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Dans la peau du tueur

Original title: The Riverman
  • TV Movie
  • 2004
  • R
  • 1h 31m
IMDb RATING
5.9/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
Dans la peau du tueur (2004)
True CrimeBiographyCrimeDramaThriller

A series of interviews are conducted with convicted serial killer Ted Bundy in hopes of gaining insight into the Green River Killer who is terrorizing Seattle.A series of interviews are conducted with convicted serial killer Ted Bundy in hopes of gaining insight into the Green River Killer who is terrorizing Seattle.A series of interviews are conducted with convicted serial killer Ted Bundy in hopes of gaining insight into the Green River Killer who is terrorizing Seattle.

  • Director
    • Bill Eagles
  • Writers
    • Tom Towler
    • Bob Keppel
    • Bill Birnes
  • Stars
    • Bruce Greenwood
    • Sam Jaeger
    • Sarah Manninen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    5.9/10
    1.6K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Bill Eagles
    • Writers
      • Tom Towler
      • Bob Keppel
      • Bill Birnes
    • Stars
      • Bruce Greenwood
      • Sam Jaeger
      • Sarah Manninen
    • 18User reviews
    • 6Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Photos2

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    Top cast30

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    Bruce Greenwood
    Bruce Greenwood
    • Robert Keppel
    Sam Jaeger
    Sam Jaeger
    • Dave Reichert
    Sarah Manninen
    Sarah Manninen
    • Georgia Hawkins
    Kathleen Quinlan
    Kathleen Quinlan
    • Sande Keppel
    Cary Elwes
    Cary Elwes
    • Ted Bundy
    David Lawrence Brown
    David Lawrence Brown
    • Gary Ridgway
    • (as Dave Brown)
    Jeremy Akerman
    • LT. Downing
    Cindy Sampson
    Cindy Sampson
    • Marisol
    Richard Blackburn
    • Warden Owens
    Mark Graham
    • Roger
    John Dunsworth
    John Dunsworth
    • Haney
    Sherry Smith
    • Hazel
    Lee J. Campbell
    • Arthur
    Leah Ostry
    Leah Ostry
    • Ally Keppel
    Colin Rogers
    • John Keppel
    Grant Rogers
    • David Keppel
    Venessa Brooks
    • Hinds
    Tara McCalla
    • Chapman
    • Director
      • Bill Eagles
    • Writers
      • Tom Towler
      • Bob Keppel
      • Bill Birnes
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews18

    5.91.6K
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    Featured reviews

    6TBJCSKCNRRQTreviews

    More cinematic than your usual TV-film, and reasonably well-done overall

    I haven't read the book behind this, and I don't know too many details about Bundy or the Green River Killer case. I caught this on TV, and it looked interesting enough, so I watched it, more or less attentively. I haven't seen any footage of the real Bundy, but according to others, Cary Elwes does well in portraying him accurately... and I can attest to the fact that he manages to be quite creepy. I don't know that I would have thought he would be able to play a part like that, if nothing else, so convincingly. The acting in general isn't bad. I haven't seen anything else by the director, but he does fairly well. The film doesn't feel or look "TV", but rather like something produced for the silver screen. Editing and cinematography are good. They never get flashy or overdone, either. The pacing isn't bad, but the movie isn't particularly intense considering what it's about. The end comes somewhat abruptly. The movie could have been longer, and maybe it should have, because what's there is good, but it could have used more time spent on it. This is said to be the best acting job on Bundy thus far seen, so anyone looking for that might want to give this a look. A good enough TV-movie. I recommend this to those interested in the subject and fans of the actors and/or film-makers. 6/10
    5starring-1

    Only if you have a lot of interest in serial killers

    First I must say that Cary Elwes did a very convincing portrayal of Ted Bundy. I thought he looked a lot like him and did a good acting job.

    This movie is for those who want to go deeply into the killer's mind and perhaps discover new things about Bundy and his childhood. (For instance in one part he tells the detective that as a child his mother threatened to send him to stay with his grandfather if he wasn't good and that he would try to be good but she would send him there anyway; then his grandfather would lock him in a closet). It also caused me to think about how much more useful it would be to keep people like him alive to analyze, study and try to understand what triggered his heinous psychology.

    This is a dark movie and not entertaining; not something I would watch for entertainment or fun in any sense. It was more like watching reenactments and felt sometimes more like watching a documentary than a movie.

    The film also goes into the psychology somewhat of a serial killer known as "The Green River Killer."

    I think of this as more of an educational film. Women for instance could watch it with an eye to learn tricks Bundy and the Green River Killer used to catch their prey (both seemed to like the trick of pretending to be disabled and in need of help for example). The film also highlights what it is like for those who interviewed Bundy hoping he could help them get into the mind of another killer they were trying to apprehend -- how dark and freaky it is. All around, as is its subject, the movie it pretty grisly. Definitely not a "date movie," haha.

    Some people are fascinated with learning more about serial killers and for those people this is probably a film they would like to see; but for most of us, I think we would rather be spared all the grisly details.

    Good acting all around and good cinematography, etc.; slow moving, graphic photos of murdered women I would rather not have seen. I personally would not recommend this movie to anyone other than those I mentioned above -- who like to study this sort of thing and are always hungry for more details. Lots of creepiness here!

    And please, mothers, fathers and others: don't lock the kid(s) up in the closet!! I gave this a 5 rating.
    7TheAnimalMother

    Inside The Mind Of Two Serial Killers

    This film is based upon the 1989 non-fiction book The Riverman: Ted Bundy and I Hunt for the Green River Killer by Robert D. Keppel and William J. Birnes. Many have claimed this book actually inspired the Harris novel The Silence of the Lambs. However this is not true. This book was actually released after Harris's Silence novel. So unless Harris had a time machine, yeah, no. Harris may have indeed been influenced by this real life story from seeing or hearing about it in the press or elsewhere, or perhaps from reading about the FBI who did very similar interviews in the 1970's and 80's as is shown in the TV series Mindhunter. Nonetheless, contrary to popular rumor, SilenceOTL is not based on the book that this is based on. This film is actually pretty good if you're interested in Bundy or The Green River Killer. The film essentially becomes more about Bundy than the GRK, but nonetheless we do learn a good bit about both. This film, like The Deliberate Stranger has a good bit of very real Bundy-esque truths within it. To some degree, we definitely are able to get inside his head if we dare, and into Ridgeway's to some degree as well. Keppel after all was a Homicide Detective who worked both cases, and he became known as quite an educated profiler in understanding serial killers. Much of this is shown here. Overall the film is quite grim and fairly brutal, especially for a TV movie. It's more psychologically grim and brutal than visually, though it has some grim visuals as well. If you're interested and you can stomach this kind of fare, it's well worth a look. 7/10.
    9td_gwendy

    A frightening look into the mind of a monster...

    I've seen a couple of Ted Bundy movies and they were more of a slasher horror fest based on real events. Although The Riverman is also based on real events, and in particular the book authored by Robert "Bob" Keppel (played by Bruce Greenwood in the movie), this made-for-TV movie to me felt a lot creepier than the other two Bundy films I had mentioned.

    Now before you go running off to the DVD store, you have to know that this is no slasher flick. This movie is scary for its psychological insights into the mind of a monster, particularly that of Ted Bundy. What's even scarier is how well Cary Elwes plays the role of Bundy, from his gestures, his voice, and most especially his eyes. It is perhaps one, or could be Elwes's best performance yet, albeit not quite recognized.

    Though a made for TV movie, it felt more like a silver screen feature. The acting never feels forced, the pacing satisfactory, and the script very intense especially towards the film's conclusion. There may be an amateurish feel towards the cinematography, but over all, a very good, chilling film.
    8Hey_Sweden

    In a word: creepy.

    'The Riverman' tells the story of the infamous serial killer Ted Bundy (played here by Cary Elwes), on death row for his crimes. He reaches out to criminal profiler Bob Keppel (Bruce Greenwood) to tell him that he may have insight into the series of "Green River" killings that were plaguing Seattle. Sometimes working the case with a stressed-out detective (Sam Jaeger), Keppel sits down with Bundy for a series of interviews.

    Stories like 'The Riverman' (based on a non-fiction book co-authored by Keppel) aren't for everybody, since they make us get to know sick minds better than most of us would really want to. But, on that level, it can be fascinating, as we learn from both Keppel and Bundy some ideas about those deviants walking among us: how they select victims, their ways of justifying their actions, etc. This being a made-for-TV movie, it refrains from showing much of the graphic violence that turns off some viewers. But, as directed by Bill Eagles, this solid film is a good case study in both pervasive atmosphere and subtlety. Characters like the real-life Keppel are now familiar to any viewer who's watched their fair share of yarns about serial killers: they become haunted individuals. Indeed, we get a sense of the toll that Keppels' line of work has taken on his home life.

    The wonderful Kathleen Quinlan is typically great in support, even if she's obliged to play a kind of standard-issue "concerned spouse / partner" type of character. Jaeger is okay, but he's outshone by the more interesting Greenwood and especially the riveting Elwes, who's rarely been as good as he is here. The face-offs / conversations between Bundy and Keppel provide an effective foundation on which to build this picture. Also good in a supporting role is David Lawrence Brown; he plays the off-putting Gary Ridgway, the man who would be identified as the Green River killer decades later (thanks to improved forensic technology).

    This is definitely the kind of movie that stays with you after it's over.

    Filmed in Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada.

    Eight out of 10.

    Storyline

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    Did you know

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    • Trivia
      Bob Keppel had watched the film and was very pleased with it. He also praised Cary Elwes and Bruce Greenwood's performances.
    • Quotes

      Robert Keppel: If you know someone, someone close to you and you put together all the pieces; all the laughter and the tears and the silences all the deep telling moments of their life then, well then you can inhabit them and feel part of them. But if you've known someone with a soul dark, so terrifying and you've crawled into every foul corner they think they've hidden from you and you've inhabited them... How do you... How do you come back? Can you return to how you used to be?

    • Connections
      Version of Green River Killer (2005)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • September 6, 2004 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Also known as
      • The Riverman
    • Filming locations
      • Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
    • Production companies
      • Koch Company
      • Cinema 21 Group
      • Fox Television Studios
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      • 1h 31m(91 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.78 : 1

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