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The Boston Strangler (1968)
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Overview
User Rating:
Release Date:
16 October 1968 (USA) moreTagline:
Why did 13 women willingly open their doors to the Boston Strangler?Plot:
Boston is being terrorized by a series of seemingly random murders of women. Based on the true story... more | add synopsisAwards:
Nominated for Golden Globe. Another 2 nominations moreNewsDesk:
(2 articles)
Veteran Director Richard Fleischer Dead at 89 (From Studio Briefing - Film News. 27 March 2006)
Director Richard Fleischer Dies at 89
(From WENN. 24 March 2006)
User Comments:
True-crime drama features Tony Curtis in career-best performance more (63 total)Cast
(Cast overview, first billed only)| Tony Curtis | ... | Albert DeSalvo | |
| Henry Fonda | ... | John S. Bottomly | |
| George Kennedy | ... | Det. Phil DiNatale | |
| Mike Kellin | ... | Julian Soshnick | |
| Hurd Hatfield | ... | Terence Huntley | |
| Murray Hamilton | ... | Det. Frank McAfee | |
| Jeff Corey | ... | John Asgeirsson | |
| Sally Kellerman | ... | Dianne Cluny | |
| William Marshall | ... | Atty. Gen. Edward W. Brooke | |
| George Voskovec | ... | Peter Hurkos | |
| Leora Dana | ... | Mary Bottomly | |
| Carolyn Conwell | ... | Irmgard DeSalvo | |
| Jeanne Cooper | ... | Cloe | |
| Austin Willis | ... | Dr. Nagy | |
| Lara Lindsay | ... | Bobbie Eden |
Additional Details
Parents Guide:
Add content advisory for parentsRuntime:
116 minCountry:
USALanguage:
EnglishColour:
ColourAspect Ratio:
2.35 : 1 moreSound Mix:
4-Track Stereo (Westrex Recording System)Certification:
Canada:PA (Manitoba) | Canada:R (Nova Scotia/Ontario) | Canada:18+ (Quebec) | Norway:11 (DVD rating) (2006) | Canada:18A (video rating) | Australia:M | Finland:K-16 | France:U (re-release) | Norway:15 | Norway:16 (original rating) | Spain:18 | Sweden:15 | UK:18 | USA:R (re-rating) | Iceland:16Fun Stuff
Goofs:
Factual errors: In the film it is assumed DeSalvo was guilty, and it portrays him as suffering from multiple personality disorder and committing the murders while in a psychotic state. DeSalvo was never diagnosed with, or even suspected of having that disorder. moreQuotes:
Title card: [opening title card] This is the story of 'Albert DeSalvo', the self-confessed Boston Strangler. The characters and incidents you are about to see are based on fact. moreSoundtrack:
There Will Never Be Another You moreFAQ
This FAQ is empty. Add the first question.more (63 total)
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THE BOSTON STRANGLER (1968)
Aspect ratio: 2.35:1 (Panavision)
Sound format: 4-track magnetic stereo
The true story of serial killer Albert DeSalvo (Tony Curtis), a devoted family man with a split personality who terrorised Boston during the early 1960's and murdered eleven women.
Perhaps taking its cue from the success of Richard Brooks' true crime drama IN COLD BLOOD (1967), Richard Fleischer's THE BOSTON STRANGLER is a dignified, unsensational account of Albert DeSalvo's notorious crimes and the wide-ranging police investigation which led to his arrest. However, modern viewers may be alarmed by the casual references to 'faggots', and a screenplay (by Edward Anhalt, from the book by Gerold Frank) which assumes a divide between 'normal' heterosexual behaviour and other forms of sexuality, all of which are bracketed as seedy, deviant and marginalised. That small (but significant) caveat aside, the movie provides an effective overview of a complex case, and Curtis - an unlikely choice for such a difficult role - gives a career-best performance as the deranged killer whose routine domestic life provided no hint of the monster lurking within his psyche. Henry Fonda is his nemesis, a dedicated law lecturer assigned to the case against his will, who eventually secured DeSalvo's confession. Some of the crime-scene details are fairly frank for a major release of the period, though the worst of it is relayed through dialogue and reaction shots, and visual depictions are kept to a bare minimum. Even for those familiar with the outcome of the case, the movie generates suspense through an accumulation of historical evidence, as Boston's terrified populace reacts convulsively to the maniac in their midst, and police trawl the streets for anyone whose sexual peccadilloes mark them as possible suspects.
Fleischer was a particular advocate of the widescreen format (he photographed most of his films anamorphically after being bowled over by a demonstration of CinemaScope in 1953), and his modish use of split-screen effects is completely diminished whenever the movie is broadcast on TV (you'll need a big screen to get even a modicum of the intended effect!). While irritating for some, there's nothing gratuitous about this technical device, by which Fleischer is able to convey layers of relevant information within the space of a single scene, whereas a conventional approach might have taken more time and necessitated the removal of crucial information (note also the clever use of directional dialogue and sound effects during these episodes). Few of the murders are recreated in any detail, but there's a couple of unsettling scenes which describe the cunning manner in which DeSalvo was able to gain access to his victims despite a city-wide alert over the Strangler's crimes, and Sally Kellerman is hugely sympathetic as the only woman to survive one of DeSalvo's brutal assaults.
NB. While Fleischer's film takes DeSalvo's guilt wholly for granted, the facts which condemned him have been challenged in robust terms by a number of sources throughout the years (most recently in Susan Kelly's 2002 book 'The Boston Stranglers: The Public Conviction of Albert DeSalvo and the True Story of Eleven Shocking Murders'), and much of the evidence which 'exonerates' DeSalvo is as compelling as anything in the movie. DeSalvo himself died in 1973, murdered by a fellow inmate whilst serving time in Walpole Prison.