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Ted Bundy

  • 2002
  • R
  • 1h 39m
IMDb RATING
5.8/10
8.5K
YOUR RATING
Michael Reilly Burke in Ted Bundy (2002)
Home Video Trailer from First Look Home Entertainment
Play trailer1:55
1 Video
27 Photos
DocudramaPeriod DramaPsychological HorrorPsychological ThrillerSerial KillerSlasher HorrorTragedyTrue CrimeBiographyCrime

The story of serial killer Ted Bundy.The story of serial killer Ted Bundy.The story of serial killer Ted Bundy.

  • Director
    • Matthew Bright
  • Writers
    • Stephen Johnston
    • Matthew Bright
  • Stars
    • Michael Reilly Burke
    • Boti Bliss
    • Julianna McCarthy
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.8/10
    8.5K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Matthew Bright
    • Writers
      • Stephen Johnston
      • Matthew Bright
    • Stars
      • Michael Reilly Burke
      • Boti Bliss
      • Julianna McCarthy
    • 151User reviews
    • 35Critic reviews
    • 37Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 3 nominations total

    Videos1

    Ted Bundy
    Trailer 1:55
    Ted Bundy

    Photos27

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    Top cast57

    Edit
    Michael Reilly Burke
    Michael Reilly Burke
    • Ted Bundy
    Boti Bliss
    Boti Bliss
    • Lee
    • (as Boti Ann Bliss)
    Julianna McCarthy
    Julianna McCarthy
    • Professor
    Jennifer Tisdale
    Jennifer Tisdale
    • Pretty Girl
    Michael Santos
    • Man at the Window
    Annalee Autumn
    Annalee Autumn
    • Girl Attacked on Street
    • (as Anna Lee Wooster)
    Steffani Brass
    Steffani Brass
    • Julie
    Samantha Tabak
    • Vincennes
    • (as Tricia Dickson)
    Meadow Sisto
    • Welch
    Eric DaRe
    Eric DaRe
    • Male Partygoer
    • (as Eric Dare)
    Melissa Schmidt
    Melissa Schmidt
    • Female Partygoer
    Deborah Offner
    Deborah Offner
    • Beverly
    Zarah Little
    • Garber
    Alison West
    • Randall
    Matt Hoffman
    Matt Hoffman
    • Arnie
    Renee Intlekofer
    Renee Intlekofer
    • Cutler
    • (as Renee Madison Cole)
    Orly Tepper
    Orly Tepper
    • Dead Girl in Woods
    Jason Collins
    Jason Collins
    • Washington Cop
    • Director
      • Matthew Bright
    • Writers
      • Stephen Johnston
      • Matthew Bright
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews151

    5.88.4K
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    Featured reviews

    fastal

    Brilliantly disturbing....

    I have seen almost every serial killer movie ever made. I, also work in the mental health field. Combining this information, I still cannot completely believe what I just watched. Someone in the production was privied to actual mental health knowledge, because this presentation was very realistic. The TV movie dealt with the obsession, but not with the actual disease. This version dealt with the progression of violence and the increasing brazeness of the psychotic mind. Sometimes, it is hard to watch realistic violence, and separate it from every day violence. The director nailed the unstable personality traits to a tee. Ted Bundy was an animal and a human being, waiting for his true love. There never was one and he paid the ultimate price. If, only Clozaril had been available then.

    Alan Sheldon
    rmax304823

    Serial Murderer Gets Serial Circuit

    What is the point of making this movie? Next to this, the TV series, "The Deliberate Stranger," is a masterpiece of information and good taste. I suppose it was inevitable that sooner or later it would occur to someone that there was a nickel or two left in the story of Ted Bundy, who slaughtered and raped all those young women and was put to death for it.

    But how to improve on the TV series? Simple, you throw out almost all of the background involving family and police and leave in the murders, only this time, this being a feature film, you can show the slaughters and the rapes in all their gory detail.

    Mission accomplished. It's a disgusting and exploitative movie. We don't get to know any of the victims of course. They're as faceless as the guys that Dirty Harry shoots during a holdup. Nothing about their families of course. Nothing about Ted Bundy either, for that matter -- not that there's very much to know about a major anti-social personality who invents himself as he goes along. Why does he kill? He has a little speech he makes to his girl friend about finding out that he was illegitimate, but so what? Who knows? Who cares? We don't know how the police manage to catch him twice. All of that sort of thing would detract from the time devoted to the murders. If we learned anything more about the police or about Ted, we'd be able to see fewer bloody naked female bodies being slung about. Only the juicy parts of the story are left in, with just enough non-juicy stuff for the film makers to deny that only the juicy parts of the story are left in.

    The last murder we see is that of Ted Bundy himself. He's electrocuted in Florida. Does the director skip any details of this final death? Are you kidding? We get to learn so much about how electrocutions are carried out that we could probably follow the procedure as well as the professionals. I'll bet you didn't know that before the victim becomes part of a serial circuit with the chair he has cotton forced into his rectum and made to wear Depends. The ghouls must be jumping in their seat with excitement. More time is spent on the electrocution (almost 10 minutes) than on any of the other deaths in the movie. If this isn't "pandering" then the word has no referent at all.

    The acting is passable. The direction, aside from the content of the movie, isn't objectionable. It's not very good either. Okay -- example. Bundy escapes from prison. The whole country is searching for him. Cut to his former girl friend sleeping alone in her bed. The door to her room slowly opens and Bundy enters without a shirt but holding a machete. He tiptoes to the bed, raises the knife above his head, and -- WHACK. But what do you know, folks. It's a nightmare. We know it's a nightmare because the girl wakes up screaming and shoves her face into the camera lens. I don't know how far back in cinematic history this hoary device goes, the wakee sitting up and screaming into the lens. The first time I remember seeing something like it was, I think, in "Carrie," about a quarter of a century ago. It was an effective shocker -- once. Now it's almost obligatory. Instead of wincing, you yawn. (I also think a moratorium should be placed on scenes in which a patient is being wheeled hurriedly on a gurney down a hospital corridor and the camera takes the patient's point of view, so we see all these worried faces staring down into the lens and snapping medical-type orders at one another. While we're at it, let's have a moratorium on any further commercial use of Beethoven's ninth symphony. Let's throw in Edward Hopper's "Nighthawks," too.)

    There is an especially nauseating scene of Bundy chasing a girl through the woods. He's just kidnapped her from the beach, so she's wearing only a skimpy bikini. She's running, howling, falling down, getting up, running again with the camera a few feet behind her at every step, every fall, so that the viewer gets a good sexy view of her wobbling buttocks before Bundy catches her and bashes her brains out. The shot may have been plagiarized from "I Spit on Your Grave," which see.

    I'm happy that censorship is relaxed enough to allow gore on screen but this film provides an exercise in the use of moral restraint. Just exactly who are we supposed to identify with while the camera follows the terrified victim through the woods? What pleasure is to be derived from simply looking at the butchery of strangers? What comes next? Should we skip ALL of the background details, drop any concern with insight or ethics, and just have one and a half hour's worth of some nameless monster chopping up nameless bodies and splattering everything with blood and intestines? If that's not the direction in which a film like this points, then what IS the reason it was made in the first place?
    bfan83

    Disturbing and well acted.

    This movie was very hard to watch. The guy who played Ted Bundy was actually very convincing. His performance was disturbing and the murders bothered. Not that they were in graphic detail. It's just the way he committed them. Also, the rape scenes made me sick. I'm very much against rape. So that was the only downside to the film. But other than that, it was well acted , disturbing, and frightening. Pick this film up!!!
    8PatrioticVeracity

    Morbidly Fascinating/ Disturbing

    Be prepared to leave your lights on in order to sleep for at least three days after first viewing this morbidly fascinating account of mass-murdering, intelligent sociopath Ted Bundy and his descent into soul-less depravity. As a study in human nature gone wrong, this is a fascinating body of work. Particularly because this movie is, unfortunately, based on the facts, I am grateful that the viewer is not forced to witness Bundy's every demonic act, though little is actually left to mystery. Chilling, thought-provoking, disturbing, tragic, and well-made, this movie is an often shocking account of one cold-blooded monster's reign of terror.

    The best part for this viewer is that the movie allows us to see Bundy sentenced to death.

    A. Freimann
    JackLint

    Not what it could have been

    The story of Ted Bundy is a truly fascinating one. The movie "Ted Bundy" however, failed to portray many of the most interesting periods in his life. That, along with one glaring bit of unrealism and a complete lack of tastefulness kept me from enjoying this movie. Some fine acting performances make the film watchable, but only barely.

    Ted Bundy had a troubling childhood where he discovered in his early teens that he was illegitimate and that the man who had acted his father was in fact not. This was a terrible shock to young Ted and he retreated into pulp fiction detective stories that were actually soft-core pornography. Between feeling he had been betrayed by his mother and the sexual arousal he got from these stories, his pathos began to form.

    All the while, Ted Bundy got good grades and kept up appearances at school. He graduated high school and college without real difficulty. He became very politically active for the Republican party here in Seattle, and made some contacts that would later be horrified to learn to whom they had given allegiance, most notably a man named Ralph Munro who would become the Attorney General of the state of Washington.

    It is at this point where the movie starts, and not with his political prowess, but rather with a relationship he had with a local woman. The film depicts him trying to have genuine human contact and showing real concern to this woman, two things of which this monster was completely incapable. It only briefly shows him in a social situation where he proves highly charismatic, and can get almost anyone to like him within a few moments, a trait necessary to his future endeavors.

    These scenes in Seattle offer a technical quibble as they seem to have been shot in Pasadena or some other southern CA location. There are shots with the San Gabriel Mountains in the background and some dreadful scenes at a park where the background is very sparse. Here in Seattle, one would have to drive 100 miles or more to find a park with a hillside barren of trees in the background, but this does not discourage our film makers. The most aggravating part of this is the fact that there are many places in northern CA that could have been used for Seattle without running the cost up too much, but the producers of the film were evidently not concerned.

    Most of the rest of the film is devoted to his killings, and even shows a couple with seemingly perverse pleasure. While they do show him as a monster, there is almost a sick humor to them that I found somewhat inappropriate. The film does well to show that one of his jail breaks was facilitated by his befriending a guard.

    The film completely disregards one of the most fascinating periods of his life however; his trial. Ted Bundy proved to be a fairly adept attorney and was able to mount a creative defense and the judge even complimented him on his litigation skills when pronouncing the verdict. While in prison awaiting trial, Ted Bundy developed a romance and went so far as to call the woman as a witness in his trial, and make his wedding vows part of his murder trial. This is totally overlooked by the movie.

    All in all, this movie seems to be an excuse to show a couple of rape-murders rather than a serious attempt to understand the mental mis-wiring of one of the sickest persons ever to walk the face of the earth.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      In the scene when Ted and his girlfriend Lee are celebrating with friends at a party, a woman walks up to Lee introducing herself as "Beverly" and talks to her about working with Ted at a crisis center. Her character is clearly a reference to Ann Rule, a true-crime author who met and worked with the real Ted Bundy at a crisis center in Seattle, Washington during the early 1970s. Furthermore, Rule did, in fact, meet and talk with the real Ted Bundy's girlfriend at a Christmas party one year. Rule would later write a book about Bundy and his murders.
    • Goofs
      Early on in the movie Ted attacks a woman with a hammer handle. As he grabs her, the handle - which is supposed to be hard wood - bends at the base to reveal that it is rubber.
    • Quotes

      [first lines]

      Ted Bundy: [standing in front of mirror] Hi there. Hi there. My name's Ted. Nice to meet ya. Hi there. My name's Ted. Nice to meet ya.

    • Connections
      Referenced in Vintage Video: Forbidden Zone (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Martha's Street
      by Dominic Glynn (uncredited) and Martin Smith (uncredited)

      Published by Chappell Recorded Music Library

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    FAQ18

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    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 22, 2002 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Bundy
    • Filming locations
      • Griffith Park - 4730 Crystal Springs Drive, Los Angeles, California, USA
    • Production companies
      • First Look International
      • Incessant Barking Productions Inc.
      • Tartan Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $1,200,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $6,073
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $1,710
      • Sep 15, 2002
    • Gross worldwide
      • $68,716
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 39 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Digital
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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