Boston Strangler

2023 - 3 - 17

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Image courtesy of "ABC News"

REVIEW: 'Boston Strangler' is a rallying cry for justice (ABC News)

Film critic Peter Travers shares his review of Hulu's new true-crime thriller, "Boston Strangler."

Did DeSalvo, Marsh and Nassar conspire to throw police off or to collect reward money or to cash in on a book deal for DeSalvo organized by Nassar's lawyer F. There is also too little of DeSalvo (David Dastmalchian), except to show how he disguised himself as a handyman to talk himself into his victim's apartments. Boston-raised writer-director Matt Ruskin lets us see Loretta at home as a mother whose husband (Morgan Spector) pitches in when the strangler story dominates their lives. Reduced to lifestyle puff pieces by her newspaper, Loretta had to fight editor Jack Maclaine (Chris Cooper) to write a story about a pattern she saw in the early killings. As portrayed by Tony Curtis in the 1968 film "The Boston Strangler," DeSalvo suffered from a multiple personality disorder that left him unaware of his murderous side, a theory dismissed as Hollywood hogwash by later evidence that pointed to multiple stranglers. The British Knightley, sporting a spot-on American accent, is ideal casting as Loretta.

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Image courtesy of "Roger Ebert"

Boston Strangler movie review (2023) | Roger Ebert (Roger Ebert)

Ruskin succeeds in paying tribute to McLaughlin's hard work but is less successful in filling in the bigger story.

Eventually, "Boston Strangler" reaches a point in which it is totally controlled by the wild course of events it is recreating, and it does make for decent, unsettling twists in a third act based on truth. [Alessandro Nivola](/cast-and-crew/alessandro-nivola), who plays a Boston cop who admits to being worn down by the case but starts to see the purpose in supporting Loretta's tenacity. There are many scenes of Loretta and Jean poring over documents, and moments meant to sting—like when Jean makes eye contact with a suspect in custody—lose their effect. But the plotting takes on some interesting layers, including the point when Loretta and Jean call out the Boston police in the paper for how they have mishandled the investigation and left innocent Bostonians in a dangerous dark. Instead, the stakes are more about someone believing so hard in the case they risk losing focus on their family life, and yet "Boston Strangler" doesn't have much space for that. Loretta and Jean are the first to pursue and broadcast the connection through the paper.

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Image courtesy of "TIME"

The Chilling True Story Behind Hulu's <em>Boston Strangler</em ... (TIME)

'Boston Strangler' tells the story of a series of murders in the early 1960s from the perspective of the two journalists who broke the story.

[WBZ-TV in 2018](https://www.cbsnews.com/boston/news/boston-strangler-cellmate-interview-george-nassar-albert-desalvo-wbz-tv-i-team-cheryl-fiandaca/), Nassar denied having taken part in the killings and claimed he told Bailey to take on DeSalvo’s case. In the following years, Marsh moved to Ann Arbor, Mich., where a series of similar murders later took place. Lee Bailey (played by Luke Kirby), who took on DeSalvo as a client when he became the prime suspect in the case. The question of whether DeSalvo committed the other 12 murders remains unanswered. [Boston Globe](https://www.bostonglobe.com/metro/2018/11/25/loretta-mclaughlin-groundbreaking-reporter-and-former-globe-editorial-page-editor/SfVdYxacCQtG5JfUSru5gL/story.html) about what pushed her to cover the case, explaining how it was the fourth murder in the summer of 1962 that “galvanized” her attention. DeSalvo recanted his confession in prison in 1973 shortly before he was stabbed to death by a fellow inmate. It was at this point in time that McLaughlin and Cole started to come up against significant resistance from authorities who took the stance that the level of detail included in their reporting wasn’t helping the investigation and could inspire copycat crimes. That said, in terms of trying to tell a story that spanned several years in a feature film, you obviously have to take some liberties.” In October 1964, 34-year-old Albert DeSalvo (played by David Dastmalchian) was arrested for sexually assaulting a woman after pretending to be a police officer to gain entry into her home. DeSalvo was sent to await trial at Bridgewater State Hospital, a state facility for the criminally insane, and it was there that he allegedly confessed to his cellmate, George Nassar (played by Greg Vrotos), that he was responsible for the murders associated with the Boston Strangler case. The majority were sexually assaulted before being strangled to death. That was what made them so interesting…sisters in anonymity, like all of us.”

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Fact-checking Hulu's 'Boston Strangler' and its 'cathartic' true-life ... (USA TODAY)

In writer/director Matt Ruskin's true-crime thriller “Boston Strangler” (now streaming on Hulu), Loretta McLaughlin (Keira Knightley) and Jean Cole (Coon) team ...

Some of the imagery and the way in which we depict the violence – hearing things instead of seeing things in many cases – is actually more horrifying than if we tried to depict it.” “Boston Strangler” also digs into how the police struggled in the "early stages" of criminology, Ruskin adds. “They would go visit different regional police stations and see some of their articles taped to the wall,” Ruskin says. “It was a tabloid newspaper, and so they did what they could to sell papers,” the filmmaker says. McLaughlin “tried to punch everyone in the face and say, ‘Take me seriously!’ And Jean is much more wily about it and a bit flirty,” Knightley says. “A lot of women have said watching it is cathartic,” Knightley says.

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Is Loretta McLaughlin Real? Keira Knightley 'Boston Strangler' Role ... (Newsweek)

Keira Knightley stars in Hulu's new true crime film, playing the journalist to first connect the Boston Strangler murders together.

McLaughlin later became a medical reporter and she worked in that role with the Herald American. McLaughlin and Cole were both real, and they did indeed work together to write about the murders of four women in 1962. She then became a medical news specialist for the Boston Globe. The serial killer's victims were aged between 19 and 85. Between 1962 and 1964, the Boston Strangler raped and killed 11 women across the city. Here is everything you need to know.

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Image courtesy of "Seventeen.com"

The Boston Strangler: A Complete Timeline of Albert DeSalvo's ... (Seventeen.com)

Albert DeSalvo reportedly raped and killed 13 women as the Boston Strangler. Read ahead for a complete timeline of the Boston Strangler's victims.

He did receive a life sentence for the "Green Man" assault. Upon his release DeSalvo began breaking into the homes of women across New England, where he'd tie them up and sexually assault them while wearing green handyman clothes, earning him a new nickname, "Green Man." He was arrested and spent nearly a year in prison for those crimes. The outlet claims DeSalvo was nicknamed the "Measuring Man" after he would knock on the doors of young women, claiming to represent a modeling agency, and "crudely fondle" them with his tape measure. Read ahead for everything we know about the Boston Stranger and his murder victims. He was never charged with the crimes, as he was serving life in prison for other crimes.

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'Compelled to tell their stories': South Shore reporters are focus of ... (The Patriot Ledger)

Keira Knightley and Carrie Coon play reporters from Scituate and Milton in "Boston Strangler," which debuts March 17 on Hulu.

And to be able to line those streets with old cars from the 1950s and early ’60s, and dress the actors in a wardrobe from that time period, it was amazing to witness the neighborhoods returned to a period that was before my time.” “There's just no shortage of great actors in the Boston area,” he said. “But I was particularly inspired by Loretta and her commitment to doing the work that was so important to her. And the more I got to know about these women, the more I grew to admire them and felt incredibly compelled to tell their stories.” “There was very little information available about them,” Ruskin said of McLaughlin and Cole. “Then several years ago, I started reading all that I could and discovered this incredibly layered mystery that was full of twists and turns, and in many ways was as much a story about the city. “They thought that she didn't belong in the workplace either.” I was just completely gripped by the case, and when I discovered the contributions of these reporters, Loretta Mclaughlin and Jean Cole, I felt it was a really compelling way to revisit the case.” And both reach deep into the darkest recesses of a story that’s as much about their characters as it is about the crime. “When I started researching the story, I was immediately grabbed by Loretta and Jean's stories,” Ruskin said. But he’s quick to add that championing McLaughlin and Cole, as well as the victims, was always his priority. DeSalvo confessed to the killings, but was never convicted of them, and decades later [a DNA investigation raised doubts](https://www.nytimes.com/2001/12/07/us/doubts-are-raised-in-case-of-boston-strangler.html?searchResultPosition=1) about his confession.

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Image courtesy of "The Independent"

Was the Boston Strangler ever caught? (The Independent)

More than 60 years after the Boston Stranger took their first of at least 11 victims, no charges have ever been brought. A new Hulu film starring Keira ...

“But we do believe that we stand on the threshold of unprecedented certainty regarding Mary Sullivan’s murder.” Some have posited that more than one person could have been responsible for the Boston Strangler killings. The question of whether DeSalvo really was the Boston Strangler lingered. “We don’t claim with certainty that Albert DeSalvo is a suspect in each of them,” District Attorney Daniel F Conley told The New York Times then. The unknown always holds a certain element of terror, and because so much about the Strangler is completely unknown, and because what is known is so bizarre, he has had a far-reaching effect on the city.” [The New York Times](http://go.redirectingat.com/?id=44681X1458326&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.nytimes.com%2F1967%2F01%2F19%2Farchives%2Fboston-strangler-guilty-in-4-attacks-strangler-gets-life-in.html&sref=https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/boston-strangler-documentary-true-story-b2302597.html) reported at the time. DeSalvo was dead by then (he died in prison in 1973 after being stabbed to death in prison). Six decades after Slesers’s death, the story of the Boston Strangler remains in part shrouded in mystery. The women were found in their homes. It is a dark, distressing true-crime saga, involving a controversial confession, breakthrough DNA evidence, and a pioneering journalist who first connected the deaths to one another. In the months that followed, more women were found, apparently killed by the same perpetrator. More than 60 years after the Boston Stranger took their first of at least 11 victims, no charges have ever been brought. The Boston Strangler’s first victim, Anna Slesers, was found dead on 14 June 1962.

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Image courtesy of "Boston.com"

Separating fact from fiction in the 'Boston Strangler' movie (Boston.com)

The 1968 film “Boston Strangler,” starring Henry Fonda as the lead investigator and Tony Curtis as suspected Strangler Albert DeSalvo, debuted to generally ...

In the same documentary, Phil DiNatale, the lead investigator of a Boston Strangler task force, said he believed that DeSalvo, his prime suspect in the case, was guilty. A 1964 Record-American story tells of Hurkos touching crime scene objects and using ESP to identify an unnamed 57-year-old suspect who Brooke said matched the description of a “prime suspect” in the case. Much like in real life, the ending of “Boston Strangler” doesn’t come to any tidy conclusion about who was responsible for the killings. The deal said that DeSalvo would be sentenced to life in prison for the multiple rapes he allegedly committed, but his confession to being the Boston Strangler would not be admissible in court. “Boston Strangler” also spends time with another alleged suspect, known as “Daniel Marsh.” Marsh did not exist in real life, but instead represents the many men who were at one point strongly considered to be the Strangler. It also speculates that perhaps Nassar himself may have committed some of the killings, and found DeSalvo as a willing scapegoat. Nivola, who doesn’t naturally speak with a Boston accent but capably pulls it off in the film, told Boston.com that he watched a police interrogation of the “It was actually the first time I’d ever really listened to a real police interrogation start to finish,” Nivola said. It was also true that McLaughlin wrote a number of lifestyle pieces during her time at the Record-American and its predecessor. “Growing up in Boston, I think everybody had heard of the Boston Strangler,” Ruskin told Boston.com. McNamara initially garnered positive headlines for his diligence on the case, with the Record-American noting that he had assigned 150 detectives to the case in September 1962. This isn’t the first time Hollywood has taken a look at the killing spree that rocked Boston in the 1960s, during which 13 women were murdered between June 14, 1962, and January 4, 1964.

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Image courtesy of "StyleCaster"

Who Was the Boston Strangler? Serial Killer's Real Name, How ... (StyleCaster)

Who was the Boston Strangler? DNA evidence proved Albert DeSalvo was guilty of one of the 13 murders but there could be many Boston Stranglers.

In the fall of 1964, police were also trying to save a series of rapes committed by a perpetrator dubbed the “Measuring Man” or the “Green Man” in addition to trying to solve the Strangler cases. “There was not one Boston Strangler, but rather a bare minimum of six and much more likely eight or nine,” she wrote. The letters were part of a collection of correspondence between DeSalvo and a family who’d met him while visiting a friend at Walpole State Prison. “He’s the killer of my aunt, which is all this has been about for me.” Though DeSalvo has been conclusively linked to Mary Sullivan’s murder, there are doubts as to whether he’s responsible for the slayings of the other Strangler victims. DeSalvo was arrested in connection to the “Green Man” rapes but was not considered a Boston Strangler suspect. “That confession has been the subject of skepticism and controversy from almost the moment it was given.” Lee Baily and Senator Brooks and a lot of other big names.” “For almost five decades, the only link between Albert DeSalvo and Mary Sullivan was his confession,”. The DNA profiles matched one from a water bottle that had recently been used by one of DeSalvo’s nephews. He was never charged or convicted, however, as the technology that could link him physically to the crimes would not become widely used for another 20 years. 19-year-old Mary Sullivan, the last of the victims, was found raped and murdered in her apartment in January 1964. Even though local police’s primary suspect confessed to the slaying of at least 13 women, authorities had insufficient evidence to charge him with the crimes.

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Image courtesy of "Seventeen.com"

Where is Loretta McLaughlin from The Boston Strangler Now? (Seventeen.com)

Here's what we know about Loretta McLoughlin the respected Boston Record American reporter who investigated The Boston Strangler in the 1960s.

There isn't much information on her cause of death, but the award-winning medical reporter and former Boston Globe editorial page editor was reportedly in her Milton, Massachusetts home when she passed away. She went on to appear in televised interviews surrounding the Boston Strangler, per She became the first journalist to find a connection between the infamous string of killings conducted by Albert DeSalvo and wrote a five-part series of stories about them in August 1962. Following the Boston Stranglers investigation, McLaughlin became "fascinated" by the psychological factors that prompted DeSalvo to kill his victims. Per the [Crime Museum](https://www.crimemuseum.org/crime-library/serial-killers/the-boston-strangler/), he would act as a delivery or repairman to lure his female victims into their apartments before sexually assaulting and killing them. [The Boston Strangler](https://go.redirectingat.com/?id=74968X1525086&url=https%3A%2F%2Fwww.hulu.com%2Fmovie%2Fboston-strangler-323eae40-5c62-4765-949a-5b4f7f8f2ba4), is based on the Boston Record American's investigation that revealed the chilling real-life murders conducted by Albert DeSalvo between 1962 and 1964.

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Former WBZ employees tied to Boston Strangler speak out as new ... (CBS News)

"There was a time he came to the WBZ studios and that was terrifying," said Joanne Desmond, the city's first female news anchor. She worked at WBZ, and some of ...

"It follows the trajectory of the multi-killer theory that I'm a proponent of." "There was a time he came to the WBZ studios and that was terrifying," said Joanne Desmond, the city's first female news anchor. "All written in very small print, 'what is your bra size, panty size,' and a line to put in the numbers," she says.

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Local makers of 'Boston Strangler' film talk about the journalists who ... (WBUR)

As Hulu's "The Boston Strangler" makes its debut, we speak with local writer and director Matt Ruskin and actor Chris Cooper about their film.

And I was able to get a sense of their voice as journalists, some of which actually made the film — I was able to pull quotes from some of their stories. And then, you know, like Chris did, I spoke with people whose careers overlapped with Loretta and Jean's really just to get a sense of who they were and how they approached their work." And she filled me with all kinds of stories of how rude and dismissive these men were in the newsroom. She worked at the Globe, and she was educated at the Columbia Journalism School. I was really taken with the murder mystery, with all the different layers to this story. Ruskin: "So I had just finished this film, 'Crown Heights,' and I was looking for something new to write about.

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Matt Ruskin: Boston Strangler is about the journalism as much as ... (Crow River Media)

Matt Ruskin says it was important not to "humanise" a serial killer in 'Boston Strangler'. The filmmaker has helmed the historical crime drama based on the ...

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What Happened To Jean Cole & Loretta McLaughlin After The ... (Screen Rant)

The true crime movie ends just after McLaughlin and Cole wrap up their work on the case of the infamous Boston Strangler serial killer. The two women were among ...

She continued to work at the Record American as it became the Herald American (now the Boston Herald). She moved to the Boston Globe in 1976 and closely covered the McLaughlin and Cole worked for the Boston Record American, a tabloid newspaper created from the 1961 merger of the Boston American and Boston Record. As stated at the end of the film, she and James J. The two women were among the first journalists to report on the series of grisly murders in the 1960s, and McLaughlin coined the name "Boston Strangler." But after the Boston Strangler faded from public consciousness, how did McLaughlin and Cole's careers progress?

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Boston Strangler Stars Keira Knightley and Carrie Coon Reveal Why ... (MovieWeb)

Her costar similarly stated that being a mother was the reason she no longer watched true crime. Coon said, "I have to say, having children has complicated my ...

It's just really gratifying for their families to see that their story and their involvement in this case is finally being told." He wasn't in the game of delivering gratuitous violence to his audience; he really wanted them to see that the focus of the story was about the way these women were warning the women of Boston when nobody else was." She continued, "Their part in this whole investigation has been totally taken out, but their tenacity, their doggedness in trying to get justice for the women, is very inspiring. When speaking about why she chose to take on the role of McLaughlin, Knightley said, "For me, it was the opportunity to highlight two amazing female investigative journalists. McLaughlin is the first person to break the story of the Boston Strangler. Still, despite starring in a true crime thriller, Knightley and Coon both admitted that they "can't watch" true crime anymore.

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Boston Strangler Truth Is Even More Disturbing Than Fiction (Daily Beast)

Gerold interviewed every major figure in the investigation over three years of covering the case, including reporter Loretta McLaughlin, the Keira Knightley ...

But when the screen goes dark, we must reckon with reality: We live in a violent, disorienting time with no easy answers or safe harbors, and a continuing imperative to get at the truth, whether it entertains, comforts, or disturbs us. He was stabbed in prison in 1973, shortly after hinting in a letter that his confession might have been false, which naturally fed more conspiracies that DeSalvo was not the killer and was part of the coverup. The standard sociological interpretation of the appeal of conspiracy thinking is it gives people clean, easy answers and a sense of control and moral righteousness in a world that’s actually layered, complex, and indeterminate. The film version of McLaughlin is a composite figure, a sponge for a male conspiratorial fantasy, if one with a #MeToo bent. Yet while DeSalvo was never convicted of the murders, the evidence is overwhelming that he was the strangler. It was not McLaughlin, but reportedly a detective, who realized that DeSalvo was out of jail during the murders and thus a viable suspect. The film vests her with views she didn’t hold, in service to a storyline that feeds a need to believe in good women (who bother to get at the truth), and bad men (who only care about power and profit). The trouble is that the real McLaughlin never believed in the conspiracy tale the film depicts, specifically the view that there were multiple killers. (He was the only one to get a release from DeSalvo allowing him to do so, the so-called book deal that F. “You all created a myth,” Nassar tells McLaughlin, who finally gets ahold of tapes that, in the film, confirm the confessions were coached. Through their dogged reporting, they identify a prime suspect, a handyman named Albert DeSalvo, whom the police, in their ineptitude, had thought was behind bars during the killing spree and couldn’t have been the perpetrator. DeSalvo makes a false confession, coached on the murder details by an investigator eager to close the case.

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Boston Underground Film Festival gets weird, 'Pacifiction' plays ... (Cambridge Day)

Film Ahead is a weekly column highlighting special events and repertory programming for the discerning Camberville filmgoer. It also includes capsule ...

[“Triangle of Sadness”](https://www.cambridgeday.com/2022/10/16/slash-back-adds-to-the-scares-of-the-thing-athena-triangle-stars-and-more-reviewed/) and [“Infinity Pool.”](https://www.cambridgeday.com/2023/02/05/in-repertory-labyrinth-billy-wilder-and-kafka-we-review-infinity-pool-80-for-brady-more/) The setting is Tahiti as we embed with a French envoy by the name of De Roller (Benoit Magimel), who dresses in Tom Wolfe white-linen suits, wears Bono-esque tinted glasses and has a neatly blown coif also similar to the Irish band’s frontman. Tom is also a member of the Boston Society of Film Critics and rides his bike everywhere. (Tom Meek) The Brattle Theatre, [40 Brattle St.](https://maps.google.com/maps?q=40+brattle+street+cambridge+ma&client=safari&oe=UTF-8&hnear=40+Brattle+St,+Cambridge,+Massachusetts+02138&gl=us&t=m&z=16), Harvard Square. Also as part of the Latin American focus, on Friday the HFA brings in filmmaker Andrés Di Tella to show and talk about his 2007 film “Photographs” as part of its “Archives and Memory” theme. [Landmark Kendall Square Theatre](https://www.landmarktheatres.com/events/1941-retro-replay) in the “Seeing Double: Welles and Lean” series serves up Orson Welles’ dark, border town noir “Touch of Evil” (1958) starring Charleston Heston and Janet Leigh as lovers ensnared in political corruption and murder. The film becomes a testimony to the women’s tenacity and acumen as they paint a grim picture missed by police and bigger papers such as The Boston Globe. Their themes, which deal with the dysfunctional, indifferent and isolationist, echoes the dilemma of the film’s protagonist. It’s also got the trouble-in-paradise quirk most recently brought to us by “The White Lotus,” Brown (“The Beach House), about a young woman (Lachlan Watson) who undergoes an experimental procedure and begins to have aural hallucinations of her mother, who recently and mysteriously vanished. Shifting its cultural lens, the HFA exhibits a series of Korean shorts revolving around celestial bodies as part of the “Youjin Moon, Inner and Outer Space” on Monday. On Wednesday comes a screening of Ben Lawrence’s 2021 documentary about the political imprisonment of Wikileaks journalist Julian Assange and the struggle to free him. Then there’s a unique spin on Frankenstein with “The Angry Black Girl and Her Monster” (March 26); the latest absurd horror from French filmmaker Quentin Dupieux (“Rubber,”

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