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Hollywood True Crime Movies (1959-2005)
"Karla"
(2005):
View The Trailer.
A deeply
disturbing true story…Serial Killers/Husband & Wife team, Paul Bernardo and Karla Homolka’s
psychological dance with death and depravity.
The Hillside Strangler (2004): The disturbing case of
two serial killing cousins that terrorized Southern California
in the late 70s is brought gruesomely to film.
Starkweather (2004): In 1956 Nebraska 16 year old
garbage man Charles Starkweather goes on a murder spree with his
14 year old girlfriend Caril Ann Fugate killing 11 people in
three months, introducing America to spree killing.
Monster (2003): Charlize Theron won an Oscar for her
portrayal of Aileen Wuornos, one of America’s first female
serial killers.
The Stranger Beside Me (2003): Based on Ann Rule’s real
life friendship with serial killer Ted Bundy, before he was
exposed as a murderer.
Gacy (2003): Based on a true story of serial killer John
Wayne Gacy, a man with over 30 dead men and boys entombed in the
crawl space underneath his house which he shared with his family.
Chicago (2002): The movie and broadway musical were
based on true murder cases – a laundry worker and a cabaret
singer who were accused of claiming the lives of their lovers in
1924.
Dahmer (2002): Based on the true
crime story of serial killer Jeffrey Dahmer, this movie tells
the emotionally riveting story of a man who turned his darkest
fantasies into a horrifying reality.
Nightstalker
(2002): Based on the life of
Robert Ramirez, aka the Nightstalker, who terrorized people in
Los Angeles during the 1980s.
From Hell (2001):
In Victorian Era London, a troubled clairvoyant police detective
investigates the murders by Jack The Ripper.
Marilyn Bardsley of Crimelibrary.com says
Why, over a hundred years later, are there allegedly more
books written on Jack than all of the American presidents
combined? Why are there stories, songs, operas, movies and a
never-ending stream of books on this one Victorian criminal? Why
is this symbol of terror as popular a subject today as he was in
Victorian London? Because Jack the Ripper represents the classic
whodunit. Not only is the case an enduring unsolved
mystery that professional and amateur sleuths have tried to
solve for over a hundred years, but the story has a terrifying,
almost supernatural quality to it.
Summer of Sam (1999): Takes place as the notorious
serial killer Son of Sam (David Berkowitz) is stalking New York
City.
Citizen X (1995): Based on the story of a Russian serial
killer who is thought to have killed more than 50 people and the
bureaucracy that hampered the investigation.
Silence of the Lambs (1991), The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
(1974): Killer Ed Gein, who wore the skin of his victims,
was an inspiration for Buffalo Bill in Silence of the Lambs and
his case also impacted the Chainsaw Massacre movie.
The Amityville Horror (1979): The story of the haunted
house can be traced back to Ronald DeFeo, who killed his family
while living in the home.
Helter Skelter (1976): Focused on Charles Manson and his
“family” and the brutal murders that sent them to jail. A new
version was released in 2004.
Jack the Ripper (1976):
A serial killer whose mother was a
prostitute starts killing streetwalkers as a way of paying back
his mother for her abuse.
The Deadly Tower (1975): Tells the story of Charles
Whitman, who killed his wife and mother, then went up to the
University of Texas Tower, where he shot and killed many people
at random.
Dog Day Afternoon (1975):
Based on the true story of John
Wojtowicz, who with Salvatore Naturale attempted to rob a Chase
Manhattan bank in Brooklyn to pay for his lover's sex-change
operation. The duo held the bank's employees hostage for 14
hours. Naturale was shot and killed during the standoff, and
Wojtowicz was later sentenced to 20 years in prison.
The French Connection (1971): William Friedkin's
thriller about two New York cops who try to bust a drug ring.
The film's protagonists, 'Popeye' Doyle and 'Cloudy' Russo, were
based on two real-life New York detectives, Eddie Egan and Sonny
Grosso. And the title refers to an infamous drug trafficking
scheme in the 1960s and '70s, in which heroin was smuggled from
Turkey to France and then the U.S.
The Boston Strangler (1968): About the murders of Boston
women in the 1960s and their killer, who became known as the
Boston Strangler.
In Cold Blood (1967): Based on Truman Capote’s book
about the infamous killing of the Clutter family by two would-be
robbers.
Compulsion (1959): Based on the 1924 Chicago murder
trial of Nathan Leopold and Richard Loeb, two rich, handsome
teenagers who killed a 14 year old boy for kicks.
(source:
Pulse24.com,
Quantum Entertainment
MovieBank,
Imdb)
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