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IMDbPro

Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer

  • 2003
  • R
  • 1h 33m
IMDb RATING
7.1/10
7.1K
YOUR RATING
Aileen Wuornos in Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer (2003)
Trailer
Play trailer1:21
1 Video
10 Photos
Crime DocumentaryTrue CrimeCrimeDocumentary

Nick Broomfield's second documentary about serial killer Aileen Wuornos, focusing on her mental state on death row.Nick Broomfield's second documentary about serial killer Aileen Wuornos, focusing on her mental state on death row.Nick Broomfield's second documentary about serial killer Aileen Wuornos, focusing on her mental state on death row.

  • Directors
    • Nick Broomfield
    • Joan Churchill
  • Stars
    • Aileen Wuornos
    • Nick Broomfield
    • Terry Humphreys-Slay
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    7.1/10
    7.1K
    YOUR RATING
    • Directors
      • Nick Broomfield
      • Joan Churchill
    • Stars
      • Aileen Wuornos
      • Nick Broomfield
      • Terry Humphreys-Slay
    • 45User reviews
    • 37Critic reviews
    • 71Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 wins & 4 nominations total

    Videos1

    Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer
    Trailer 1:21
    Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer

    Photos9

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    Top cast24

    Edit
    Aileen Wuornos
    Aileen Wuornos
    • Self
    Nick Broomfield
    Nick Broomfield
    • Self
    Terry Humphreys-Slay
    • Self - Her Father was Killed by Wuornos
    • (archive footage)
    Leitha Prather
    • Self - Victim's Sister
    • (archive footage)
    • (as Leitha Prater)
    Shirley Humphreys
    Shirley Humphreys
    • Self - Victim's Widow
    • (archive footage)
    Joe Hobson
    • Self - Wuornos' Attorney
    Steve Glazer
    • Self - Wuornos' Former Attorney
    Arlene Pralle
    • Self - Wuornos' Adoptive Mother
    • (archive footage)
    Dawn Botkins
    Dawn Botkins
    • Self - Wuornos' Best Friend
    Tyria Moore
    Tyria Moore
    • Self - Wuornos' Former Lover
    • (archive footage)
    Uriel Blount
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    • (as Judge Muriel Blount)
    Danny Caldwell
    • Self - Wuornos' Childhood Friend…
    Jerry Moss
    • Self - Wuornos' Childhood Friend…
    Michelle Chauvin
    • Self - Wuornos' Childhood Friend…
    Jeb Bush
    Jeb Bush
    • Self - Governor of Florida
    • (archive footage)
    Dennis Allen
    • Self - Wuornos' Childhood Friend
    Jesse 'The Human Bomb' Aviles
    • Self - Wuornos' Former Friend
    • (archive footage)
    Dick Mills
    • Self - Wuornos' Former Friend
    • (archive footage)
    • Directors
      • Nick Broomfield
      • Joan Churchill
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews45

    7.17.1K
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    Featured reviews

    7shannen-l-c

    Thought provoking documentary about the first known female serial killer

    Hitch-hiker and prostitute, Aileen Wuronos, was convincted for committing the murders of seven men between 1989-1990, and executed for her crimes in 2002. The documentary 'Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial' killer is the second of Broomfield's documentaries about Aileen (the first was released in 1992) and explores her story including her childhood, her experiences as an adult living on the streets and selling her body, and attempts to piece together her truth about her crimes.

    As other reviewers have pointed out, Broomfield doesn't attempt to hide his biases throughout the documentary, so if you're looking for an unbiased telling of Aileen's crimes, you won't find that here. Broomfield is clearly sympathetic towards Aileen and the two seem to strike up a friendship of sorts from their many interactions, which perhaps inhibits his ability to be objective. However, it doesn't diminish the impact of the documentary and in journalism there's no such thing as true objectivity anyway. I personally respect Broomfield for making his own opinions clear without forcing them upon the viewers.

    It's no surprise that as an English man Broomfield is opposed to the death penalty (being English myself, I don't know anybody here that's NOT opposed to it), and that clearly plays a part in his sympathies towards Aileen. He doesn't even have to make a convincing argument against the legal justice system (particularly surrounding the death penalty), because as a viewer I can clearly see how corrupt and inadequate it was in this case. Aileen DID NOT receive fair representation and although her mental state amplified her delusions in her final days, she wasn't completely wrong in her accusations against law enforcement who were making money off her story. There have been endless movies, books and documentaries produced about Aileen's crimes and even those that were closest to her (her girlfriend, family and friends) were more concerned with profiting off her case than her well-being.

    Although Broomfield doesn't delve too deeply into the issues facing the American legal system and the death penalty, those questions are clearly echoing throughout. Broomfield asks if it's moral or just to send a mentally ill person to death, and it's a fair question. As the documentary progresses, Aileen's mental state deteriorates and in her final interview with Broomfield she's clearly suffering from mental illness which she claims she did not receive adequate medical treatment for. Essentially, Broomfield forces the viewers to ask themselves whether what happens to Aileen is fair. She has been found guilty of her crimes and has confessed to those crimes, but she is still a human being who has fundamental human rights and whom the American legal justice system has basic responsibilities for - e.g. providing fair representation and medical care - two things we know Aileen did not receive. It's impossible to ignore these injustices in the 'justice' system and to question how much the system aligns up to what it claims to be.

    In addition to posing questions about the American legal system, the documentary also provides insight into the criminal mind, and shows that serial killers are not always what we expect them to be. They're not always psychopathic, intelligent, sadistic monsters who get a thrill from hurting and killing others, such as Ted Bundy. In Aileen's case an argument can adequately made for the nurture side of the nature vs. nurture debate. Her horrific experiences from a young age (being abandoned by her birth mother, being sexually abused, being impregnated by a local paedophile at 14 and being forced to give the child up, being made homeless at age 14 and living in the woods at the end of her street and her endless experiences of violent/sexual abuse from being a prostitute) deeply impacted her and twisted her mindset. She felt she had suffered at the hands of the world and that her suffering entitled her to inflict that suffering upon others and take what she felt she deserved and had always been robbed of - money and security.

    Although Broomfield spends time interviewing the friends and family of Aileen to uncover more about her childhood, the interviews he conducts with Aileen herself are by far the highlight of the documentary. It's in those moments that Broomfield is face-to-face with Aileen that we truly get to see how unstable she is - jumping from a seemingly ordinary, reasonable and polite person to erratic, angry, paranoid and rude. The possiblity that Aileen suffered from Borderline Personality Disorder is referenced once, but generally, her mental state is completely neglected which is shocking to me since throughout filming she was clearly suffering from severe mental illness.

    Regardless of Aileen's mental state, what happened to her throughout her life or what led her to commit her crimes, the fact remains that she took the lives of seven men and that is a point that Broomfield continues to emphasise throughout. He continually prods Aileen as to whether she acted in self-defence or committed cold-blooded murder and each time Aileen's response is different. In fact, her story changes so often that it's impossible to know the truth and by the end of the documentary it's safe to label Aileen a pathological liar.

    Overall, 'Aileen: Life and Death of a Serial Killer' is an intriguing insight into Aileen Wuronos' life and crimes. It gives Aileen herself a voice, allowing her to tell her 'truth' and counteract the claims or words of others - the media and those closest to her - that have crafted their own tales about her. Ultimately, it's a tragic story of a murderer, who although many would agree deserved to die, did not receive a fair trial and was transformed into a money-making machine for many of the law enforcement officers connected to her case and even her own loved ones.
    fertilecelluloid

    Mostly fascinating

    Nick Broomfield's second Aileen Wuernos doco (with Joan Churchill) does not walk the same hallways as the first, but it explores how the first, "The Selling of a Serial Killer", impacted the serial killer's mostly miserable life.

    Wuernos's claim that the police department left her alone to kill so that they could ultimately sell the story rights to Hollywood is given a lot of play here. Broomfield doesn't take it up any further with the cops themselves (he did some of that in the original doc), but he does include fascinating footage of his own experience as a documentary "witness" to the dope smoking of "Dr. Legal", Aileen's first lawyer.

    Aileen's final speech, almost directly to camera, is powerful and raw, much like the rest of this doco.

    Some material feels whipped to death, but the revelations about the killer's childhood (at thirteen, after giving birth, she lived in the woods behind her house during a snowy winter) certainly help us to understand her better.

    Worth seeing, but I feel that it would work better on the small screen.
    bob the moo

    Suffers a bit from Broomfield's bias but is still chilling and Wuornos is clearly not mentally competent

    Almost a decade after he made his original documentary around the trial of Aileen Wuornos, Nick Broomfield is surprised to open his door one morning and be served with a subpoena to attend what would turn out to be Wuornos final appeal. After being heavily criticised for editing his film to give false impressions, Broomfield's involvement is finished when Wuornos gives up on her appeal and volunteers for the death sentence. Broomfield continues his documentary, looking back at the original trial and getting several interviews with Aileen before her death.

    I have not seen the film Monster but I may rent it out after seeing this film as it has raised my interest and given me more factual background to the story than I imagine a Hollywood film would give me. I'm not a massive fan of Broomfield and I was amused to see him being slightly hauled over the coals in court over his editing (the implication being that he made it look like Aileen's lawyer had smoked several spliffs before coming to advise her). However, despite opening himself to this criticism, Broomfield starts looking at the case and digs up some interesting fans, but the real value of the film is the interviews with Wuornos herself. While the film has plenty of little legal points about whether or not she was well advised and about how the media seemed to vilify her more than other similar male killers, it is almost impossible to agree with the penalty when you hear Wuornos talking.

    Throughout the film her story changes and I was confused as to what the truth was as she seemed to be lying with every other word. We are then given background of abuse and tough living conditions and suggestions that she is the creation of her harsh and unpleasant background. Despite some interviews (particularly with her mother) that cast doubt on her life, the overwhelming impression of her youth is one of suffering, hardship and cruelty. On top of this, Wuornos herself is increasingly erratic and is clearly not in her right mind – reason enough for locking her away for life rather than killing her. She appears to be suffering from some form of split personality – one moment talking calmly to Nick, the next swearing non-stop at the courts to let her die. The idea that Bush's competency hearing lasting 15 minutes just makes matters worse.

    Broomfield is clearly a liberal and is very against the death penalty (his comment 'it has been proven that the death penalty is no deterrent' is just lazy) and this does give the film a real slant in Aileen's favour. Despite this the film is still chilling – it is not totally clear what is true and what isn't but there are two things that are very clear. Firstly, there is no doubt that Aileen killed those men and that (in my opinion) self-defence is no defence for all of them. Secondly, Aileen is not in her right mind and should not have been killed but should have been jailed for life. It is chilling that so much is stacked in her favour and that Wuornos is only one of many people involved who want to flick the switch.

    Overall, this is not an easy watch and even the Bush brothers would maybe have doubts over her death penalty. Her last interview descends into total paranoia and instability and is horrible to watch – I was left in no doubt that she deserved jail but in no way did this woman deserve to be killed. It is a well made film despite some bias from Nick and the end result is a chilling film that really made me worry about the systems in some states in the US that seem to treat the death penalty with such ease – like Nick says in reference to the physiological competency test, 'it makes you wonder what you have to do to fail'. After this film Broomfield was interviewed in The Times and said 'When I moved to the US in the 1970's, I had a real belief that it was the land of the free. For me this film marked the end of that belief' – it is to the film's credit that many viewers will be shaken in the same way.
    10MarieGabrielle

    So important....

    to see films like this. When the media dehumanizes a person for profit, and thanks to Nick Broomfield, we see the other side. A 13 year old girl raped and impregnated by her grandfather, who slept in the freezing Michigan forest when her family kicked her out of their house.

    Shame on Diane, Aileen's mother, who sits and states that Aileen loved living as a homeless person. The denial in this abusive family is rampant. I was actually angry and upset by this film.

    Actions have consequences. Abuse starts at home, and this entire situation escalated to the point it did because an abused woman finally lost her grip on life, she had no help, no means of support, and the state of Florida was only too pleased to step in and garner media attention during an election year.

    Capital punishment does not provide a deterrent (this is a scientific fact) but it does prove man's inhumanity. Thank you Mr. Broomfield for this upsetting documentary. 10/10.
    7maccas-56367

    Sad documentary

    A sad documentary, but then again, you don't expect sunshine and rainbows when watching a film about a serial killer. It's a film about system failure. How a system hopelessly failed a child, an adolescent and then an adult and the devastating consequences of these failings. Can't help but think Aileen's life may have turned out slightly differently had better systems and support being in place from early life. Rest in peace to her seven victims and Aileen herself.

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    Related interests

    Le dossier Adams (1988)
    Crime Documentary
    Lee Norris and Ciara Moriarty in Zodiac (2007)
    True Crime
    James Gandolfini, Edie Falco, Sharon Angela, Max Casella, Dan Grimaldi, Joe Perrino, Donna Pescow, Jamie-Lynn Sigler, Tony Sirico, and Michael Drayer in Les Soprano (1999)
    Crime
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    Documentary

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Included among the "1001 Movies You Must See Before You Die", edited by Steven Schneider.
    • Quotes

      Aileen Wuornos: You sabotaged my ass, society. And the cops, and the system... a raped woman got executed. It was used for books and movies and shit. You're an inhumane bunch of fuckin' livin' bastards and bitches and you're gonna get your asses nuked in the end, and pretty soon it's comin'! 2019 a rock's supposed to hit you anyhow, you're all gonna get nuked. You don't take fuckin' human life like this and just sabotage it and rip it apart like Jesus on the cross, and say thanks a lot for all the fuckin' money I made off of ya. And not care about a human being, and the truth being told. Now I know what Jesus was going through.

    • Connections
      Edited into Monstras: Pánico (2020)
    • Soundtracks
      Your Wildest Dreams
      Performed by The Moody Blues

      Written by Justin Hayward

      Courtesy of The Decca Music Group Ltd.

      Licensed by kind permission of Nightswood BV/Sherlock Holmes Music

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    FAQ19

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    • What were Aileen's last words and what did they mean?
    • Was Aileen Wuornos really America's first female serial killer?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • November 21, 2003 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Aileen: Bir Seri Katilin Yaşamı ve Ölümü
    • Filming locations
      • Florida, USA
    • Production companies
      • Lafayette Films
      • Channel 4 Television Corporation
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $97,362
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $16,158
      • Jan 11, 2004
    • Gross worldwide
      • $97,362
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 33m(93 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.33 : 1

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