Una serie italiana de crímenes reales sobre el Monstruo de Florencia, probablemente el asesino en serie más conocido y enigmático de la historia reciente de Italia.Una serie italiana de crímenes reales sobre el Monstruo de Florencia, probablemente el asesino en serie más conocido y enigmático de la historia reciente de Italia.Una serie italiana de crímenes reales sobre el Monstruo de Florencia, probablemente el asesino en serie más conocido y enigmático de la historia reciente de Italia.
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The Monster of Florence case is one of the most bizarre, complex, convoluted and fascinating cases in the history of serial murder. Spanning at least 11 and possibly 17 years, it led to at least 14 and possibly 16 murders, four trials, one trial conviction, two definitive convictions and the trial convicted defendant, Pietro Pacciani, dying in mysterious circumstances before his due process could be completed. It also involved two targeted burglaries of the police evidence room, where several items of evidence were stolen and a string of collateral mysterious deaths and murders of several people involved in the case, as well as strange money transfers into the accounts of two suspects and mysterious threatening phone calls to various witnesses.
The official position of the Italian police is that an occult group of wealthy Italians commissioned the murders, hiring various low lives over the years to do the actual killings, in order to retrieve body parts, that would then be used in weird black magic rituals.
The problem with the Netflix Monster of Florence series is that it covers none of this at all. Instead it focuses on a clan of Sardinians who were initially suspected in being involved in the murders, but were later discounted as new developments arose.
It also consists of repetitive and rather pointless flashbacks and has a strange fixation with a 1968 double murder, which may not have even been perpetrated by the Monster of Florence.
For a series covering an absolutely fascinating and possibly unique serial murder case, it's surprisingly dull and kinda boring and focuses more on melodrama between the Sardinians, instead of the nuances and developments of the case.
The trial convicted defendant Pietro Paccianin is only barely mentioned at the end of the series.
Unless there's a planned second season which will cover the complete story, (and there hopefully will be, considering Pacciani's mention at the end), I'd say to anyone interested in the case to not bother with this one. Watch the feature length 2020 documentary, "The Monsters of Florence" by journalist Andrea Vogt instead. It's far more detailed and available on Netflix UK or Tubi for American viewers.
But as someone familiar with the Monster of Florence case and who has been fascinated by it for years, I found this series extremely disappointing to say the least.
The official position of the Italian police is that an occult group of wealthy Italians commissioned the murders, hiring various low lives over the years to do the actual killings, in order to retrieve body parts, that would then be used in weird black magic rituals.
The problem with the Netflix Monster of Florence series is that it covers none of this at all. Instead it focuses on a clan of Sardinians who were initially suspected in being involved in the murders, but were later discounted as new developments arose.
It also consists of repetitive and rather pointless flashbacks and has a strange fixation with a 1968 double murder, which may not have even been perpetrated by the Monster of Florence.
For a series covering an absolutely fascinating and possibly unique serial murder case, it's surprisingly dull and kinda boring and focuses more on melodrama between the Sardinians, instead of the nuances and developments of the case.
The trial convicted defendant Pietro Paccianin is only barely mentioned at the end of the series.
Unless there's a planned second season which will cover the complete story, (and there hopefully will be, considering Pacciani's mention at the end), I'd say to anyone interested in the case to not bother with this one. Watch the feature length 2020 documentary, "The Monsters of Florence" by journalist Andrea Vogt instead. It's far more detailed and available on Netflix UK or Tubi for American viewers.
But as someone familiar with the Monster of Florence case and who has been fascinated by it for years, I found this series extremely disappointing to say the least.
This crime thriller is based on true events. After long time finally a solid psycho murder episode from Italy on Netflix. I find it is actually on short supply to see good series or movies from Italy on Netflix. The first episode was for me too slow paced and I thought already to stop. But the longer I watched it the more interesting the story got. There are many flashbacks to reconstruct the mystery puzzles and help so the audience to understand what was really going on. The atmosphere and filming locations have been wonderfully created from the 60ties to the 80ties. The actors played the characters respectably and I think the director did a great job too. If you liked the other two psycho killer series on Netflix Jeffrey Dahmer or Ed Gein this is for you. Final vote: 7/10.
Really slow and unfocused to the point where it was often difficult to follow.
The myriad of characters and constant flashbacks/flashforwards were the main reason for the confusion while watching this. There was also nothing compelling about the Italian police procedural side of this crime case, which was mind boggling because the case was reportedly delayed and unsolved for many years longer than it should have because of purported misdeeds and mishandling of evidence and suspects by said police squad.
I would have rather seen this story told from the point of view of the Douglas Preston non-fiction book. Far more compelling!
The myriad of characters and constant flashbacks/flashforwards were the main reason for the confusion while watching this. There was also nothing compelling about the Italian police procedural side of this crime case, which was mind boggling because the case was reportedly delayed and unsolved for many years longer than it should have because of purported misdeeds and mishandling of evidence and suspects by said police squad.
I would have rather seen this story told from the point of view of the Douglas Preston non-fiction book. Far more compelling!
A new Netflix series has just been released - The Monster of Florence. It's based on real events that took place between 1978 and 1985 near the city of Florence, in its suburbs. This is already the third major series in recent months exploring serial killings - after the ones about Ed Gein and John Wayne Gacy. But this one is very different.
While American true-crime shows usually follow a familiar pattern - a troubled childhood, a drunk father, a fanatically religious mother using faith as control - The Monster of Florence goes in the opposite direction.
There's no typical "killer vs. Victim" formula here. Instead, it's a deep, almost philosophical story about post-war Italy - about a society that was closed, judgmental, and constrained by Catholicism and social dogmas.
For me, it was quite an eye-opener. I didn't even know that until 1970, divorce was illegal in Italy. A man who left his wife and children for another woman could lose not only his reputation but his freedom. The series captures this cultural reality - a world where personal freedom was suppressed by religion and fear of public shame.
In its tone and atmosphere, the series feels like an old Italian drama, where the focus is not on the killer but on the spirit of the time - how people lived, what they feared, and how they hid their desires and guilt. It's psychological and spiritual cinema, not horror or crime for shock value.
Honestly, I was pleasantly surprised. At first, I expected a typical American-style thriller, but it turned out to be something much deeper. The pacing is slow and deliberate, the visuals stunning, with beautiful cinematography and an authentic sense of Tuscany's outskirts.
I really don't understand why the ratings are so low - perhaps viewers expected more blood and suspense, but instead got a thoughtful exploration of morality, guilt, and repressed sexuality in Catholic society.
⭐ My rating: 8/10.
Not for those seeking fast-paced action - but definitely for anyone who appreciates psychological drama and European cinema with historical depth.
While American true-crime shows usually follow a familiar pattern - a troubled childhood, a drunk father, a fanatically religious mother using faith as control - The Monster of Florence goes in the opposite direction.
There's no typical "killer vs. Victim" formula here. Instead, it's a deep, almost philosophical story about post-war Italy - about a society that was closed, judgmental, and constrained by Catholicism and social dogmas.
For me, it was quite an eye-opener. I didn't even know that until 1970, divorce was illegal in Italy. A man who left his wife and children for another woman could lose not only his reputation but his freedom. The series captures this cultural reality - a world where personal freedom was suppressed by religion and fear of public shame.
In its tone and atmosphere, the series feels like an old Italian drama, where the focus is not on the killer but on the spirit of the time - how people lived, what they feared, and how they hid their desires and guilt. It's psychological and spiritual cinema, not horror or crime for shock value.
Honestly, I was pleasantly surprised. At first, I expected a typical American-style thriller, but it turned out to be something much deeper. The pacing is slow and deliberate, the visuals stunning, with beautiful cinematography and an authentic sense of Tuscany's outskirts.
I really don't understand why the ratings are so low - perhaps viewers expected more blood and suspense, but instead got a thoughtful exploration of morality, guilt, and repressed sexuality in Catholic society.
⭐ My rating: 8/10.
Not for those seeking fast-paced action - but definitely for anyone who appreciates psychological drama and European cinema with historical depth.
Not that great either!
I agree a lot more could have been brought out to the viewer.
Yet, it was interesting as I have not read the book or knew about such a case.
I guess they tried. Just is not as exciting as I had expected. I think I'll buy the book. Maybe help fact from overthinking drama series.
I agree a lot more could have been brought out to the viewer.
Yet, it was interesting as I have not read the book or knew about such a case.
I guess they tried. Just is not as exciting as I had expected. I think I'll buy the book. Maybe help fact from overthinking drama series.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaBased on the true crime book The Monster of Florence by Douglas Preston and Mario Spezi.
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Detalles
- Fecha de lanzamiento
- País de origen
- Sitio oficial
- Idioma
- También se conoce como
- The Monster of Florence
- Locaciones de filmación
- Ronciglione, Viterbo, Lazio, Italia(location)
- Productoras
- Ver más créditos de la compañía en IMDbPro
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 1h(60 min)
- Color
- Mezcla de sonido
- Relación de aspecto
- 2.00 : 1
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