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6,1/10
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SUA AVALIAÇÃO
Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaWhile working at a Seattle clinic for women in the 1970s, aspiring crime writer, Ann Rule, unwittingly becomes friends with serial killer Ted Bundy.While working at a Seattle clinic for women in the 1970s, aspiring crime writer, Ann Rule, unwittingly becomes friends with serial killer Ted Bundy.While working at a Seattle clinic for women in the 1970s, aspiring crime writer, Ann Rule, unwittingly becomes friends with serial killer Ted Bundy.
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Ben Immanuel
- Joe Foley
- (as Benjamin Ratner)
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Avaliações em destaque
Overall, this movie is "meh." It lacks accuracy. Many of the quotes are presented out of context. Events are portrayed incorrectly or out of order. It was pretty typical of a made-for-tv movie, which is probably why it went direct to dvd.
All that aside, Billy Campbell does the best interpretation of Bundy I've seen in all of the movies about him. He captures the chameleon nature of the man by constantly changing his hairstyle and facial expressions. His voice mimics Bundy's well. So it is worth a watch just to see Campbell.
The only thing really worth noting about this wildly inaccurate and misleading movie is Billy Campbell's portrayal of Ted Bundy. Of the various movies about Bundy there have been through the years, Campbell's performance as Bundy is one of the better versions, but that's about where it ends. Bundy and Ann Rule were not "close friends" nor did they have anything other than a co-worker relationship for a short time. Bundy was nothing more than a fraud and a poseur and yet he's often portrayed as some overachieving success story and nothing could be further from the truth. Someone here even referred to him as a "criminal mastermind." Nonsense. Inform yourself.
What bothered me most about this movie is that none of the victims real names were used and they should never be forgotten. Rule uses their names in her book, so why not in the movie? Even though his victims were many, the crime that ultimately sent Bundy to the electric chair was the murder of a 12 year old Florida girl named Kimberly Leach and her murder isn't even mentioned in the movie. As another reviewer suggested, for an accurate and detailed accounting of Bundy and his crimes, read the book or watch a documentary. There are many out there. I especially recommend the book published in 2023 by Chi Omega survivor Kathy Kleiner Rubin.
What bothered me most about this movie is that none of the victims real names were used and they should never be forgotten. Rule uses their names in her book, so why not in the movie? Even though his victims were many, the crime that ultimately sent Bundy to the electric chair was the murder of a 12 year old Florida girl named Kimberly Leach and her murder isn't even mentioned in the movie. As another reviewer suggested, for an accurate and detailed accounting of Bundy and his crimes, read the book or watch a documentary. There are many out there. I especially recommend the book published in 2023 by Chi Omega survivor Kathy Kleiner Rubin.
The other reviews basically nailed it on the head I didn't enjoy the film but I do want to mention that the only thing good about it in my opinion was Billy Campbell's betrayal of Ted Bundy although I would say he would comes in second to Michael Riley Burke's performance in the 2002 film "Ted Bundy". One of the best performances I've ever seen in film in regards to an actor's portrayal of real person.
Ann Rules' books including the Stranger Beside Me offers a detailed complex and complicated version of the events around Ted Bundy. Who would have thought that even a seasoned policewoman turned writer would be sitting next to a serial killer on Tuesdays nights for a Suicide hot line. There is no wonder that Ted Bundy got away with so much. He was brilliant and conscious. He graduated college and was attending law school. But there was a dark side behind the image of a charming, intelligent political promising young man and that is what Ann Rule tries to bring forth to the public in her book and in her movie. Sadly, the movie does touch on some bit of his past including the possible connection with a young girl's disappearance and the horrifying crimes against the women in the film. Not all of the victims were shown but the film can scare anybody from hitchhiking away for sure. Ann Rule was a lot stronger than the portrayal. She has three other children which are not at all mentioned. Barbara Hershey did a favorable job in playing Ann Rule. The actor, Billy Campbell, played Ted Bundy was absolutely chilling and tragic all at once. You just cringed with sadness when you heard the judge's remarks about him and if he had only chosen another way to live.
RELEASED TO TV IN 2003 and directed by Paul Shapiro, "Ann Rule Presents: The Stranger Beside Me" (aka "The Ted Bundy Story") stars Billy Campbell as the infamous serial killer and Barbara Hershey as the eponymous writer who knew him before and during his murders, as well as during his imprisonments in Colorado and Florida.
The phrase "serial killer" didn't exist before Bundy. His first suspected victim was when he was a paper boy in Tacoma at the age of 14. He finally officially confessed to 30 murders in 7 states from 1974 to1978, but later said there were several others and respectable estimates range from 60-100 or more. He was first locked up in Utah in 1975 for kidnapping and assault, which is shown in the movie. Bundy subsequently became a suspect in an increasing list of unsolved murders in several states. Imprisoned in Colorado for homicide, he amazingly enacted two successful escapes and committed further attacks, including three more homicides in Florida, before his ultimate apprehension in 1978. He received three death sentences in two separate trials for the Florida murders. Bundy was electrocuted in Starke, Florida, on January 24, 1989. He was 42 years-old.
What's strange about the Bundy case is that he was a highly educated, charismatic man with Hollywood good looks. Combined with his likable gift of bullsheet he was able to dupe those closest to him, including Ann Rule, until the evidence against him piled up. This explains why one Washington woman allowed him to stay with her after he was released from confinement in Utah as a prime suspect, not to mention a clueless woman's marriage to him from 1980-1986 while he was in prison in Florida for 11 years.
One of the first murders shown in the movie, the one that occurs in the parking garage, actually took place at a state park. Yet it successfully shows how the affable killer made himself appear harmless to his victims. Despite story changes like this, as well as obvious anachronisms, the gist of the movie account is true and the film is compelling. Campbell uncannily looks like the serial killer and does a potent portrayal. Moreover the movie inspires you to look up the facts. It also shows how women in general, and particularly nubile ones, need to be aware when dealing with strangers or dubious people and use their innate intuition, even if the person is thoroughly charming, intelligent and seems harmless. Ultra-winsome Kimberley Warnat has a small role as one of the young women who kept her wits about her and therefore was able to see the proverbial writing on the wall and escape.
This is the only movie based on Bundy's crimes that I've seen. People say that the 1986 TV movie "The Deliberate Stranger" more closely adheres to the facts, but that one was released almost three years before the murderer's execution. This one, by contrast, fittingly shows Bundy's just wages. What a sick fool and what a waste of humanity, both him and his myriad tragic victims, not to mention the dozens of naïve souls he hoodwinked into believing his pathological lies thru his amiable mojo.
THE MOVIE RUNS 88 minutes and was shot in Vancouver & New Westminster, British Columbia. The script was written by Matthew McDuffie & Matthew Tabak from Ann Rule's book. ADDITIONAL CAST: Kevin Dunn appears as a Seattle detective and friend of Rule while Brenda James & Suki Kaiser play Bundy's oblivious lovers.
GRADE: B.
The phrase "serial killer" didn't exist before Bundy. His first suspected victim was when he was a paper boy in Tacoma at the age of 14. He finally officially confessed to 30 murders in 7 states from 1974 to1978, but later said there were several others and respectable estimates range from 60-100 or more. He was first locked up in Utah in 1975 for kidnapping and assault, which is shown in the movie. Bundy subsequently became a suspect in an increasing list of unsolved murders in several states. Imprisoned in Colorado for homicide, he amazingly enacted two successful escapes and committed further attacks, including three more homicides in Florida, before his ultimate apprehension in 1978. He received three death sentences in two separate trials for the Florida murders. Bundy was electrocuted in Starke, Florida, on January 24, 1989. He was 42 years-old.
What's strange about the Bundy case is that he was a highly educated, charismatic man with Hollywood good looks. Combined with his likable gift of bullsheet he was able to dupe those closest to him, including Ann Rule, until the evidence against him piled up. This explains why one Washington woman allowed him to stay with her after he was released from confinement in Utah as a prime suspect, not to mention a clueless woman's marriage to him from 1980-1986 while he was in prison in Florida for 11 years.
One of the first murders shown in the movie, the one that occurs in the parking garage, actually took place at a state park. Yet it successfully shows how the affable killer made himself appear harmless to his victims. Despite story changes like this, as well as obvious anachronisms, the gist of the movie account is true and the film is compelling. Campbell uncannily looks like the serial killer and does a potent portrayal. Moreover the movie inspires you to look up the facts. It also shows how women in general, and particularly nubile ones, need to be aware when dealing with strangers or dubious people and use their innate intuition, even if the person is thoroughly charming, intelligent and seems harmless. Ultra-winsome Kimberley Warnat has a small role as one of the young women who kept her wits about her and therefore was able to see the proverbial writing on the wall and escape.
This is the only movie based on Bundy's crimes that I've seen. People say that the 1986 TV movie "The Deliberate Stranger" more closely adheres to the facts, but that one was released almost three years before the murderer's execution. This one, by contrast, fittingly shows Bundy's just wages. What a sick fool and what a waste of humanity, both him and his myriad tragic victims, not to mention the dozens of naïve souls he hoodwinked into believing his pathological lies thru his amiable mojo.
THE MOVIE RUNS 88 minutes and was shot in Vancouver & New Westminster, British Columbia. The script was written by Matthew McDuffie & Matthew Tabak from Ann Rule's book. ADDITIONAL CAST: Kevin Dunn appears as a Seattle detective and friend of Rule while Brenda James & Suki Kaiser play Bundy's oblivious lovers.
GRADE: B.
Você sabia?
- Erros de gravaçãoThe VW Beetle car is red, which is the wrong color. TB's actual VW was beige.
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