To everyone who's involved in making this: Thank you! Thank you! THANK YOU!
I haven't even finished the documentary yet but I'm too excited not to write this review. Finally! A Ted Bundy documentary that's victim focused. I am not being dramatic when I say this: this was all I ever wanted, I feel so much more complete now. I have been into many a serial killer's story but I have never wanted to know so much about the victims of any other killer as much I did Ted Bundy's. Brutal deaths of those gorgeous, young, groovy and bright 70's girls in the spring of their lives hit me so hard ever since I found about Bundy as a little kid. Yet despite countless documentaries about him, we always saw the same photos of the girls and no one ever talked to their families to find out what they were like when they were alive, how it affected their lives and community, the tragedy of such a magnitude was always glossed over and it made me so mad. We literally talked about this with my brother every few months, wishing for someone, anyone to go talk to the families before it was too late and make it not all about Ted for just once and it finally happened. Starting with so many new photos of Ted, then Linda Healy, her room, her friends, I was at the edge of my seat, not wanting to jinx it but exploding with excitement thinking we had finally found a victim focused documentary that would tell the story of each girl. Well, they apparently couldn't reach a relative or friend of each girl and skipped a few, I really wanted to know more about Roberta Parks and Denise Naslund but Georgeann Hawking's segment was so detailed with so many photos that I can say from the bottom of my heart this documentary was so appreciated, so loved and so long awaited. Thank you a million times over.
- yogsottoth
- Feb 2, 2020