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Tag: monster: the ed gein story

  • Ryan Murphy’s ‘Monster: The Ed Gein Story’ proves he doesn’t care about victims | The Mary Sue

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    ed gein and his mom

    One of my biggest problems with shows that explore serial killers from a fictional place is that we sensationalize what these people did. Often, their victims are a second thought. Despite many pushing back at this idea, Ryan Murphy is keeping that disappointing trend alive.

    I am someone who feels a dedication to Murphy’s work. I have been here for 23 years and there doesn’t seem to be anything that will stop me from watching his shows. But, that being said, it means I am incredibly critical of what he does. One of those things being the Monster series. The Netflix anthology series began with Evan Peters as Jeffrey Dahmer and my main complaint was that we didn’t focus enough on Dahmer’s actual victims. We had one episode and that was only because Murphy insinuated that Dahmer and his victim, Tony Hughes, had a flirtatious relationship.

    The follow-up season about Erik and Lyle Menendez was a bit different as many have pushed back on the idea that their parents are the “victims” in the situation. So you can, in theory, give that season a “pass” for this one thing. Not for insinuating that the brothers were romantically linked but for the victim situation, the show had an interesting advantage.

    Now, I have had to deal with Monster: The Ed Gein Story. Ed Gein himself was an “interesting” choice of subject given the fact that Gein was confirmed to have killed two women and most of his “infamous” nature came from his obsession with his mother and furniture made of skin. Cinema loves Gein and that’s kind of what Murphy did with this season with Ian Brennan. But he also somehow made victims a secondary thought in a disgusting way.

    Why did I have to see a bunch of women dying?

    man walking with woman to car
    (Netflix)

    The end of The Ed Gein Story felt like Murphy heard our complaints about how he handled victims and said “time to make it worse.” The last episode features a series of serial killers who were all inspired by Gein having their time to shine. Ted Bundy kills two women in the woods and then later, when Richard “Birdman” Speck is talking about his own influence, we see Bundy kill two women from his infamous sorority house killing spree.

    Why was that necessary? Did we need to see more of how Gein influenced people? I understand that the use of movie scenes and the finale were Murphy and Brennan’s way of showing that Gein may not have been the most prolific of serial killers but he did usher in a lot of destruction with his crimes. I get that. What I don’t need to see if the senseless violence against women that these men committed to without having anything else “real” to say about it.

    These were nameless women on Monster and it was unnecessary. And for what? So Ryan Murphy and company could show that they know how serial killers act? If you’re not going to actually give the victims of these men the time they deserve, then stop making these shows.

    (featured image: Netflix)

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    Rachel Leishman

    Assistant Editor

    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.

    Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.

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  • Monster Season 3’s Charlie Hunnam on Why He Agreed to Play Ed Gein

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    Charlie Hunnam recently opened up about his transformation for Monster: The Ed Gein Story, which premiered on Netflix on October 3. In the interview, the actor discussed his intense preparation for the role, the emotional challenges he faced, and his effort to find humanity in one of history’s most disturbing figures.

    Charlie Hunnam explains what drew him to Monster: The Ed Gein Story

    Charlie Hunnam explained in an interview with Forbes that portraying serial killer Ed Gein in Monster: The Ed Gein Story required complete physical and psychological immersion. He lost nearly 30 pounds in three weeks to match Gein’s frail frame and studied the killer’s rare audio recordings to replicate his high-pitched voice and tone. Hunnam said his goal was to “find the man behind the monster” rather than judge or sensationalize his crimes.

    He described the challenge of maintaining empathy for a figure defined by horror, emphasizing his effort to portray Gein truthfully. “There was an enormous amount of trepidation and fear initially,” Hunnam said. “And then it was just trying to understand him, trying not to judge him, trying to find the truth and find the man behind the monster.” He remained in character throughout the filming process, choosing to stay focused on Gein’s mindset instead of breaking between scenes.

    The Netflix series is the third installment in Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan’s Monster anthology, following stories about Jeffrey Dahmer and the Menendez brothers. Brennan wrote the eight-episode series, while Max Winkler directed several episodes. The cast includes Laurie Metcalf as Gein’s domineering mother, Augusta, Tom Hollander as Alfred Hitchcock, and Suzanna Son as Adeline Watkins, Gein’s only friend.

    Hunnam, who also served as executive producer, said he and the creators frequently questioned what drove Gein’s actions. “We definitely didn’t want to sensationalize this or make a show that was gratuitous,” he explained. The actor ended filming by visiting Gein’s grave to bid farewell to the character.

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  • Monster Doesn’t Know When to Quit

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    Monster: The Ed Gein Story tiptoes toward a thought-provoking read on the American obsession with true crime. Then it blows right past it.
    Photo: COURTESY OF NETFLIX

    Spoilers follow for Monster: The Ed Gein Story, all eight episodes of which premiered on Netflix on October 3. 

    Much like the other installments of Monster, you can guess the point The Ed Gein Story is making: We don’t know the full story of killer Ed Gein, and maybe if we did, we’d sympathize instead of judging him, and we’d better understand America, its crassness and consumerism. Creators Ian Brennan and Ryan Murphy aren’t implicating themselves in that formula, of course, because they’re doing the important work of pointing out all the other filmmakers, law-enforcement authorities, and media professionals who spun the Gein story for their own devices. But their pointed fingers would feel a little cleaner if they weren’t delivered alongside lengthy scenes of Charlie Hunnam’s Gein having sex with a corpse or dancing around in the snow while wearing a suit made of women’s skin. Brennan and Murphy could’ve ended the season with its fourth episode, which features its most insightful observations about the United States’ blinkered perspective on political violence. Monster tip-toes very close to delivering a thought-provoking argument about the way we use entertainment to avoid taking responsibility for our collective sins of complacency and cultural narcissism. Alas. Like Gein, Monster doesn’t know when to stop.

    Monster starts in the early 1940s with Gein’s life in remote Wisconsin, trapped at a failing farm with his abusive religious mother Augusta (Laurie Metcalf). The pair’s routine basically goes like this: She screams at him that he should never have sex, catches him masturbating while wearing her underwear and choking himself with a belt, then screams some more Bible quotes at him until the cycle starts again. Ed’s repressed and lonely, a cowed boy trapped in a broad-shouldered man’s body, and Hunnam’s falsetto-voiced, wide-eyed performance is a little bit Lennie from Of Mice and Men, a little bit Gollum from The Lord of the Rings. When his on-again, off-again girlfriend Adeline Watkins (Suzanna Son) shows him Polaroids taken by a soldier in the Nazi concentration camps and a kinky fetish comic featuring Ilse Koch (Vicky Krieps), the German war criminal nicknamed “the Bitch of Buchenwald,” Gein becomes obsessed. After his mother dies in 1945, he starts digging up graves to mimic Koch’s hobby of using human skin to make home furnishings and furniture, and eventually, remains from more than 200 bodies litter his house, like belts made out of nipples and bowls made out of skulls. Later, Gein begins killing people around town and using their bodies for his creations, too. (It cannot be overstated how distressing this show is to watch. Kudos to the props department, but also, what in the actual hell.)

    Once Monster establishes these rushed motivations for Gein’s increasingly horrifying activities, it jumps around in time: to 1959, when Alfred Hitchcock (Tom Hollander) began thinking about making Psycho; 1968, when Tobe Hooper (Will Brill) tapped into his childhood fear of Gein to conceive The Texas Chainsaw Massacre; and the late 1980s, when Gein inspired Buffalo Bill’s crossdressing in The Silence of the Lambs. Monster traces the massive shadow Gein left on 20th-century horror to convey how far Gein’s lore spread, how well-known he became for acts he didn’t entirely understand himself, and eventually, how disconnected he felt from both those crimes and that reputation. But it’s also trying to make a broader argument that is less about Gein as an individual and more about why we as Americans are more comfortable with ingesting some kinds of gore and brutality over others. Why do we pay money to see Leatherface shove his chainsaw into people’s torsos, but turn off the TV when news coverage of the Vietnam War comes on? Why do we transform images of Jewish misery into lurid soldier’s mementos, shrug off war crimes like My Lai, and treat New York City crime-scene photographer Weegee like a minor celebrity?

    Monster doesn’t have answers for these questions, just a general disdain for Americans and broad observations about our own cowardice. It’s frustrating that the series presents this bloodlust and apathy as a post-World War II development in the American psyche, thus tidily ignoring that the U.S. was born out of genocide and built on the backs of enslaved people. But Brennan and Murphy find thought-provoking tension in these imbalances, contrasting our disinterest in keeping up with America’s imperialist destruction with our never-ending fascination with Gein’s brutality and depravity. And the series incriminates us, of course, when Hunnam looks straight into the camera and says, “You’re the one who can’t look away.” By fourth episode “Green,” Monster has hit all these points, and hit them well. The episode’s final minutes feature Hooper ranting about how he was “fucking bored” by Psycho. When someone tells him he can’t make his movie, he replies, “Why not? They’re mowing down whole villages and putting it on TV. They’re burning babies … I’m not making the movie this country wants. I’m making the movie it deserves. They created it. The ugliness, the violence, the cruelty, the depravity, the lies. We’re humans, but we’re not human anymore.” His tirade is nihilistic and grandiose, but he makes some good points! Gein is the bogeyman, Hooper argues, but he’s a bogeyman for an America that’s already deeply lost its way, and maybe never had it.

    Imagine if Monster had ended there. We’ve seen Gein infantilized and mistreated by his mother, led on and corrupted by Adeline, have his schizophrenia activated by those horrific images from the concentration camps, and become a ruthless murderer of women who made him angry. We understand that headlines about Gein were inspiring copycats and changing true crime as we know it. We feel Brennan and Murphy’s contempt. But Monster just keeps going, making the same arguments and piling on the stomach-churningly awful visuals until you lose all sense of whatever nuance the show once had.

    Consider the finale, which floats a bunch of big-brained ideas about the cruelty of religious moralizing, the churning depravity of the American audience, and the failures of our criminal-justice and public-health systems, only to let them all splatter to the ground like the organs of so many of Gein’s victims. In “The Godfather,” Gein is reformed. With therapy and the appropriate medication, he’s lucid and penitent, but he’s still stuck in an underfunded asylum, surrounded by inmates who insult and bite him. The only people who write him letters are serial killers who adore him, especially serial killers who were portrayed on the Netflix series Mindhunter (which Monster, for some reason, takes a swipe at with a frankly exhausting, metatextual parody). He has information from serial killer “Birdman” Richard Speck about Ted Bundy, who is still on the loose beheading young women, but the FBI is ignoring Gein’s tips — until finally, a cop meets with Gein and uses his information to catch Bundy. This is allegedly a fantasy sequence, but one of Monster’s greatest flaws is how flimsy it is at differentiating Gein’s imagination from what the series is presenting as objective truth.

    The most needless scene of all is a bizarro fantastical sequence where Speck, who describes Gein as his role model and hero for faking insanity (even the killers who idolize Gein didn’t know him, Monster argues), narrates a letter he wrote to Gein in which he asks Gein if he’d like to masturbate while touching Speck’s estrogen-enhanced breasts. Look at all these freaks and opportunists, Monster tells us, unlike good boy Gein, who as he dies imagines himself going down the middle of a Soul Train-style line of asylum patients and employees and the people from his life, all bumping and grinding to Yes’s “Owner of a Lonely Heart.” His final thoughts are of reuniting with Augusta, who greets him warmly at the top of a set of stairs. (If you’re picturing a Glee performance mashed up with Leo and Kate’s reunion at the ending of Titanic, that’s exactly what it’s like.) Ed has made her proud, Augusta tells him, and although “only a mother could love you,” she does.

    The final image of Monster is the pair drinking lemonade on the front porch of their home. Is this a rare moment of familial pleasantness we didn’t see? A hypothetical, what the Geins could have been like if Ed had received treatment earlier? Or a vision of Ed and Augusta in heaven, somehow? It’s unclear! Regardless, this is an exceedingly genteel way to end a show that previously had shown us not one, not two, but three shots of removed and preserved vulvas. Monster practically insists that Gein changed in the later years of his life, and Hunnam’s performance shifts into a man more self-possessed and calm, his voice pitched downward and his body language steady after years of proper treatment for his schizophrenia. (Although the show struggles to really clue us into Gein’s interiority, Hunnam admittedly tries his hardest to make him accessible.) But Monster is gratuitous in conveying both Gein’s deviance and reform, leaning into the excessive characterizations and flourishes it previously criticized Psycho, The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, The Silence of the Lambs, and Mindhunter for demonstrating, too. In the season’s back half, neither its overloading of vile desecrations nor maudlin sentimentality adds anything that Monster hadn’t already established four episodes ago. We already know how the tale of Ed Gein ends, with commercialization and infamy. What Monster fails to consider is that it’s part of the problem.

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    Roxana Hadadi

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  • How Monster Butchers the Real Ed Gein Story

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    The third installment of Monster justifies its various imaginings through constant reminders that Ed’s (Charlie Hunnam) grip on reality that is tenuous at best.
    Photo: Netflix

    Ryan Murphy “based on a true story” adaptations are known for having a flexible relationship with the truth. That willingness to play fast and loose with history gained new momentumb in the Monster series, the first two seasons of which made questionable diversions from the life of Jeffrey Dahmer and the saga of the Menendez brothers. But in an interesting twist, the new third installment, The Ed Gein Story, embeds the idea of differing versions of the truth into the season’s narrative. After all, Ed Gein inspired legendary fictional villains like Norman Bates (Psycho), Leatherface (The Texas Chain Saw Massacre), and Buffalo Bill (The Silence of the Lambs), so not only does Monster offer deeply fictionalized versions of Gein’s crimes, it moves its adaptive tendrils outward to explore how his monstrous actions rippled through pop culture.

    That approach opens up all sorts of new avenues to diverge from the historical record. Murphy’s Monster co-creator Ian Brennan, who writes all eight episodes, clearly savors taking kernels of truth and turning them into batches of popcorn this season. In doing so, he insulates himself against charges of gross extrapolation through constant reminders that Ed’s grip on reality is tenuous at best. Think something didn’t happen quite that way? Well, maybe Ed thinks it did. (Although this doesn’t explain some of what this season does to the production of Psycho.) There are details in all eight episodes that are based on verifiable facts, but anything unverifiable, anything that might have happened, even in Ed’s mind, is fair game for Monster, too. Get the shovels, we’re digging for the truth buried within Monster’s grisly fantasia of the Ed Gein story.

    Heavy spoilers follow.

    The “Butcher of Plainfield” became one of history’s most notable murderers not because he killed at least two women but because of what he did with their bodies, and others he dug up at the local cemetery. The list of items that authorities found when his house was raided in 1957 is pure nightmare fuel, including a wastebasket made of human skin, bowls made from skulls, a belt made of nipples, a lampshade created from a human face, and nine vulvas in a shoebox. Most of these body parts were obtained from the cemetery, but also from two women Gein killed: Mary Hogan and Bernice Worden. They found Mary’s face, which Ed had been using as a mask, and Bernice’s entire head. Gruesome, to be sure, and Monster incorporates all of those gnarly details and more.

    Monster is pretty consistent with the details of the atrocities Gein confessed to, including hanging Bernice’s body up in a shed, shooting Mary Hogan, and grave-robbing from the cemetery. However, he was only suspected of other crimes that the show presents as fact, including the disappearance of a young woman named Evelyn Hartley; a pair of missing hunters named Victor Travis and Raymond Burgess that Monster presents as victims of a chainsaw murder that would inspire Leatherface; and even the death of Ed’s brother Henry, which the authorities ruled as a product of asphyxiation despite finding bruising on his head that the show portrays as Ed’s first assault.

    And what about all that nasty mother stuff? According to a 1957 psychological report printed in The Ed Gein File: A Psycho’s Confession and Case Documents, “After the death of his mother … his emotional needs influenced him to attempt the re-creation of his mother by using the parts of bodies from other graves.” So that part aligns pretty closely with Monster’s depiction of Ed’s motivations, although it should be noted that experts on the case are unsure about the extent of Gein’s necrophilia, with Gein claiming that he didn’t have sex with the bodies he exhumed because of the smell. So that truly upsetting scene in episode five is supposition, depending on if you believe a man who did what Gein did had boundaries.

    Monster arguably saves its most unconfirmable flights of fancy for Adeline Watkins, the alleged on-and-off girlfriend of Ed Gein for over 20 years. Maybe. Probably not. The truth is that almost nothing is known about Watkins other than she knew Gein and once said in an interview that they had briefly dated at different times in her life. But she later recanted those claims, saying that her original quotes were blown out of proportion and that she’d never been inside Gein’s house, they only went to the movies a few times.

    The Monster version of Adeline Watkins is not that at all, portrayed more as a Lady Macbeth urging on Ed’s monstrous ways. The fifth episode is particularly remarkable, implying that Adeline not only attacked someone in New York after a meeting with the infamous crime scene photographer Weegee (played by Elliott Gould) but that her mother (Robin Weigert) told her that she threw herself down the stairs multiple times to kill Adeline in utero. Could that have happened? Theoretically, and that’s all Monster needs to run with something.

    The idea that Watkins was an enabler of Gein’s murders and subsequent desecrations could be read merely as a part of the show’s aggressive and admitted mingling of fiction and reality. After all, Watkins also plays a Marion Crane figure in the show, introduced with Ed peeping on her a la Norman Bates, and later envisioned being brutally murdered in a shower while audiences watch a version of Psycho that never existed. In the end, she serves multiple functions on the show as an object of obsession, a partner in crime, a sociopath herself, and a necrophiliac’s girlfriend. That the real Adeline was likely none of those things is fitting for a show about how truth becomes legend, and vice versa.

    Photo: Netflix

    We don’t see much of Ed’s mother Augusta in Monster, and what we do see and hear is often filtered through Gein’s visions and hallucinations. Like a lot of people in this case, not much is known about Augusta Gein other than she married George and had two sons, Ed and Henry. She was reportedly very religious, which is captured on the show in her railings against loose women and the immorality of the world around her. George died in 1940 and Henry in 1944, leaving Ed alone with Augusta, which is when his mental decline began to accelerate.

    Again, Monster blends truth and fiction from the very beginning. Believe it or not, the detail about Ed and Augusta seeing a man abusing a dog seems to be true, at least according to Gein’s account, although she didn’t drop dead on the scene as the show depicts. What Brennan does capture through Augusta is Ed’s obsession with her, reflecting what expert Harold Schechter wrote in his 1989 book Deviant about how she was “his only friend and one true love,” and that after she died, “He was absolutely alone in the world.”

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Paul W. Bailey/NBCU Photo Bank/NBCUniversal via Getty Images, Netflix

    In one of several sections of the show that seeks to capture the influence of Ed Gein on pop culture, Brennan imagines the Master of Suspense’s obsession with the moral boundaries crossed by the man who would inspire Norman Bates. Of course, Psycho was based on a novel of the same name by Robert Bloch, which was loosely inspired by Gein. A review of the book caught the attention of Peggy Robertson, Hitch’s assistant, and the filmmaker forwent his director’s fee and lowered the budget to get it approved by Paramount distributors. Much has been written about the production of Psycho, including how it radically deviates from the book — Marion is barely a character in the source and Bates doesn’t look like Anthony Perkins — but Hitchcock being as obsessed by Gein’s horrific tendencies as he is in Monster is a new idea, one largely imagined.

    The show’s bending of reality fully breaks in episode two as we see Hitch watching a tumultuous screening of Psycho, complete with vomiting and fainting audience members, and even get a re-creation of the shower scene with Hunnam’s Ed and Son’s Adeline in the Norman and Marion roles. Anyone who’s seen the actual movie knows the nudity and graphic violence of the Monster version doesn’t match up with the source; it’s just one more example of how all the material here about the production of Psycho is exaggerated for effect.

    Photo: Vulture; Photos: Pierre Vauthey/Sygma via Getty Images, Netflix

    In a show full of oversized versions of real-life people, Alma Reville is surprisingly subtle, but also remarkably underdeveloped, especially given the talent of the actress cast to play her. The real Reville married Alfred Hitchcock in 1926 and they remained partners until his death in 1980. Her work with Hitch is well-documented, including collaborating on some of his best scripts, but Monster really just uses her as a judgmental sounding board for Alfred, there to shake her head after Psycho typecasts him into a new genre called “sex horror.” She’s just there to look concerned at Alfred and say things like “You have other stories to tell.”

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Reporters Associes/Gamma-Rapho via Getty Images, Netflix

    Hitchcock’s Psycho star doesn’t get much to do in Monster, either, although the way the show connects him to Gein is significantly more insulting to the actor’s legacy than what it does with Alfred and Alma: A show about a cross-dressing psychopath introduces the actor who would play Norman Bates cross-dressing with his boyfriend. Ugh. In a later scene, Bates gets a blowjob from a boyfriend while watching himself on the big screen in Psycho. There isn’t really enough to hold onto here in terms of fiction vs. reality because Monster is only interested in the fact that Perkins felt he had to remain closeted to keep his fame, and that tenuous connection to Gein’s behavior behind closed doors isn’t just shallow, it’s pretty gross.

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Ron Galella, Ltd./Ron Galella Collection via Getty Images, Netflix

    The fourth episode of Monster suggests that a young Tobe Hooper heard about Ed Gein from his father at the dinner table, incorporating that into his vision of the 1974 horror masterpiece The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. It also imagines an adult Hooper sparking to the idea at a Montgomery Ward department store when he sees a chainsaw and fantasizes about using it to carve through a holiday shopping line. He then incorporates the body suit stories about Gein into his vision of Leatherface on the set of TCM.

    There’s a tiny bit of truth hiding in Monster’s imaginings about Hooper. Yes, the filmmaker said that elements of Gein’s crimes inspired elements of TCM, but it’s a film about a lot more than the Plainfield Ghoul, including the proliferation of misinformation and the Vietnam War, which the episode nods to as well. Hooper wanted to tell a true story that wasn’t really true, sort of like what Monster does.

    Photo: Netflix

    A 58-year-old Plainfield hardware store owner, Bernice Worden disappeared in November 1957. Her son, Deputy Sheriff Frank Worden, led the investigation after finding blood stains on the floor, discovering that Gein had been seen in the store the night before she disappeared. This led to the investigation of Gein’s farm that unearthed his atrocities, including Worden’s body being decapitated, flayed, and hung in his shed. Both Mary Hogan and Bernice Worden were roughly similar in age, appearance, and background Augusta Gein, which is likely why Ed killed them.

    Monster devotes a scene to an imaginary encounter with Ilse Koch that inspires Ed to kill Mary (played by Rondi Reed), but the show really goes nuts with its version of Bernice, going so far as to imagine a torrid sex scene between the two in which Ed wears women’s clothing before the two fornicate. Monster uses this encounter to thematically tie Ed’s murder of Bernice to his own confused sexuality and mommy issues, but underlines the unreality of the situation via the green blood that seeps from Bernice’s head after he shoots her in the hardware store.

    Photo: Netflix

    In October 1953, 14-year-old Evelyn Hartley went missing in La Crosse County, Wisconsin, after she had been hired to babysit the 20-month-old daughter of a man named Viggo Rasmussen, and was never seen again. A local man claimed to have seen two men in a vehicle that night not far from the Rasmussen house, and there were strange details about the house, including every room being locked and a window missing a screen with a stepladder leading to it, but Evelyn’s body was never found. When he was arrested, Gein was asked about the case because he lived not far from the house, but no trace of her was found in the Gein residence, and, well, he wasn’t exactly big on hiding body parts, which was likely one of the reasons that the authorities cleared Gein of any involvement with this one (as well as the disappearance of 8-year-old Georgia Weckler, also insinuated on the show).

    In the third episode, Monster posits that Ed tried to get a babysitter job to prove he could be a father with Adeline, and that said job was “stolen” by Evelyn Hartley. So what does Ed do? He stalks and kidnaps her, trying her up in his basement and yelling at her about how he was somehow going to pay for a wedding with a “babysittin’ job.” Then he introduces her to “mother” before bashing her in the head with a hammer. In a series with a lot of torturously gross scenes, it’s one of the grossest.

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Universal History Archive/Universal Images Group via Getty Images, Netflix

    A German war criminal who was married to the commandant of Buchenwald during World War II, Ilse Koch is deserving of a Monster season of her own. In the show, Ed is inspired by a comic book about Koch titled The Bitch of Buchenwald, given to him by Adeline, suggesting that her sadistic treatment of Jews during the Holocaust led to Gein’s house of horrors in Wisconsin. Most of the show’s version of Koch comes from witness testimony during her 1947 US military commission court trial at Dachau, where she was accused of many of the atrocities seen on the show. That includes turning skin into lampshades, something that two inmates alleged to have seen happen but was never proven; when Buchenwald was raided, items made from human skin were found, but the direct connection to Koch could never be established.

    Monster’s visions of Ilse Koch are freed from the historical record because they’re merely what Ed sees in his head after reading the comic book. Whether or not The Bitch of Buchenwald did what is reenacted on the show isn’t relevant, because her activities are placed in the context of a comic book that exaggerates history to make a point — just like Monster does. That is until the seventh episode, in which Ed contacts an imprisoned Ilse over ham radio just before she kills herself. Koch did indeed die by suicide in prison, but did she really speak to Gein beforehand? Of course not, but the walls of reality have crumbled so completely by this point in Monster that we’re in and out of Ed’s hallucinating mind. Maybe we were all along.

    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Library of Congress/Corbis/VCG via Getty Images, Netflix

    As an institutionalized Ed starts to examine what’s behind his cross-dressing ways in the seventh episode, he comes across a recording of “I Enjoy Being a Girl” by Christine Jorgensen, dancing and singing along in his bra and panties. One of the first people widely known to have had a sex reassignment surgery, Christine Jorgensen became a celebrity on the New York scene in the early 1950s. In 1957, she saw Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Flower Drum Song, becoming enchanted by the track that captivates Ed and making it her own.

    In the “Ham Radio” hallucination episode of Monster, Gein “calls” Jorgensen to ask her about why he feels disconnected from his “trouser snake.” As he tells his imaginary Christine about his mother abusing him after catching him masturbating, we hear her voice coming from the mouth of his therapist, the person he’s really speaking with, and flash to the iconic scene in The Silence of the Lambs when Buffalo Bill wears his woman suit, drawing a line between Ed’s proclivities and that masterful film. But imaginary though she may be, Christine gives Ed a much-needed reality check when she makes it clear that his attempt to use her experience to explain his immoral behavior won’t fly. “I don’t think you and I are alike at all,” she says. “The transexual is rarely the perpetrator of violence, Mr. Gein. We are far more likely to be the victims of violence.”

    Photo: Netflix

    In the truly bonkers finale of Monster: The Ed Gein Story, Netflix gets as close to a third season of Mindhunter as there will likely ever be. Happy Anderson, who played serial killer Jerry Brudos on that acclaimed show, returns as the Shoe Fetish Slayer Jerry Brudos, talking to characters clearly meant to be Holden Ford and Bill Tench, though they’re named John Douglas and Robert Ressler, about how he was inspired by Gein. They then go back to their basement office and talk about the case with a woman modeled after Wendy Carr.

    After that WTF opening, the finale works hard to push the idea that Gein influenced numerous other serial killers. Anderson’s Brudos says, “I chopped my share of bodies once I heard about the fella in Wisconsin that did it.” The infamous Richard Speck (Tobias Jelinek) talks about his titties and sends a letter to his beloved Ed, which Gein then uses, Hannibal Lecter-style, to lead the authorities to catch Ted Bundy. And then, in one of the most OMG things that’s ever appeared on Netflix, a near-death Gein has a vision of serial killers thanking him for how he inspired them, including Brudos, Speck, Charlie Manson, Ed Kemper, and more. After a bizarre goodbye with Adeline that feels half-imaginary itself, he goes back to the hall of monsters in his mind and ascends the Psycho staircase to his waiting mother as Yes’s “Owner of a Lonely Heart” plays on the soundtrack. And thus Monster goes out having fully intertwined reality, fiction, and legacy into one nutty vision that it is almost impossible to believe exists.

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    Brian Tallerico

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  • So you want to know about Ed Gein now… | The Mary Sue

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    As is the way with Ryan Murphy’s Monster series, fans flock to Netflix to watch his latest season. Based on infamous murder cases, the show has tackled Jeffrey Dahmer, Erik and Lyle Menendez, and now season 3 is centered on Ed Gein.

    Gein is the kind of serial killer that many forget. But he is infamous for a reason. After all, his story did inspire creatives to make Psycho and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre after learning of what this man did. So if you want to head into the Ryan Murphy universe with a little bit of knowledge of Gein, here is what you need to know about the man.

    Gein grew up in Plainfield, Wisconsin, where his crimes took place. He was known as the Butcher of Plainfield and the Plainfield Ghoul. When Gein was 48 years old, he claims to have killed his first victim, Mary Hogan and then said he killed hardware store owner Bernice Worden when he was 51 years old. Worden was Gein’s victim who got him caught.

    If you’re wondering how this man is tied to stories like Psycho and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, it is because he was a twisted man who was not only a serial killer but a body snatcher as well. He would create things out of human skin (the Leatherface of it all) and his deep love for his mother would go on to be the inspiration for Norman Bates.

    While Gein was only found guilty of Worden’s murder and pled insanity so he spent the rest of his life in a mental institution. He was accused of at least 5 other murders as well as a string of missing people cases in Wisconsin. But his more deranged methods made him the infamous serial killer he’s known to be.

    Why do we keep telling stories of these men?

    Now that you know more about Gein, we have to ask ourselves an important question: Why do we constantly go back to the serial killers and not their victims? This is a common criticism of fictionalized tellings of these stories and it still is a problem. If anything, I need to spend no time at all with the killer themselves.

    And yet time and time again, we are telling the story through their eyes and that’s not really something I think we need in 2025. Gein’s legacy has been documented in cinema for years. Thanks to Alfred Hitchcock, Tobe Hooper, and Kim Henke took Gein’s crimes and made them part of cinema history forever. And yet that isn’t enough? We still have to watch things through his eyes?

    Arguably, I’m still working through the show and maybe I will change my tune but it is a criticism I have of the Monster series as a whole. It is very much on the side of those accused of murder and the only one it worked to help was the Menendez brothers and there were plenty of flaws with season 2 as well.

    Ed Gein is not someone you should become fascinated by. I watch murder documentaries and learn about serial killers to keep myself safe because that is sadly the world we live in. At the end of the day, Ed Gein was confirmed to have murdered two women who had their lives cut short because of his actions. And let’s not get into the basket made of skin.

    (featured image: Netflix)

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    Rachel Leishman

    Assistant Editor

    Rachel Leishman (She/Her) is an Assistant Editor at the Mary Sue. She’s been a writer professionally since 2016 but was always obsessed with movies and television and writing about them growing up. A lover of Spider-Man and Wanda Maximoff’s biggest defender, she has interests in all things nerdy and a cat named Benjamin Wyatt the cat. If you want to talk classic rock music or all things Harrison Ford, she’s your girl but her interests span far and wide. Yes, she knows she looks like Florence Pugh. She has multiple podcasts, normally has opinions on any bit of pop culture, and can tell you can actors entire filmography off the top of her head. Her current obsession is Glen Powell’s dog, Brisket.

    Her work at the Mary Sue often includes Star Wars, Marvel, DC, movie reviews, and interviews.

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • Charlie Hunnam Is Going Psycho in Monster Season 3

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    Ryan Murphy and Ian Brennan are returning to the true-crime well. After courting controversy with their takes on Jeffrey Dahmer and the Menendez brothers, the pair are digging up one of the first true-crime sensations in America: Ed Gein. And would you believe there’s already a long history of problematic adaptations of the grim material? Below, the teaser trailer, release date, and everything else we know about Monster season three starring Charlie Hunnam, coming to Netflix on October 3.

    The third season of Monster will cover one of the most dramatized serial killers in history: Ed Gein. Gein is perhaps more famous for his DIY projects than for murder. He killed at least two people and was suspected of killing seven more. Police discovered several mutilated corpses in his house when he was arrested. “You’re the one who can’t look away,” Hunnam’s Gein ends the trailer dancing in a full skin suit and mask.

    In real life, Gein upholstered chairs and a trash can with human skin and made bowls out of skulls. He also made a corset out of a woman’s torso and a belt out of women’s nipples. “You’re working too fast!” his mother, played by Laurie Metcalf, yells into the dark work room where a bald Hunnam hammers away at a human face. “Just go slow and steady. Take your time, sweet boy.”

    The corset Gein made seemed to stick in certain authors’ minds, as the case has been fictionalized and used to demonize the trans community multiple times. Robert Bloch turned Gein into the crossdressing and mommy-obsessed Norman Bates in the original Psycho novel. Thomas Harris drew from Gein to create sewist serial killer Buffalo Bill in The Silence of the Lambs. Gein was also a reference point for The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, House of 1000 Corpses, and even AHS: Asylum’s Bloody Face.

    Tom Hollander and Suzanna Son will star. This is also Metcalf’s second time she’s playing the mom of a serial killer.

    Monster: The Ed Gein Story comes to Netflix at the start of spooky season, dropping on October 3.

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    Bethy Squires

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