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While most high-profile serial killers have some type of visual medium devoted to them, whether a miniseries for Ted Bundy or a feature film for Aileen Wuornos, its much more difficult to develop such presentation for historical figures. Larsons bestselling book, The Devil in the White City, brought considerable attention to H.H. Holmes, but until now there has never been a comprehensive documentary on the man. Though film rights for Larsons book have been optioned by Cruise/Wagner Productions, no movie plans have been announced. But there is a way to acquire some visuals of the Holmes case.
In 2003, Waterfront Productions offered an hour-long DVD about the life and crimes of H. H. Holmes. While producer John Borowski mistakenly bills Holmes asFeatured on the documentary (www.hhholmesthefilm.com) are crime historian Harold Schechter, noted for Depraved, his painstakingly researched book on the case, and Thomas Cronin, who bills himself as a criminal profiler. While Cronin overextends himself to assume things about the killers ideas and behavior for which he has no real basis, Schechter balances this with a scholars careful approach. Cronin has been a police officer for over thirty years and has training in criminal profiling from the FBIs BSU in
This documentary was made over the course of three years, completely at Borowskis expense, and sparked by an article about the infamous
While the documentary offers nineteenth-century photos and maps, it also reconstructs some of the scenes, using genuine pieces from the 1980s, such as scalpels and a lantern. Borowski even acquired a copy of Holmes birth certificate.
He apparently acquired his interest in killers like Holmes after he viewed photos that a friends father, a police detective, had of some of Jeffrey Dahmers dismembered victims. The images of body parts, heads, and a torso in a bathtub haunted him for years afterward. Eventually he made a short film while in college about Dahmer, and then got intrigued with other such crimes. Since no one else had produced anything about Holmes, he decided to do it himself. In addition to offering a DVD, Borowski has made a CD-Rom available that includes Holmes original confession, published in the Philadelphia Inquirer, and the book by Detective Frank Geyer.In short, Borowski has done a service for fans and scholars of true crime alike. This is the first documentary of the case and it offers plenty of historic material. His company will also publish the contents as a book, which can otherwise only be accessed in their original form through
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