DVD
- Audio commentary from director Matthew Bright
- Alternative extended score
- Film notes from critic Billy Chainsaw
- Original theatrical trailer
- 'Tartan Terror' trailer reel
- Interactive menu
- Scene access
- Region 0
The accounts vary and the actual number will never be known, but the deaths of at least 36 women can be attributed to Theodore Robert Bundy. This biographical horror film begins in Seattle in 1974 where the duplicitous nature of Bundy (Michael Reilly Burke) becomes unmistakably evident. He is working as a polite crisis hotline volunteer, but his callers don't know that he is secretly a sexual deviant in a bow tie whose sexual desires become increasingly perverse until they culminate in his killing spree. Meanwhile, an unsuspecting girlfriend (named "Lee" in the film, this woman--played by Boti Ann Bliss--wrote a book about her life with Bundy under the alias Elizabeth Kendall) dotes on her lover, whose crimes would go unsolved for years. The film follows Bundy's murderous trail through two prison escapes and his eventual execution in Florida.

Average rating (1 review)
absolutely rubbish
ChrisBWFC | 04/09/2007 | See all ChrisBWFC's reviews (1) »
a terrible film. Poor script backed up by wooden acting from the lead pair - also strange directorial decisions such as the lightweight and comic approach they take to the murders, the rapes, and especially whoever decided to play jaunty music whilst Bundy has sex with the long dead body of one of his victims.
Bizarre.
Michael Reilly Burke, Boti Bliss, Julianna McCarthy, Jennifer Tisdale & Steffani Brass | |
18 years and over | |
2002 | |
Widescreen 1.85:1 Anamorphic | |
English - Dolby Digital (2.0) | |
1 hour and 36 minutes (approx) | |
Region 2 - Will only play on European Region 2 or multi-region DVD players. |
































