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Kansas City's most notorious serial killer.
Online promotion for the new film Berdella.
The film "Berdella" is based off of
the real life events of Robert A. Berdella during the 1980's.
The movie is written and directed by Kansas City natives Bill
Taft and Paul South, the founders of the Northeast Film Group.
Bob Berdella, Kansas City’s most notorious
serial killer, was most notable for luring young men to his
home throughout the 1980s. He drugged them and tortured them,
repeatedly experimenting to see how much pain he could cause
them and still keep them alive. And when he went too far, his
victims died. He cut up their bodies and set them out with the
garbage. Finally, one victim jumped out a window and fled the
house wearing nothing but a dog collar. With that incident,
police broke the case, and Berdella confessed to six killings
in a deal that spared him of the death penalty
Taken From "Horror
Society.com"
http://horrorsociety.com/2008/07/25/bob-berdella
Principle photography
for BERDELLA began July 21st, 2008.
The story behind Bob Berdella is quite gruesome yet fascinating.
When exactly did he go "bad"? Growing up within 15
minutes from where the serial killer lived I have grown a much
fonder interest. Over the course of the past three years I have
conducted many interviews and completed extensive research on
the man himself.
At first sight Bob Berdella appears to be an ordinary man.
To all those who knew him, either through work or some other
association, say he was a very friendly man, kind, and courteous.
He had many jobs and hobbies, Bob Berdella was a very busy man.
He worked for a local news station in Kansas City, wrote restaurant
reviews for the Kansas City Star, and ran his own booth at a
Flea Market in Westport, the counter-cultural headquarters of
KC. It was called "Bob's Bazaar Bizarre". He had everything
from human skulls to an extensive library on witchcraft and
occultism. Bob lived at 4315 Charlotte, the picture above is
what the house looked like in 1989, now the house is gone and
what remains is a large driveway. While conducting an interview
with an associate, I gained insight into one of his encounters
with Berdella. Apparently one evening around 1987-88, my associate
was leaving a bar, one that Berdella frequented, and they offered
to give him a ride home since he was plastered. On the ride
home Bob started telling them stories of men he'd had tied up
and tortured at his house in the past few months, the guys brining
him home thought he was just being an ignorant drunk and dropped
him off without any hint of what they were soon to find out.
Bob Berdella murdered six young men, dismembered them in the
tub and then put their bagged remains out on the curb for Monday
morning pick-up. He apparently did all this on weekends, so
that he could make trash day and have no remains left around
the house. Of course, like all serial killers, he had to keep
something: a box of hundreds of Polaroid's of his victims. (be
forewarned, these aren't necessarily easy to look at, so think
a bit before clicking away. also, i doubt a workplace around
would consider these proper viewing material.)
Berdella "was the 39-year old owner of Bob's Bazaar Bizarre
in Kansas City, a downtown novelty shop that specialized in
lava lamps, replica skulls, incense, and other kinds of supplies
that would appeal to potheads and weekend Satanists." "His
many secrets had begun to emerge on the Saturday the Final Four
tourney got under way, when a man wearing only a dog collar
escaped from Berdella's home at 4315 Charlotte St. "Berdella
later confessed to killing six men -- some by lethal injection,
some by suffocation. He said he stuffed their bodies in plastic
bags for the trash collectors. What police called torture, Berdella
called "my darkest fantasies becoming my reality."
"In the week that Kansas City coveted the sporting world's
spotlight, more than a few visitors had to wonder: Is it safe?
Berdella himself showed a twisted appreciation for the occasion
by displaying four model skulls next to the caption "The
Final Four" at his Westport curio shop, Bob's Bazaar Bizarre."
"On April 4, 1988, Robert Berdella was arraigned on seven
counts of sodomy, one count of felonious restraint, and one
count of first degree assault. Bail was initially set at $500,000,
revoked the next day, when officers testified that one of the
men in Berdella's photographs — trussed up and hanging
by his heels — appeared to be dead. While excavation continued
on Berdella's property and prosecutor's contemplated murder
charges, homicide investigators started checking out their list
of missing persons dating back to 1984. A bargained guilty plea
on one count of murder consigned Berdella to prison for life,
but authorities suspected him in at least seven other deaths.
On December 19, 1988, Berdella pled guilty to first-degree murder
in the death of victim Robert Sheldon, and to four counts of
second-degree murder involving additional male victims. He was
sentenced to a term of life imprisonment."
While he was in prison, Berdella came up with the peacemaking
idea of setting up a fund for the families of his victims. When
he complained about the roaches in his cell, a local station
started the 'Bugs for Berdella' campaign, mailing hundreds of
listener-donated insects to him. Four years into his sentence,
Bob died of a heart attack, though recent revelations hint at
him being killed. Even poisoned. He was shipped back to Cuyahoga
where his dad is buried.
Taken from Savage Cinema.com
http://www.savagecinema.com/berdella.html

Copyright
© 2008 Northeast Film Group LLC. All rights reserved.
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