What Happened to Amy Bradley? New Doc Focuses on 23-Year-Old Who Disappeared During Cruise

Amy Bradley (Netflix)

In March 1998, 23-year-old Amy Lynn Bradley boarded the Rhapsody of the Seas with her parents and younger brother for a Caribbean cruise. Just a day and a half into the trip, she vanished.

The ship was approaching Curaçao, and Amy Bradley had been out late with her brother at the ship’s nightclub, according to the FBI. By early morning, she was gone.

The case drew national attention at the time and has continued to surface in internet forums, true crime podcasts and TV specials in the decades since. But Amy Bradley’s disappearance has never been solved. No body was found. No charges were filed. And no official explanation has ever been confirmed.

Now, 26 years later, a new Netflix docuseries, “Amy Bradley Is Missing,” looks back at her disappearance. Directed by Ari Mark and Phil Lott, the three-part series revisits key witness accounts and theories — from possible overboard scenarios to organized trafficking — while focusing on the family’s decades-long search for answers.

“The story has so many layers,” Mark tells TODAY.com. “And when you sit with this family in their home and hear what they’ve been through, you understand why this is a story that deserves to be told.”

A long-unsolved case

Amy Bradley disappeared in the early morning hours of March 24, 1998, as the ship neared the island of Curaçao.

She was last seen asleep on her chair on the balcony of the ship’s eighth deck at 4:30 a.m, according to the Curacao police, as reported by the South Florida Sun-Sentinel in 1998.

Amy Bradley and Brad Bradley. (Netflix)

The FBI at the time searched the ship in St. Maarten, its next destination, and an FBI spokeswoman said the agency had “no evidence of foul play,” the AP reported at the time.

The family’s theories

In the years since, dozens of explanations have circulated — including a theory she was kidnapped and speculation that she fell or jumped overboard.

Her family has long believed she was taken against her will and may still be alive, which her parents, Ron and Iva Bradley, and brother Brad Bradley reiterate in the documentary.

The docuseries does not offer a definitive conclusion. Instead, it builds a detailed timeline and walks viewers through how the investigation unfolded and where it hit dead ends. Throughout, the series places the Bradleys at the center of the story, offering a portrait of a family still living with questions. The docuseries also features interviews with people who believe they saw Amy Bradley at various locations in the Caribbean.

Amy Bradley (Netflix)

“The thing that keeps them going, and kept us going, is that their hope is completely inextinguishable,” Mark says. “Amy is present for them every single second of every single day.”

“Every single day wasn’t just another day of production, every single day was another day that Amy could be home,” Lott adds.

Ron and Iva Bradley filed two lawsuits on the same day against Royal Caribbean Cruises Ltd. in Miami-Dade court. Both were dismissed in 1999.

Telling a story without a conclusion

With no definitive conclusion to Amy Bradley’s case, the filmmakers behind “Amy Bradley Is Missing” faced a challenge: how do you tell a complete story when the central mystery remains unsolved?

“We really tried not to present anything to viewers that we didn’t ourselves think was real or credible,” Mark says. “There’s a lot of fact checking, a lot of information gathering and research that goes into these things so if certain leads had no substance we didn’t put them in the show.”

Amy Bradley (Netflix)

That approach guided how they structured the series. The episodes aren’t just a string of rumors — they follow a clear timeline, anchored by evidence, official reports and direct interviews. Each theory introduced in the series, whether involving foul play, accidental death, or human trafficking, is rooted in credible information, but never framed as the definitive truth.

The result is a docuseries that resists sensationalism. Instead of promising answers, it leans into uncertainty, inviting viewers to sit with the discomfort that the Bradleys have lived with for more than two decades.

“You go into a project like this thinking maybe you’ll land somewhere. And instead, every time we thought we had a theory nailed down, something else would unravel it,” Lott says. “We’d find ourselves saying, ‘OK, it’s definitely this.’ And then by the next day, ‘Actually, no. It might be something else entirely.’”

While they won’t reveal which theory they personally believe, they agree that something shifted early that morning on the ship. “Something happened that cannot be explained at about 5:45 a.m. on that ship,” Lott says. “That started the timeline that is not easy to answer.”

Mark adds that the ambiguity has never meant indifference. “We know there’s more to it,” he says. “It’s not so cut and dry.”

By Episode 3, the show has made its position clear: the point isn’t to provide closure, because closure may never come. Instead, it’s about creating clarity around the facts, while honoring the ambiguity that still defines Amy Bradley’s case.

What Amy Bradley’s family is doing now

The final episode of “Amy Bradley Is Missing” doesn’t offer resolution. Instead, it offers an invitation — to re-engage with a case that, after 26 years, still holds unanswered questions for her family.

For the filmmakers, this isn’t just a story about one family’s grief. It’s also a story about how collective attention, even decades later, might still help uncover the truth.

“We’re always excited about getting shows out for the public,” Lott tells TODAY.com. “It’s a wonderful conclusion to a process, but when you meet this family and you hear how present and alive Amy is for them every single second of every single day, the responsibility for getting a show onto the air is about life and death.”

Amy’s family continues to hold out hope. In the closing moments of the series, her mother, Iva Bradley, says they wake up every day thinking “maybe today,” and go to bed each night thinking “maybe tomorrow.”

That hope, unshaken after more than two decades, is what the filmmakers say anchored the entire project.

Between moments of uncertainty and unresolved leads, the series returns again and again to the person at the center: a daughter, a sister, a friend. “This show, more than others, feels communal,” Mark says. “If we can engage enough people around the world—people who want to do something, people who want to help—we think there’s a real chance something new could come to light.”

For the Bradleys, that possibility is everything. Even now, they believe someone, somewhere, knows something. And they’re still waiting for the right person to speak up.