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  • Sleep My Little Dead: The True Story of the Zodiac Killer (St. Martin's true crime library)

    Aug 29th 2011

    By: admin

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    actual case files, crime, Dead, Killer', Library, Little, Martin's, Sleep, story, thriller from david fincher, true, true crime library, zodiac

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    • Andrew Zaninovich

      August 29th, 2011 at 01:13

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      10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
      1.0 out of 5 stars
      What Can I Say?, February 5, 2006
      By 
      Andrew Zaninovich –
      (REAL NAME)
        

      This review is from: Sleep My Little Dead: The True Story of the Zodiac Killer (St. Martin’s true crime library) (Mass Market Paperback)

      I’ve read material safety data sheets more engaging than this. Stick with Graysmith or others if you want a good read.

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    • Rhiannon Bishop

      August 29th, 2011 at 01:56

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      19 of 25 people found the following review helpful:
      1.0 out of 5 stars
      Zero Stars for this book!, May 20, 2002
      By 
      Rhiannon Bishop (North Carolina) –
      (VINE VOICE)
        

      This review is from: Sleep My Little Dead: The True Story of the Zodiac Killer (St. Martin’s true crime library) (Mass Market Paperback)

      Save your time, save your money, don’t purchase this book.

      Yes, in NYC this guy was called the Zodiac, but this author uses California’s infamous Zodiac Killer symbol, etc. on the cover. So much for imagination.

      The book itself is a total waste of time, the writing is poor, there are spelling and grammatical mistakes throughout. If I could have given this book a zero star rating I would have.

      If you want good true Crime check out books by Graysmith, Keppel, Rule, Bledsoe and Carlton Smith, these names are KNOWN in the True Crime genre, Crowley is not.

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    • Anonymous

      August 29th, 2011 at 02:30

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      6 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
      5.0 out of 5 stars
      Once you get started on this, u’ll want more, June 20, 1999
      By A Customer
      This review is from: Sleep My Little Dead: The True Story of the Zodiac Killer (St. Martin’s true crime library) (Mass Market Paperback)

      This was the very first True Crime book that I had purchased. It’s cleverly written and readers can get into the mind of Eddie the self proclaimed ‘Zodiac 2′. It is a great book to start on if you have not read any True Crime books. Eddie’s mind is complex and spuns intellectual thoughts, Kieran Crowley explores his mind and puts himself in Eddie’s shoes to come up with this fantastic book. (not forgetting that he had an interview with Eddie himself) This book is a MUST BUY!!!

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    • Cubist

      August 29th, 2011 at 03:11

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      92 of 95 people found the following review helpful:
      5.0 out of 5 stars
      This Director’s Cut Special Edition was worth the wait, January 7, 2008
      By 
      Cubist (United States) –
      (TOP 500 REVIEWER)
        

      This review is from: Zodiac: The Director’s Cut (Two-Disc Special Collector’s Edition) (DVD)

      After the technically accomplished but ultimately hollow thriller Panic Room (3-Disc Special Edition), director David Fincher returns to familiar subject matter with Zodiac, a dramatization of the murders perpetuated by the infamous serial killer known as Zodiac that terrorized the San Francisco Bay area in the late 1960s and early 1970s. With Seven (New Line Platinum Series), Fincher seems like an obvious choice to direct this film but those of you expecting a rehash of that film will be disappointed. With Zodiac, he faces the daunting challenge of making an exciting thriller that runs two hours and forty minutes long where the killer was never caught. He does this by focusing on the people who investigated the case and how it affected them.

      This is a film that shows people talking and doing research – hardly, dynamic, cinematic material but Fincher makes it fascinating with strong performances from his talented cast and a solid screenplay to anchor the film. Like Michael Mann’s equally obsessive serial killer movie, Manhunter (Restored Director’s Cut Divimax Edition), Fincher spends a lot of his movie showing offices buzzing with activity as the case heats up and we see people hard at work as the police, FBI, the Chronicle and even the CIA all try to decipher the Zodiac’s code and solve the case. He also show the minutia of their methods while also reminding us of the limits of technology at the time (no personal computers, no internet, no DNA testing, etc.). These people faced a monumental task of sifting through hundreds of false leads and crank calls from the substantial information that might actually further the case.

      Zodiac presents a wealth of information and invites you to sift through it like the three protagonists. In fact, there is so much to absorb that repeated viewings will undoubtedly reveal more details that might not have been caught upon an initial viewing. The film’s long running time allows you to gradually immerse yourself in the film and the story it tells. However, it never feels too long because Fincher maintains a brisk, efficient pace cramming as much detail and information as he can into every scene. The killer is a fascinating enigma and his encrypted letters, his blatant taunting of the police, and the discrepancies between murders only it makes it more interesting. It is easy to see why people became obsessed with this case. Ultimately, the Zodiac case doesn’t just leave a trail of actual bodies but also collateral damage in the form of failed marriages, ended partnerships and substance abuse. And this is just the people who investigated the case. The toll taken on the victims who survived, their families and those of the people who were killed is inconceivable. A whole other movie could be made about them. Fincher has made a smart, engaging thriller that suggests a new direction for the filmmaker, one that places an emphasis on character and story instead of atmosphere and set design.

      Last year, Paramount released an obligatory bare bones DVD and in the meantime, Fincher and DVD producer extraordinaire, David Prior have assembled an in-depth two-disc special edition that covers all aspects of the production. The director has also added five minutes back into the film that improves on an already great motion picture.

      The first disc features an audio commentary by director David Fincher. He touches upon the “oddly personal” period details as much of the film takes place during his childhood and around areas he lived. This also informed the period songs he picked for the film. This is the kind of engaging, informative track we’ve come to expect from Fincher.

      Even better is the second commentary by actors Jake Gyllenhaal and Robert Downey Jr., producer Brad Fischer, screenwriter James Vanderbilt, and crime novelist James Ellroy. Fischer and Vanderbilt talk about how closely they stuck to the actual facts of the case and delve into its details. Ellroy, a self-proclaimed fan of the film, does his entertaining Demon Dog of crime fiction persona that fans of his love while also talking about the film’s place in crime fiction. Downey and Gyllenhaal provide all kinds of anecdotal information with Downey displaying his trademark dry sense of humour.

      The second disc is broken up into two sections: extras dealing with the film and ones dealing with the actual Zodiac murders. “Zodiac Deciphered” is an hour-long documentary on the making of the film. Producer…

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    • Grady Harp

      August 29th, 2011 at 03:30

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      50 of 55 people found the following review helpful:
      5.0 out of 5 stars
      A Dark Obsession Becomes Even Darker, January 9, 2008
      By 
      Grady Harp (Los Angeles, CA United States) –
      (TOP 10 REVIEWER)
        
      (VINE VOICE)
        
      (REAL NAME)
        

      This review is from: Zodiac: The Director’s Cut (Two-Disc Special Collector’s Edition) (DVD)

      ZODIAC is director David Fincher’s finest film to date. All of the preparatory exercises in violence and horror he served so well in such films as FIGHT CLUB and SEVEN now are even more terrifying because of the manner in which he internalizes the events of the infamous Zodiac killer of the 1960s and 1970s and allows us to see how the murders and lack of proof of the perpetrator destroyed the personal lives of those bound to reveal Zodiac’s identity. The story of course is true, as documented in Robert Graysmith’s book (adapted extremely well for the screen by James Vanderbilt), and the history is so well known that rehashing it in a review is pointless. But on to the production.

      Filmed in the Bay area the film has that peculiar light known to artists of the region but rarely captured so well as it is here by cinematographer Harris Savides: the sunlight (when visualized is brilliant and the night portions are dank not only form the seeming constant rain but also form the seediness of the story’s message. The acting is of the highest caliber: newspaper cartoonist Graysmith (Jake Gyllenhaal, in a standout role), police inspector David Toschi (Mark Ruffalo, in one of his finest performances), news writer Paul Avery (Robert Downey, Jr.), Melvin Belli (Brian Cox), Inspector William Armstrong (Anthony Edwards), Graysmith’s long-suffering wife Melanie (Chloë Sevigny), down to the more minor roles are all pitch perfect.

      What makes this film work so well is the emphasis on the human aspect of how violence, especially random and uncontrolled, alters the psyches of people. The breakdown from the stress of the fruitless and frustrating investigation by each of the primary characters is heart wrenching. How much of this is actor driven by such talented pros and how much is due to Fincher’s directorial abilities is probably a moot point. The very long unwinding of this struggle (158 minutes) becomes almost unbearably tense. While the Added Features of this set open windows of information that delve more deeply into this unsolved horror story, the film still stands solidly on its own without the added accoutrements. This is a very fine film that is worthy of the many awards that are dangling in space at the moment. Grady Harp, January 08

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    • MICHAEL ACUNA

      August 29th, 2011 at 03:44

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      77 of 90 people found the following review helpful:
      5.0 out of 5 stars
      Symbols, March 2, 2007
      By 
      MICHAEL ACUNA (Southern California United States) –
      (VINE VOICE)
        
      (REAL NAME)
        

      David Fincher, director of the fascinating, impeccably composed, cerebral “Zodiac” has not heretofore been known for his subtlety though his “Fight Club,” “Alien3″ and “Seven” are filled with Life and a doomed even ugly sense of reality. But “Zodiac,” the story of the Northern California serial killer, who was more aware of his reputation and celebrity than any Hollywood starlet, gives us a subtler, more rational Fincher than his previous films would suggest. There is very little of the trademark Fincher violence and brutality here and more of a psychologically astute and emotionally cognizant one.
      “Zodiac” is a story of Men working together for a common goal: that of capturing the Zodiac killer. There is the Police primarily consisting of San Francisco PD Homicide, David Toschi (a remarkably committed and persuasive Mark Ruffalo) and William Armstrong (stalwart and dedicated Anthony Edwards) and the San Francisco Chronicle reporters Paul Avery (intelligent, pathetically alcoholic Robert Downey) and Robert Graysmith, who would go on to write the book about the Zodiac murders portrayed by the excellent and wounded, ultimately crazed-by-the-case, Jake Gyllenhaal.
      As a rule, in most movies of late dealing with serial killers, the serial killer is merely a jumping off point for brutal and disgusting slash and dash murders. But here Fincher has stepped back, adjusted his sights and telescoped on the psychological and emotional effects of the killings, the endless procedural details of the investigation (handwriting experts, the “2500″ suspects), the letters sent to the SF Chronicle by Zodiac and the detritus of a 20+ year investigation that wears down and whittles away at any kind of normal life for Toshi and Graysmith. As such “Zodiac” is more about the furtive, brutal legacy of the Zodiac murders and its effect on these two men than it is about the Zodiac killer himself.
      Gyllenhaal plays Graysmith as a man possessed: alternately repulsed by the Zodiac as a mass murderer but at the same time fascinated by his facility with the obscure language of codes, symbols and puzzles and his seemingly insatiable, preening desire for celebrity. Matching his intensity is Ruffalo’s Toschi. Ruffalo has never been more persuasive and effective even bettering his feral performance in “In the Cut.” Both men are obsessed with Zodiac and both pay for this obsession with the hard currency of years and loves lost and never regained.
      “Zodiac” goes on a bit too long but its ultimate success can be attributed to its brilliant, careful and intricate accumulation and dissemination of case detail that forms the backbone of this tragic, interesting and intelligent film. The larger tragedy that this film inadvertently points out though is that Zodiac’s murderous swath across California in the mid 20th. Century now seems oddly remote, old-fashioned and even quaint in this time of 9/11 and international terrorism.

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