The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

New HBO series looks at lives disrupted by a serial killer

- By Mark Kennedy

NEW YORK » It’s said that documentar­y filmmaking is all about being in the right place at the right time. If so, director Liz Garbus has been doubly lucky with her latest project.

Two years ago, she and her team started filming their series on the hunt for the stillunkno­wn Golden State Killer, whose trail had been cold for more than 30 years. The very next day, a suspect was arrested.

“If you’re making a documentar­y and everything happens as expected, isn’t that boring?” she asks, laughing. “Why are you bothering?”

Garbus kept filming and the result is “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” a six-part documentar­y series debuting Sunday on HBO. It also premieres with perfect timing.

In a twist that seems almost too well scripted, the day after the first episode airs, the Golden State Killer suspect is expected to plead guilty in a California courtroom.

The filmmakers were able to pivot in large part because “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark” is not really about the killer himself but rather the survivors of his terror. It’s framed through the life of the late crime writer Michelle McNamara.

“It’s very weird timing, but that’s the way things go sometimes. It just happens,” said comedian Patton Oswalt, who was married to McNamara.

McNamara spent years working out her obsession with the Golden State Killer and hunting for his identity, which filled the manuscript of her “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark.” After her death from an accidental drug overdose in 2016, the book was finished by fellow investigat­ors and became a bestseller. HBO tapped Garbus to turn it into a series.

The Golden State Killer is suspected of at least 13 murders and more than 50 rapes across California from 1974-1986. The armed and masked rapist would tie up any man he found in the house and pile dishes on his back, threatenin­g to kill both victims if he heard the plates jiggle while he assaulted the woman.

DNA evidence in 2018 led authoritie­s to arrest Joseph DeAngelo, a former police officer. While McNamara’s work didn’t directly lead police to the arrest, she and her fellow civilian online sleuths kept pushing the case.

“I’ll Be Gone in the Dark” is rich and compelling, part of a recent wave of documentar­y films that lift up the survivors of violence, like “Surviving R. Kelly,” “Finding Neverland” and “Jeffrey Epstein: Filthy Rich.”

The first four episodes of the new series don’t even mention DeAngelo. “In some ways, he is an afterthoug­ht because the survivors are much more interestin­g,” Garbus said.

One Golden State Killer victim was 15 when she was attacked while playing the piano at home and stopped playing it forever shortly thereafter. “It was just a few hours, but it changed everything,” she says in the film.

The series ends on a triumphant note with a gathering of the aging men and women whose lives were turned upside down by the predator but who suffered quietly for years due to societal stigma. Now they are raising their voices.

“If DeAngelo pleads guilty on Monday, that will be I think an important step forward. But, to me, the fact that they have really triumphed over that silence is really the culminatio­n of the story,” Garbus said.

Garbus and her team — including directors Elizabeth Wolff, Myles Kane and Josh Koury — used archival footage, recreated crime scenes and conducted extensive interviews with amateur detectives, retired detectives and even DeAngelo’s family members and ex-fiancée.

 ?? HBO VIA AP ?? This image released by HBO shows late writer Michelle McNamara from the six-part docuseries “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” debuting on Sunday.
HBO VIA AP This image released by HBO shows late writer Michelle McNamara from the six-part docuseries “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark,” debuting on Sunday.

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