IMDb RATING
5.7/10
1.6K
YOUR RATING
After 31 years at-large, detectives in Wichita, Kansas home in on the serial killer known as BTK.After 31 years at-large, detectives in Wichita, Kansas home in on the serial killer known as BTK.After 31 years at-large, detectives in Wichita, Kansas home in on the serial killer known as BTK.
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaAmerican serial killer Dennis Lynn Rader known as BTK gave himself the abbreviation which stands for "bind, torture, kill".
- GoofsThe teakettle continues to whistle after the whistling stopper is removed.
- Quotes
Detective Jason Magida: [voiceover] They say there are some things you can't unsee. This would be one of them.
- ConnectionsVersion of B.T.K. Killer (2005)
Featured review
Dennis Rader went decades living as the BTK Killer (stands for Hunt, Torture, Kill), with his final amount murder list will probably never be known for sure. "The Hunt for the BTK Killer" follows Rader, played by Gregg Henry, and Detective Magida, Robert Forster, the man responsible for taking him down.
This is a very good true to life television film. The story is for the most part correct, and while I don't know if there was a Det. Magida (or if that was the Detective's name) the police investigation kept me interested as to exactly how BTK was caught. Rader's kills are presented in a creepy and fascinating way. Overall the script is tight and consistently keeps your attention.
Henry and Forster are really the only characters that are given much depth, but those two are the only ones that need it. The script typecasts Forster's Magida as your usual cop, he's an older gumshoe working with a beautiful younger actress as partner. Henry does a fantastic job as Rader, his interviews at the end are creepy and award-worthy.
There is a voice-over narration by Forster that guides the film, which I suspect was brought in afterwards to tie up loose ends. In any other case, I would drop the quality down for using the worst tool in the business, but here it actually enlightened about Rader instead of insulting the viewer's intelligence.
If you're interested in BTK, or serial killer media in general, this one is worth a watch.
This is a very good true to life television film. The story is for the most part correct, and while I don't know if there was a Det. Magida (or if that was the Detective's name) the police investigation kept me interested as to exactly how BTK was caught. Rader's kills are presented in a creepy and fascinating way. Overall the script is tight and consistently keeps your attention.
Henry and Forster are really the only characters that are given much depth, but those two are the only ones that need it. The script typecasts Forster's Magida as your usual cop, he's an older gumshoe working with a beautiful younger actress as partner. Henry does a fantastic job as Rader, his interviews at the end are creepy and award-worthy.
There is a voice-over narration by Forster that guides the film, which I suspect was brought in afterwards to tie up loose ends. In any other case, I would drop the quality down for using the worst tool in the business, but here it actually enlightened about Rader instead of insulting the viewer's intelligence.
If you're interested in BTK, or serial killer media in general, this one is worth a watch.
- Bob_the_Hobo
- May 3, 2012
- Permalink
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- The Hunt for The Btk Killer
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 22 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.78 : 1
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content
Top Gap
By what name was The Hunt for the BTK Killer (2005) officially released in Canada in English?
Answer