Stream it now Ted Bundy

IMDb rating: 5.8 (4,540 votes)
IMDb ID: 0284929
Duration: 99 min
Release Date: November 22, 2002
Solar rating:
Be first to rate!
Please wait..

The story of serial killer Ted Bundy.


Drama, Thriller, Crime, Biography produced in 2002 [UK, USA]

 
 
Voting
Quality
Age
 
Voting
Quality
Age

Сomments




Saw this one on cable last night.

What, exactly, did director Matthew Bright ("Freeway") find so humorous about Ted Bundy, the monstrous sexual predator for whom the term "serial killer" was first attributed? He certainly added enough of it to really leave a bad taste in my mouth. Not to mention this film was completely unpleasant.

But unpleasant it should be. Bundy's brutal raping and killing of nearly 100 women *is* unpleasant and sickening. And it's all shown here, very exploitatively, all the way up to and including Bundy's death in Florida's electric chair. The scenes right before Bundy's electrocution, where he's being prepped were more squirm inducing than the murder scenes. Through it all Michael Reilly Burke did give his Bundy a good mixture of charismatic and horrifying. But it all just came off like a B grade slasher film.

Skip this one, and instead pick up the book "The Stranger Beside Me" by Ann Rule for a better look at Ted Bundy. She was actually a friend / co worker of Bundy's. Her book is a compelling read. Or for much better films in the genre go rent "Copycat", "The Silence Of The Lambs" or "Seven".
reply
This dude was in fact, crazy as all hell, and he had a VW Bug. I don't know why I added that, but I think it helps you get an image. You know the "Who wears short shorts?" deal. Well he could have definetely been a spokesperson for that thing.. Nair it up Bundy. HAHA. This movie was atrocious, I almost puked all over myself when I saw it, because of it's gayness. There was one part where Bundy was sexin his chick up, and got all rapist-violent, and I can relate to that, so I enjoyed it. But when Bundy got caught she was all "Oh, my god, I can't believe it, look at my tits". The acting was horrible, and the death scenes were all cut up, so it was kinda lame, but the accuracy was good, so I'm just going to rate it, that way I don't have to think about it anymore.

reply
this movie was very confusing and explained very little all in all it gets a :down: :rotten:
reply
Dahmer
Starring: Jeremy Renner, Bruce Davison, Artel Kayaru, Matt Newton, Dion Basco, and Kate Williamson.
Written and Directed by David Jacobson.
Rated R (for aberrant violence, sexuality, language and some drug use).
Running time approximately 1 hour 42 minutes.


Goodness, how frightening

Matthew Bright's Ted Bundy also experienced some second-viewing regression. I really liked the film the first time I saw it (I saw this one directly after viewing Matthew Bright's twisted Little Red Riding Hood spin-off, Freeway), but the second time around, it failed me. Oh, well. The lead performance by Michael Reilly Burke was quite good, if a bit over-the-top. Once one gets over the initial shock of Bundy's acts, though, the film is sort of by-the-numbers, concluding predictably and without much punch. ** (out of ****) C
reply
The film doesn't delve deep into the character, but it was still a fascinating story about a very disturbing character. The acting is fine, the story is well paced.
reply
Ted Bundy
directed by Matthew Bright
written by Matthew Bright and Stephen Johnston
starring Michael Reilly Burke, Boti Ann Bliss

The first modern serial killer gets the bio treatment in this fictionalization of Ted Bundy's duplicitous and thoroughly convincing personality scheme.

Bundy (Burke) is a straight shooter with a loving if too desperate girlfriend named Lee (Bliss) who lets a whole lot of evidence slide on by as she clings haltingly to her man. Ted is good with kids and truly able to say the right things at the crisis clinic he works at a couple days per week. He's exceedingly well groomed and polite to most everyone he meets when he's being affable Ted who is disarmingly charming and sweet natured. Of course he's also a brutal killer who does horrific things to the bodies of the girls he mercilessly butchers. It's this duplicity that is examined with precision and great skill. This remains arguably the best film ever devoted to a killer of this type. It's nuanced, stylized, and exceptionally forthcoming with the litany of violence toward Ted's many victims.

Our first introduction to Ted sees him standing in front of a three paned mirror. We thus find him in triplicate trying out his introduction to whomever happens to catch his fancy. This is the side of Ted that his friends and associates are familiar with. Then he goes into a ghastly routine where he makes gutteral noises and funny, absurd faces. In this instance he's something unhuman, a fiend of sorts who represents the side of Ted that allows him to murder and rape with impunity. From there we meet the civil Ted who is attending Law School and genuinely attempting to better himself. He even has eyes on political office and it's apparent to everyone that knows him that he has a definite shot of realizing his dream.

Lee is something of an emotional battering ram for Ted. He never treats her all that well and when she discovers handcuffs in his car she brushes it off because Ted claims to have never seen them before. But then he convinces her to allow herself to be tied up and ravished as Ted says "Fuck You, Bitch" over and again. It's a painful scene to watch mostly due to the look of horror plastered on Lee's face as she allows Ted to pummel and verbally abuse her. Still, she fully believes she is in love and subsequently puts up with whatever it is he decides to do. She's an enabler who only wants to see the best in Ted and is driven by her affection for him.

Ted is remarkably good for Lee's young daughter. He clearly dotes on her and provides her with much affection, filling in the void left by her absent father. There is no doubt that Ted is sincere with his treatment of the girl; he genuinely adores her and would certainly react viciously to anyone who attempted to harm her. He can clasp hands and tell her silly stories in the afternoon and rape the corpse of some poor girl he's lured away in the evening. It's his ability to keep both personalities working simultaneously that makes him such a worthy subject for this treatment.

The music throughout this film is often incongruous to the filmed action. In particular there is a happy bit of Christmas music that is played when Ted and family are opening presents and looking so ebullient and joyful. The scene switches to a long hallway, with the same music, where Ted is play acting that he is in terrible shape and in need of assistance. A woman rushes to his aid only to be savagely attacked and the music continues as her legs repeatedly twitch. It's a funny scene simply because it's not the sort of music one expects to hear at a time like that. There are several such instances in the film as much of the source music is uplifting and cheerful after a fashion. The score itself is, however, consistent with the criminal acts being projected on the screen.

There is a substantial amount of violence in this film and it all possesses a sort of grim beauty in how it is presented. One gets a real sense of the sexual mores of Ted as he has his thrills with all the girls he sways with his charm and ingenuity. He feigns a broken arm, pretends he's a cop, and even tells poor little Kimberly Leach that something horrible has happened to her father. They all go with Ted because he is so convincing in whatever role he is affecting. They believe in him long enough to ensure that they will fall prey to his enormous sexual appetite. There is a sense that they are all lost little girls who find themselves face to face with the big bad wolf who necessarily devours them for their prettiness and sweet, unassuming natures. But Ted cannot help but carry out his deeds because the urge for total domination is far too strong to ignore. He even assaults Lee when he's got her legs spread and bound; he half heartedly tries to smother her thereby demonstrating his own special take on love. Still, she stays by him no doubt more confused than horrified.

The film is routinely chilling and admittedly it's grotesque nature is expressed most fluently through the slight introductions we are afforded to several of Ted's victims. Many of them are anonymous but some of them are given just enough personality to make their killing truly horrific. Despite Ted's charm and tenderness, he isn't portrayed in such a way that it's easy to sympathize with him. This is not the sort of film that either demonizes or lionizes its subject. It's simply a straightforward, albeit fictionalized, telling of one man's unquenchable thirst for power and his particular method of obtaining it. One does not sense that Ted is unduly troubled by his actions which makes them all the more baffling to the common observer. He isn't torn necessarily by his actions; he merely performs them as if he were doing something as innocuous as running his fingers through the hair of Lee's young daughter. They are as much a part of him as his immaculately arranged sock drawer.

The sickness aspect of Ted's endeavors is not really dealt with in this film. There is no gross attempt at psychoanalysis that would be an obvious attempt to foster a sort of explanation for his behavior. Instead, there is but a clean, clear-headed account of one serial killer's obsessions and delights. We don't gain a tremendous amount of insight into Ted's character other than to be made privy to how gentle and kindhearted he can be when the situation calls for it. There are indications throughout that the remnants of his peculiar hobby have bleed into the rest of his well-structured, orderly life but they are not significant enough to suggest any mortal danger.

Michael Reilly Burke is thoroughly believable playing the two most prominent aspects of Ted's personality. He is able to convey both the sweetness and the part of Ted who sees a lovely girl and just has to cane her head in and fuck her dead body in an old, filthy shed. Burke is quite good at providing Ted with the type of charm that convinces such females to let down their guard and wander off with a complete stranger. Boti Ann Bliss is truly remarkable as a legitimate light in Ted's life who is nevertheless unable to see him for what he truly is. Bliss captures Lee's longing and confusion throughout the film. Lee is a strong character and Bliss allows us to feel her desperate need to be loved so completely by the man to whom she is so often callously rebuffed.

Overall, this film does an excellent job conveying the complexities inherent in its subject. It explores the natures of various types of love including love as affliction, love as utter blindness, and love stolen from the cold and dead lips of death. It provides little insight into the nature of these crimes other than to demonstrate the sheer, unadulterated urgency that demands that they must be actualized as quickly as possible. Indeed, Ted is portrayed for what the real Ted Bundy was and remains: a keenly driven individual who becomes acutely focused on the rape and murder of young, unassuming females. His is the carnal will taken to its most illogical conclusions. At some point in his life, and this is certainly never explored in this film, young Ted learned to associate pain and suffering with the sexual release. To Ted, the orgasm is most fully realized in the quickly cooling rectum of a girl he has so recently rent from the niceties and cruelties of life. It's satisfying in its own way.
reply

Rating - R18+ for Medium Level Violence, Adult Theme

Tagline - Not Every Killer Fits The Profile.

Ted Bundy was the good guy. Charasmatic, handsome, charming, intelligent, and the nicest guy you'd ever met. But beneath that good guy exterior was a vicious serial killer who caused havoc and terror among the citizens of the United States in the 1970s. This is the true story of how this respected man became one of America's most notorious serial killer.

OK. The film starts off interesting but as it moves along it feels rushed. Basically all it does is show us that he really gets off spying and killing these women, and his girlfriend, which makes the film seem unrealistic, doesnt even think this is weird. I know it was based on a true story, but it doesn't seem realistic, and the film itself is nothnig special.

The plot is simple. A sadistic killer going across 10 states murdering whoever he want's. I think that it wasn't well adapted to screen, and the script could be alot better, if the film was a big budget hollywood picture.

The acting was also pretty bad. No member of the cast really stood out as being even above average, and because it's fairly low budget, the acting wouldn't have been any better with a different cast.

Overall "Ted Bundy" is a rushed adaption, that really doesn't make you think any less of him, as if you'd never heard of him before, you'd just think it was based on fiction. My rating is 2/5.

reply
OMG ?? Rilly RIIIILLLY WIERD.. So weird I Bought it hahahha*
This is the only one where They Show how his exacution went down .. Rilly Allot of detail (wink) its campy But Different ..
reply
A lame recreation of a horrific serial killer's life.
Just a little too comical for me. Like when he's beating off outside some girl's window, and a guy upstairs dumps a bucket of water on his head and says "get outta here ya damn pervert" hahaha!
The only redeaming quality of this film is when he gets the electric chair. Especialy when the guards are preping him for execution, and they hold him down and shove some chemicals up his butt so he won't shit his pants when they fry him, and the guard doing the dirty deed says "that enough uncle Bob?" And the older guard says "naw, keep it in there Tommy we don't want no mess to clean up later." hahahahaha! Great scene!
But you're better off watching a real life documentary on him instead of this dumb movie.
reply