😍 2022-09-27 18:00:35 – Paris/France.
With the rise of true crime on television, the cases they portray often reopen old wounds in the loved ones of perpetrators and victims, especially the latter. Ryan Murphy's new series, 'DAHMER - Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story' was no exception with the crude account of the murders perpetrated by this psychopath.
What upset the relatives of his victims. Specifically those of Errol Lindsey, whose sister Rita Isbell (who was also portrayed in the highly notable Netflix miniseries), blew up through an article for Insider.
reopened wounds
In the, the woman tells both her real experience in the trial (and his sonorous speech) like what he felt when he saw it in the fiction. An unpleasant experience from which he concludes:
“By evoking old feelings, the show hurts, but it also benefits me. He does it because I can handle it differently now than in the past. I can talk about it without too much anger. »
Netflix victim Jeffrey Dahmer's sister and the real Rita in 1992 #jeffreydahmer #serialkillers #truecrime #truecrimecommunity pic.twitter.com/t8fZe1S2oT
— Carol DaRonch (@CarolDaRonch) September 21, 2022
She also reveals that she was never contacted about the show, not even to ask her what she thought of what they were doing. Consider that the Netflix has been overlooked:
"I don't want money and that's what this show is about, Netflix trying to get paid. I could understand if they gave some of the money to the children of the victims. Not necessarily their families. I mean, I'm old. I live very, very comfortably. But the victims have children and grandchildren. If the show had benefited them in any way, it wouldn't seem so harsh and careless.
It's sad that they are making money from this tragedy. It's pure greed. The episode with me was the only part I watched. I haven't seen the full series. I don't need to see it. I lived it. I know exactly what happened. »
Another review of the Dahmer case
Statements that join those of one of his cousins, Eric, who stormed the networks to make it clear that the obsession with the Jeffrey Dahmer affair it's as cruel as it is painful:
"I'm not telling anyone what to watch, I know true crime is huge right now, but if you're really curious about the victims, my (Isbell's) family is pissed off about this show. It's retraumatizing again and again and for what? How many films/series/documentaries do we need?”
“They don't notify families when they do this. Everything is public, so you don't need to notify (or pay) anyone. My family knew it when others knew it. So when they say they do it with “respect for the victims” or “respecting the dignity of the families”, no one contacts them. My cousins wake up every few months to a bunch of calls and texts and they already know there's another show on Dahmer. It's cruel. »
As Eric rightly points out, this isn't the first time a production has been done on the Dahmer case (we've had a few movies about it before) and, in fact, Netflix has 'Conversations with a Killer: The Jeffrey Dahmer Tapes Exit Track'a documentary which will be released on October 7th.
SOURCE: Reviews News
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