Calgary Herald

THIS STORY DOESN’T NEED RETELLING

Jeffrey Dahmer series tries to put focus on victims, but ultimately fails

- BETHONIE BUTLER

... Viral tweets memorializ­ing the victims ask the audience not to romanticiz­e Jeffrey Dahmer just because he is played by Evan Peters ...

Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story Netflix

The true-crime cottage industry that exploded in the years following Serial, the podcast that became a cultural phenomenon in 2014, is inherently exploitati­ve — even when the work in question has an ostensibly noble mission.

In the case of Serial, the mission was to find out whether an innocent man had been convicted of a murder he long maintained he did not commit. But even as the This American Life spinoff inspired fervent interest in Adnan Syed's 2000 conviction for the murder of his ex-girlfriend, Hae Min Lee, it has also received criticism for what — and whom — it left out.

“This is not a podcast for me,” Lee's brother Young Lee said following a judge's decision last week to vacate Syed's 2000 murder conviction. “This is real life — a never-ending nightmare for 20-plus years.”

Those who consume truecrime podcasts, films or TV series, whether documentar­ies or fictionali­zed, must make calculatio­ns about whether the larger quest for truth, redemption or cultural examinatio­n justifies the intrinsica­lly fraught aspect of retelling harrowing stories. And sometimes, the question is whether such a justificat­ion holds up, as in the case of Ryan Murphy's new Netflix series Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story.

Murphy's professed aim in retelling the story of the Milwaukee serial killer, who confessed to murdering and dismemberi­ng 17 young men, is to shed light on who his victims were as individual­s, and the fact that they were primarily Black and gay.

The show also depicts Glenda Cleveland, the Black female neighbour (played by Niecy Nash) who repeatedly called the police about the stench and unsettling noises coming from the apartment of her neighbour, Jeffrey Dahmer (Evan Peters), but was ignored.

The 10-episode limited series follows several film efforts to tell the story of Dahmer, from the 2002 horror film Dahmer, starring a then-unknown Jeremy Renner, to the 2017 drama My Friend Dahmer, which was based on a graphic novel by Dahmer's high school classmate Derf Backderf and starred Ross Lynch (of Disney's Austin and Ally) in the title role.

This series, notably, is one of the few about the killer that aims to put the focus on his victims — though it ultimately falls short. Dahmer — Monster sets the tone by opening with Cleveland crying as she watches a news report about a Black man who was killed by police after they pulled him over for a supposed traffic violation as he was working undercover. The rest of the episode focuses on Tracy Edwards (Shaun J. Brown), the Dahmer victim who was able to fight off his attacker and flag down police, leading to Dahmer's arrest.

But even as Dahmer is handcuffed and led away — with a distraught Tracy wishing that he meet death for his despicable acts — the series soon goes for gruesome shock value. As police interview Dahmer's father, detailing the horrific discoverie­s they made in his son's apartment, the series displays a severed head found in Dahmer's refrigerat­or and a human heart stashed in a deep freezer.

Critics and viewers have been divided over Dahmer — Monster, which carries a 50 per cent rating at Rotten Tomatoes, where several reviews note Murphy and Co.'s attempts to tell the stories of Dahmer's victims, and how those stories are too often overshadow­ed by the acts of the killer himself. One example is the sixth episode, in which Dahmer meets a deaf man named Tony Hughes (Rodney Burford, in a standout performanc­e). The episode is centred on Tony, the events that led to his murder and his family's heartbreak over his initially unexplaine­d disappeara­nce. But the final frame of the episode focuses on Dahmer and the unspeakabl­e things he does to his victims' dismembere­d bodies.

Despite the criticism surroundin­g Dahmer — Monster, viewers are still tuning in: The show is listed as the No. 1 TV series on the streamer after being quietly released last week. While the backlash remains loud — viral tweets memorializ­ing the victims ask the audience not to “romanticiz­e Jeffrey Dahmer just because he is played by Evan Peters,” while outlets like the Guardian ponder if the “fetishized” take is the “most exploitati­ve TV of 2022” — the fascinatio­n with the murderer remains strong. And it is hard to separate the interest in the victims of the crimes from the heinous ways the ends of their lives are depicted. Amid the controvers­y, the Netflix Twitter account has promoted the series like any other, referring to reallife events as if they were plot developmen­ts.

“Can't stop thinking about this disturbing scene from DAHMER where one of Jeffrey Dahmer's victims finally manages to escape ... and the police actually bring him back inside the apartment,” reads a tweet accompanyi­ng video from an episode that features Dahmer's youngest murder victim, 14-year-old Konerak Sinthasomp­hone. “Now on Netflix.”

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Actor Evan Peters heads to the dark side to portray an American serial killer in Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story.
NETFLIX Actor Evan Peters heads to the dark side to portray an American serial killer in Dahmer — Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story.

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