Name me some movies...

Tools    





AmyLovesYou's Avatar
Registered User
I was always interested in the shows that dealt with the baddest murderers, killers, serial killers, because i am fascinated to know what happens in these people's minds! Like what possesses them to commit these crimes you know? Which one do you think is the most profound or just plain sicko??




Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer
__________________
"Film is a disease. When it infects your bloodstream it takes over as the number one hormone. It bosses the enzymes, directs the pineal gland, plays Iago to your psyche. As with heroin, the antidote to Film is more Film." - Frank Capra



I'm not sure! I am addicted to watching Law & Order, America's Most Wanted with Jim Walsh, and this new special about the Green River Killer-- he is completely insane i think!! There was a book out about him and now they're doing a movie!



I was always interested in the shows that dealt with the baddest murderers, killers, serial killers, because i am fascinated to know what happens in these people's minds! Like what possesses them to commit these crimes you know? Which one do you think is the most profound or just plain sicko??
If by profound you mean having intellectual depth and insight, that doesn't fit any of the many killers I've seen while covering the police beat and courts. I've never seen a really smart criminal; they may be crafty and usually are egotistical and sometimes lucky, but not intellectual. And all of the killers I've ever seen under arrest or at trial were emotional cripples and in some cases, possibly crazy by normal standards.

I'm not sure you can learn much about killers through the movies, since playwrights and directors often take liberties in changing the facts of the crime, as in Bonnie and Clyde which made a couple of unattractive losers seem good-looking and fun-loving.

However, in The Treasure of the Sierra Madre, Bogart does a great job in portraying a man's change from friend to would-be killer. If you want to see how a punk thief evolves into a cop-killer, read The Onion Field. They made a movie from that book but left out a lot of detail that gives you some insight into the character of the killer and his accomplice, especially the use of sex to get around a safety threat.



Registered User
Are you looking for Killers in Movies or real life?

Movie Killers there are two that you would probably enjoy Hannible Lecture of the Silence of the Lambs series and American Psycho.

Real life wackos just to name a few...

Ed Gein was a complete wacko so wacko that he was deemed to wacko to stand trial... A lot of movies have been based on this wacko...

Jeffery Dahmer he was a true wacko. If you like Wacko's he is one of the wackiest...

Joel Rifkin is another wacko who was not man enough to face his problems and let his wackoness take over...



You're a Genius all the time
I think you should check out The Minus Man. Tremendous study of an endlessly fascinating, bloodthirsty individual. Owen Wilson may not seem like an actor who could handle this sort of character, but he's flawless in that flick. A great performance in a great movie. Though if you're looking for exactly what makes a serial killer tick, you might just wind up being frustrated with it. The greatest strength of the film is leaving the motives of Owen Wilson's character so ambiguous. He's a laid back murderer who never seems to have a rhyme or reason for his actions. Very chilling and very disturbing.

Check it out.




Will your system be alright, when you dream of home tonight?
Friday the 13th
Friday the 13th part 2
Friday the 13th part 3
Friday the 13th part 4
Friday the 13th part 5
Friday the 13th part 6
Friday the 13th part 7
Friday the 13th part 8
Friday the 13th part 9
Friday the 13th part 10
__________________
I used to be addicted to crystal meth, now I'm just addicted to Breaking Bad.
Originally Posted by Yoda
If I were buying a laser gun I'd definitely take the XF-3800 before I took the "Pew Pew Pew Fun Gun."



This is Bat Country!
WITHOUT ANY DOUBT....American Psycho =]

__________________
Im trying to listen to the new Robert Palmer Tape..But Evelyn, my supposed fiancee keeps buzzing in my ear...



Bright light. Bright light. Uh oh.
Psycho
Psycho II
Psycho III
Psycho IV: The New Beginning

I think it's all there in the script/source material of the original, but I actually enjoy this series.
__________________
It's what you learn after you know it all that counts. - John Wooden
My IMDb page



wonderwall's Avatar
Registered User
oh i would suggest the green river killer movie on the lifetime movie network - theyre playing it on sunday night at 9pm and btw american psycho was such a weirdddddddd movie!!!



Monster, definitely one of the most insightful. I think this film just really helped, at least me realize how much can cause a person to do something ludicrous. It just goes to show that the hardships a person experiences really affect the decisions they make in the future. I find it pretty profound actually, I started feeling for this mass murderer, you can actually imagine this person's turmoil. Anyone who goes through that much corruption in their lifetime it almost seems surefire that they will be extremely corrupted once they grow (although not necessarily).

And it actually gives you her direct motives, and you see these are not only based on years of feeling hate from outsiders, but also directly from the love she felt for another. It's pretty twisted, but it's just amazing to actually feel you know this type of thing. This has to be one of the best, at least pertainig to a particular person.
__________________
"It's not the destination, but the things you learn on the way there"



wonderwall's Avatar
Registered User
oh totally.. and its story won all those oscars because of its dramatics ya know..

part 2 of green river killer is on tonight cannot wait to watch it on lmn



Monster, definitely one of the most insightful. I think this film just really helped, at least me realize how much can cause a person to do something ludicrous. It just goes to show that the hardships a person experiences really affect the decisions they make in the future. I find it pretty profound actually, I started feeling for this mass murderer, you can actually imagine this person's turmoil. Anyone who goes through that much corruption in their lifetime it almost seems surefire that they will be extremely corrupted once they grow (although not necessarily).

And it actually gives you her direct motives, and you see these are not only based on years of feeling hate from outsiders, but also directly from the love she felt for another. It's pretty twisted, but it's just amazing to actually feel you know this type of thing. This has to be one of the best, at least pertainig to a particular person.
I've never yet seen a criminal under arrest or on trial who didn't have a story about how fate conspired against them to bring them to the such a low point. Some seem fairly reasonable, sometimes almost believeable until you stop and think about how many people suffered so much worse and yet never robbed, never killed.

Sure, society may sometimes contribute; so can heredity, lack of education, and many other factors. But most of the people who grew up in Hell's Kitchen did not turn to crime. Plenty of people lacked proper school, but some taught themselves to read and became successes in the business world. As for heredity, Al Capone had one brother who died in the Chicago crime wars, but he had another brother who was a respected lawman in another community. Texas gunman John Wesley Hardin was the son of a Methodist preacher and the brother of an attorney, both of whom were lynched by a mob after Hardin killed a popular deputy in Comanche, Texas, and escaped.

If it only took hate, injustice, and hard treatment to produce a criminal or killer, every one of the millions freed from German death camps after World War II should have become a mass murderer. Every GI who comes home from war, should be a potential gunman.

Criminals make excuses for their actions; few ever own up to the fact they made the choice to rob and kill. And movies seldom show the dirty side of their outlaw subjects.



jimmy's One's Avatar
Registered User
Peeping Tom

an older film from 1969
__________________
James Dean In View

http://jamesdean4ever.terapad.com/



Due to my obsessive nature I know probably too much about the so called 'Helter Skelter' murders of 1969.

If you want an extremely interesting look into that subject find this DVD:



Undoubtedly, you'll learn some things you never knew about the case.



While not the goriest or "sickest" one, Vengeance is Mine is the best film about a "real life" killer, his family and his pathological behavior that I've ever seen. It's a pretty sad movie.



Has Heavenly Creatures been mentioned? Peter Jackson's best film IMO.




Dachshunds Fear Me
I've always been fascinated by the granddaddy of all serial killers, Jack the Ripper; the Ripper's story has been fallow ground for filmmakers. His identity was never discovered, so there was a lot of room for "artistic license."

A number of films have been made theorizing on various possibilities as to the Ripper's identity:
  • The Lodger (various versions, although the 1927 Hitchcock is considered the definitive)
  • Murder by Decree (1979)
  • Time After Time (also 1979)
  • Jack the Ripper (TV Movie, 1988)
  • From Hell (2001)
__________________
Reporter: What would you call that hairstyle you're wearing?

George: Arthur.



green river killer was by far the craziest movie i've seen yet and all those svu, law & order epis are just as intense!