
I have a morbid fascination with stories of animals getting revenge on the humans who have wronged them.
I inhaled Netflix's Blackfish, a film about the tragic plight of killer whales confined in captivity.
I will tell practical strangers to watch lesser-known documentary Grizzly Man, which told the harrowing tale of the death of grizzly bear activist Timothy Treadwell.
I knew everything there was to know about tiger enthusiast Joe Exotic long before he was an internet celebrity thanks to Netflix's Tiger King.
And now, a new animal documentary has come along for me to (pardon the pun) sink my teeth into: a four-part docuseries on Binge called Chimp Crazy from Eric Goode, the director of Tiger King.
What is Chimp Crazy?
This series is like a less sensational and sanitised version of Tiger King, and as a result, it's a far more disturbing watch.
In the place of documentary subject Joe Exotic is an equally enigmatic main character, Tonia Haddix, an animal enthusiast who begins the series working as a volunteer at Connie Casey’s Missouri Primate Foundation, a former chimpanzee-breeding facility in Missouri.
Watch the trailer for Chimp Crazy. Post continues after video.