year, £107 million undersea search in the southern Indian Ocean in January 2017 after finding no evidence of the aircraft, while a third, three-month search, conducted by US exploration firm Ocean Infinity, likewise concluded in May 2018.
Families are still hunting for answers over a decade later.
In the disturbing new trailer for the Netflix docuseries, family members of passengers and crew, experts, and investigative journalists explore the mystery and their hunt for answers.

Throughout the docuseries, families from China, Malaysia, Australia, and France are interviewed, and conspiracy ideas about what happened are investigated.
‘My daughter asked me, “Where is papa?” It is just so unimaginable,’ one family member tearfully says.
Another says: ‘I felt completely shattered. I lived in denial about the plane having crashed.’

‘They’re taking us for fools. They’re lying to us,’ another loved one says, as the conspiracy theories unfold about the plane having been ‘hijacked’.
The second installment of the series will examine the disappearance of a second Malaysian aeroplane mere months later.

In July 2014, MH17 was shot down by a Russian missile, raising questions about how two planes from the same line could have crashed in such a short period of time.
Viewers are already desperate to watch, with one writing: ‘Gave me chills, can’t wait to watch,’ while another penned: ‘Finally a documentary on this. I have been waiting forever. I still remember that day I was watching the news and saw this. I’m still sad and shocked to this day.’
‘Set across seven countries, this gripping documentary series uses powerful archives to reconstruct the night of the disappearance,’ reads the official synopsis, ‘giving viewers the chance to explore three of the most contentious theories about the plane’s disappearance.’
It continues: ‘It’s a story full of conspiracies and rabbit holes, shadowy figures and official silence – but most of all, it’s an opportunity to keep alive the memory of those who were lost in one of the great unsolved mysteries of our time and to keep pushing for answers.’
MH370: The Plane That Disappeared is available to stream March 8.