Investigators and witnesses recall how a modern-day Jack the Ripper terrorized the north of England during the late 1970s.Investigators and witnesses recall how a modern-day Jack the Ripper terrorized the north of England during the late 1970s.Investigators and witnesses recall how a modern-day Jack the Ripper terrorized the north of England during the late 1970s.
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A concise and well put together documentary. The doc style lent it self well to this story with very good use of archival footage. The people interviewed were relevant to the cases and added good insight into the police work and political climate.
A lot of reviewers have noted there was too much reference to the feminist movement during this series. To my mind, this was an integral part of the programme. I didn't see this as male bashing, but more about the incompetence of the police at the time, their use of derogative language to describe the victims, while highlighting their preconcieved notions about the women from the outset of the murders. These dated and, frankly, mysoginist views hampered the investigation. Well worth the watch.
The story obviously is gripping, but what makes it more compelling is the shear amount of actual footages...considering that event has happened more than 40 years, it should get a good credit...
This is a very powerful, very factual documentary series detailing the five year killing spree of The Yorkshire Ripper, Peter Sutcliffe.
Lots of interviews, new and old, you will hear from The Police, Journalists, families, and more shockingly, survivors.
It's very well produced, and doesn't at any point jar, it focuses on the case, but also gives you glimpses of life at the time for people.
It's hard to imagine how he got away with his crimes for so long, the final part gives a good insight into the actual investigation.
The only thing I would have liked a little more information on, was just how he was caught, what exactly happened etc.
Chilling, 8/10.
Lots of interviews, new and old, you will hear from The Police, Journalists, families, and more shockingly, survivors.
It's very well produced, and doesn't at any point jar, it focuses on the case, but also gives you glimpses of life at the time for people.
It's hard to imagine how he got away with his crimes for so long, the final part gives a good insight into the actual investigation.
The only thing I would have liked a little more information on, was just how he was caught, what exactly happened etc.
Chilling, 8/10.
New 4 part documentary on Netflix which has frustratingly accurate footage of the police's disregard for the victims. It was their arrogance which blinkered their investigation for far too long before he was finally caught. Not by the extent of their police work, but by officers arresting him for a completely unrelated offence, which the bigwigs happily took the praise for. Although I've seen something very similar before, it's still a very worthy watch.
Did you know
- TriviaOn the 10th of January 1983, at HM Prison Parkhurst, Peter Sutcliffe was left blind in one eye after being attacked by another inmate, James Costello. He later became blind in his other eye too after an injection to correct blurriness caused by diabetes went wrong.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #3.252 (2020)
- How many seasons does The Ripper have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- Yorkshire Canavarı
- Filming locations
- Leeds, West Yorkshire, England, UK(on location)
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 50m
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.35 : 1
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