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IMDbPro

The Jeffrey Dahmer Files

  • 2012
  • Not Rated
  • 1h 16m
IMDb RATING
6.3/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
The Jeffrey Dahmer Files (2012)
An experimental documentary film that uses archival footage, interviews, and fictionalized scenarios to tell the story of the people around Jeffrey Dahmer during the summer of his arrest in 1991.
Play trailer2:19
4 Videos
14 Photos
Crime DocumentarySerial KillerBiographyCrimeDocumentaryDramaMystery

An experimental documentary that uses archival footage, interviews, and fictionalized scenarios to tell the story of the people around Jeffrey Dahmer, during the summer of his arrest in 1991... Read allAn experimental documentary that uses archival footage, interviews, and fictionalized scenarios to tell the story of the people around Jeffrey Dahmer, during the summer of his arrest in 1991.An experimental documentary that uses archival footage, interviews, and fictionalized scenarios to tell the story of the people around Jeffrey Dahmer, during the summer of his arrest in 1991.

  • Director
    • Chris James Thompson
  • Writers
    • Andrew Swant
    • Joe Riepenhoff
  • Stars
    • Andrew Swant
    • Pamela Bass
    • Jeffrey Jentzen
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.3/10
    2.2K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Chris James Thompson
    • Writers
      • Andrew Swant
      • Joe Riepenhoff
    • Stars
      • Andrew Swant
      • Pamela Bass
      • Jeffrey Jentzen
    • 16User reviews
    • 40Critic reviews
    • 61Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 1 win & 2 nominations total

    Videos4

    Theatrical Version
    Trailer 2:19
    Theatrical Version
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 4
    Clip 2:30
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 4
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 4
    Clip 2:30
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 4
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 3
    Clip 1:47
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 3
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 5
    Clip 1:22
    The Jeffrey Dahmer Files: Clip 5

    Photos13

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    Top cast41

    Edit
    Andrew Swant
    Andrew Swant
    • Jeffrey Dahmer
    Pamela Bass
    Pamela Bass
    • Self - Neighbor
    Jeffrey Jentzen
    Jeffrey Jentzen
    • Self - Medical Examiner
    Pat Kennedy
    Pat Kennedy
    • Self - Detective
    Tom Ashbrook
    • Radio Show Host
    • (voice)
    Peter Batchelder
    • Crime Scene Investigator #1
    Todd Bishop
    • Haz-Mat Man #1
    Dick Blau
    • Optometrist
    Mark Borchardt
    Mark Borchardt
    • Man with glasses
    Brenda Bowen-Avant
    • Bus Rider with baby
    Matt Brush
    • Liquor Store Employee
    Bryan Cherry
    • Hotel Date
    Candace Cherry
    • Bus person
    Bobby Ciraldo
    • Hotel day clerk
    Patrick Connelly
    • Grocery Store Employee
    Jeffrey Dahmer
    Jeffrey Dahmer
    • Self
    • (archive footage)
    Jason Deprez
    • Coach Bus Driver
    Ryan Glass
    • Fish Store Owner
    • Director
      • Chris James Thompson
    • Writers
      • Andrew Swant
      • Joe Riepenhoff
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews16

    6.32.1K
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    Featured reviews

    5thejoetumulty

    How do you get the famous apt number wrong?

    Everyone knows it was APT 213, but they had it as 214 in these really bad dramatizations/recreations that are cut in between interviews which makes for a bad format. It would be better just with the interviews.
    6ShadowsBeneathTheLight

    It get's better after a wall

    This starts off very slow to the point that I almost turned it off after a few minutes. However, when I saw that one of the speakers was the lead investigator on the Dahmer case, I continued to watch for a little while longer. And it was then that the documentary got interesting. This short movie follows the story of the lead investigator who interrogated Dahmer during his confession and how he corroborated with forensic investigators to determine just how many people Dahmer had killed. The deceive's and forensic's stories are good. The other chunk of the documentary interviews Dahmer's neighbor and a few others who knew him and their experience during his arrest. Although it offers another story/point of view to the case, it ultimately was not needed and made the picture feel slow and lackluster. The final chunk follows an actor playing the role of Dahmer just shopping and walking around so just reenacting his everyday life. This was absolutely a waste of footage and time. More footage of the Dahmer case would have been better to show in it's place.
    8EasternZZ

    Would have been even better without the re-enactments

    Another year, another movie about American Serial Killer from Milwaukee. This documentary has some new information, but it also has some old information. I wished it didn't have the re-enactments because they were kinda corny. It goes into more details about the gruesome discoveries in Dahmer's apartment, and those sections are the most interesting. They also talk about Dahmer interrogation, his feelings, and how his crime has changed the life of everyone involved as well as the people of Milwaukee.
    7gavin6942

    An Interesting Look

    An experimental documentary film that uses archival footage, interviews, and fictionalized scenarios to tell the story of the people around Jeffrey Dahmer during the summer of his arrest in 1991.

    I like how they emphasized that Dahmer was a white guy in the black neighborhood, an wish this could have been explored more. Those not familiar with Milwaukee may not realize how incredibly segregated it is.

    I further appreciated the story of the shirt, and plenty of other behind the scenes details from Detective Pat. Some may find it boring, but I think the idea of Pat just talking for two hours would be fascinating. He probably has other non-Dahmer stories to tell.

    Using an actor to portray Dahmer was interesting. At first it seemed silly and unnecessary, but I understand why they went with it -- if you do not have the footage, you have to fill the screen with something.
    9StevePulaski

    One of the most subtle crime dramas ever

    Chris James Thompson's Jeff, a docudrama involving the interworkings of the Jeffrey Dahmer case, opens by establishing two different, vital points for a film like this to make. It has the medical examiner, Jeffrey Jentzen, assigned to the case of Jeffrey Dahmer state how many people have formulated different meanings behind what exactly a "disaster" is, and then has leading detective on the case, Patrick Kennedy, go into how as human beings we'd love to believe we'd react courageously in the face of tragedy or despair, but we can never be certain until it happens. He then goes on to state how as a devout Catholic, he was always thought that courage is fear that said its prayers.

    All I can say is that fear can pray all it wants, but it could never have prepared itself for the horror Dahmer inflicted not only on a community but on a country as a whole. Jeff dives into three people, all of them deeply effected by Dahmer's actions in some way, and spliced in are scenes recreated to show Dahmer's day-to-day life, as mundane as it is, with the man in question played wonderfully by Andrew Swant. The three people, however, are not actors, and are here to share their depressingly grim accounts of their relationship with Dahmer. The medical examiner is Jeffrey Jentzen and the leading detective is Patrick Kennedy, as established, and but the third person was the most personally affiliated with the man and that is Pamela Bass, who was the next door neighbor to Dahmer in his apartment for many years.

    The film explores how deeply this one unexplainable murder case completely changed the lives of three normal, innocent, law-abiding people and how they've gone on to better or further their lives based on this case alone. Pat Kennedy, easily the one with the biggest story to tell due to his explicit connection with Dahmer during the time of his arrest, conviction, and jail-life, goes into how when he first met the man, they talked in lengthy detail about religion and alcoholism. This was during the time that a skeleton was found in his refrigerator, so says Kennedy, who recalls his thoughts and mindset as he discovers there was not just one but six skulls found in Dahmer's refrigerator, among other severed body parts in containers, drums, and jars that lied throughout the home of Dahmer.

    This is one of the most unique documentary films I've ever seen, with a style very similar to that of Richard Linklater's Bernie, which featured polarizing performances by Jack Black, Matthew McConaughey, and Shirley McClaine. It takes the same kind of mockumentary approach that film did, featuring reenactments and authentic interviews from various townspeople who knew the suspect in question. However, this film has less of a mock-narrative consistency than Bernie, with the scenes featuring Dahmer involving little dialog and emphasizing on the mundane activities of the man behind washed-out cinematography and often low-key music. This is the stylistic side of the picture, which is very innocent and unobtrusive to its central focus. Next to Quentin Dipeux's Wrong, this is easily some of the best cinematography and stylistic merits a film has had this year, only this time, the traits are embodied in a film that is much more watchable and clear in its tone.

    Jentzen goes into the grim details of investigating and gutting the apartment, and being put to the painstaking task of identifying all the bodies removed from the apartment. It was a tireless project, seeing as how not only were the bodies dismembered and mutilated, but they had begun decomposing, leaving much of the reliance on small facial details and anatomy structure to identify them. Finally, Bass goes into how she was effected simply for being her neighbor. The apartments and their always reeked of death for weeks on end, and she and her building were the target of public scrutiny and attention, with numerous people asking if they could come in to sit on couch Dahmer gave her or touch a glass Dahmer once drank out. We begin to question that, besides Dahmer, who else was sick in this whole equation.

    There is no better way to describe Jeff than a complete film than a subtle and low-key crime drama. Everything about it is an exercise is subtle, minimalist filmmaking that accentuates drama, uncertainty, and impending doom with true craft, from a filmmaker who clearly has a long road to travel on before he can even give us, what I believe, is half of what he wants to say. If there's any film that should be shown to film students as a look at what a first-time auteur looks like, this is it.

    One of the best and most thought-provoking scenes is the scene where Jentzen reveals that he doesn't go to horror movies and can't see why people would want to. The last horror film he saw was The Exorcist, likely in its original theatrical run in 1973. He doesn't feel the need to watch anymore. Why would he? He lived a horror film and there's no "stop" button on his.

    Starring: Andrew Swant, Pamela Bass, Jeffrey Jentzen, and Pat Kennedy. Directed by: Chris James Thompson.

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    Related interests

    Le dossier Adams (1988)
    Crime Documentary
    Brad Pitt and Morgan Freeman in Seven (1995)
    Serial Killer
    Ben Kingsley, Rohini Hattangadi, and Geraldine James in Gandhi (1982)
    Biography
    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
    Dziga Vertov in L'Homme à la caméra (1929)
    Documentary
    Mahershala Ali and Alex R. Hibbert in Moonlight (2016)
    Drama
    Jack Nicholson and Faye Dunaway in Chinatown (1974)
    Mystery

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Won the Milwaukee Film Festival's Cream City Cinema Grand Jury Award for 2012.
    • Goofs
      When Dahmer is purchasing alcohol in the convenient store, the "WE CARD" sticker on the freezer to the right says the "born on this date" year to purchase alcohol is 1990.
    • Connections
      Referenced in Best of the Worst: Russian Terminator, Ninja Vengeance, and Never Too Young to Die (2013)
    • Soundtracks
      Still Light
      Performed by The Knife

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    FAQ17

    • How long is The Jeffrey Dahmer Files?Powered by Alexa

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • July 23, 2013 (United States)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Official site
      • Official Facebook
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Jeff
    • Filming locations
      • Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
    • Production company
      • Good / Credit Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 16m(76 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Stereo

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