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Chicago Massacre: Richard Speck DVD Review - DreadCentral.com
June 11 2007
In the mid Sixties one man in Chicago committed one of the most heinous and controversial crimes in the history of our country. His name was Richard Speck. Many people have a sick fascination with serial killers and mass murderers. Frequently these sick fucks become celebrities with legions of fans. What happens when an event occurs that defies the imagination? The answer is simple. Somebody makes a movie about it. The same team who brought you the surprisingly good Ed Gein (review here) have returned with another trip down Dismember-Me Lane.
For those unaware of this lunatic's crimes, Richard Speck (played here with surprisingly chilling ferocity by Corin Nemec of TV's "Parker Lewis Can't Lose") spent the night of July 14th, 1966, holding nine student nurses captive inside their dorm. One by one he took them away to be beaten, raped, and then murdered. Sometimes not necessarily in that order. With his rocks thoroughly off, and his bloodlust for the moment sated, Speck headed off into the night and thankfully never killed again. Being that in the Sixties we didn't have access to today's many forensic tools, he probably would have gotten away with it, too. That is, if he didn't leave behind a survivor. That one woman's voice would be the key to his undoing, and here in Chicago Massacre: Richard Speck the actress who played her was almost mine.
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