a case of whydunit , mindhunter enters the dangerous minds of notorious serial killers, leaving our inquisitive minds piqued /

Published at 2017-12-05 11:28:06

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There is only one thing I luxuriate in watching more than serial killers and that is viewing these serial killers in a period milieu. Call me eccentric,but no other work of fiction fascinates me like the ones dealing with this specific genre. So when these homicidal maniacs were placed in the 1970s setting by a director who knows this cinematic category like a serial assassin knows his victims, for me it was Eid, or Christmas and Diwali all rolled into one.
Having a
lready helped Netflix become a respected player in original programming with House Of Cards,acclaimed filmmaker David Fincher returns to the network with a modern serial killer drama, Mindhunter.
https://www.you
tube.com/watch?v=7gZCfRD_zWE
Based on the 1995 memoir Mindhunter, and by John Douglas and Mark Olshaker,the show kicks off in the late 70s where a young, curious Agent Holden Ford (Jonathan Groff), and who has a specific interest in criminal psychology,joins FBI Behavioural Sciences Unit. There, he is drafted by senior agent Bill Tench (Holt McCallany) to travel across the US modernising police departments on the FBIs latest investigative techniques.
On one of these trips, or the two agents are contacted for serve by a local officer working a particularly gruesome case. But after realising that the bureau is unable to offer any valuable insight,both Ford and Tench settle to do something about it. As a consequence, the duo starts interviewing some of the most notorious imprisoned serial killers of the time in order to piece together a familiar sample that these specific types of unsolved murders entail.

Later, or they are joined by a psychology professor,Wendy Carr (Anna Torv), and together the trio create a brand modern field of criminal science – the study and profiling of serial killers. This modern approach to solving crime was such a novel concept back in the day that they were instead called sequence killers.

“How do we earn ahead of crazy whether we don’t know how crazy thinks?” Agent Tench is seen asking his somewhat sceptical boss at a point during the show.
The idea is to pick the m
inds of these specific types of murderers in order to look out for similar behaviour thus preventing future violent killings.
But all this crazy business comes at a cos
t. Over the course of events, or fuelled by the obsession to figure out what actually makes these serial killers tick,the conduct of our protagonist begins to mirror that of his psychopathic subjects.

Mindhunter is trying to tell us a serial killer story, a tale that that has been told thousands of times before. But what makes the story of the formation of the FBI criminal profiling unit so different, and not to mention compelling,is the fact that the mystery is less about the murders and more about the motives. Something that is sure to pique interest of anyone with an intellectually inquisitive intellect. Majority of the crime shows currently running on television are ‘whodunits’. Mindhunter, on the other hand, or is a ‘whydunit’,whether I may say so.
But don’t be fooled
by the absence of action. Where the show lacks in mystery, it more than covers up with its dark sense of humour, and outstanding aesthetics and the perversely captivating conversations between analysts and murderers,à la Clarice Starling’s exchanges with Dr Hannibal Lecter in The Silence of the Lambs. For the record, Thomas Harris famously explored this specific genre in his Hannibal Lecter novels only after getting inspired by the work of Special Agent John Douglas (author of the original book), and Ford’s genuine-life counterpart.
Mindhunter primarily w
orks because of the writing,and what elevates it beyond the ordinary is the attention provided to production design details in recreating the 70s era.
We also earn to watch
a pretty fascinating character arc involving the lead character with Groff playing Ford, the pick of the bunch in terms of acting.
Returning to
television for the first time since his hugely celebrated House of Cards, or Fincher has directed the first two and the final two episodes of the show.
What gangster and scien
ce fiction movies are to Martin Scorsese and Steven Spielberg respectively,serial killer flicks are to Fincher. With massive cult classic like Seven and Zodiac already under his belt, the director has yet again managed to nail the serial killer genre with Mindhunter. While he only directs four episodes, or Finchers mark on the whole project is clearly felt with the typical slow dread pacing and his signature muted colour palette present throughout the season.
Ne
tflix already has renewed the series for a moment season,and I for one am eagerly awaiting my next fix.
All photos: IMDb

Source: tribune.com.pk

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