- I ate his liver with some
fava beans and a nice Chianti.
- I've never encountered a serial killer
who would behave quite so
much in that pantomimic way.
I have encountered serial killers
who have tried to scare me,
but I wouldn't be scared
by Anthony Hopkins.
I'd have laughed, frankly,
if you'd told me about fava
beans and a nice Chianti.
Hi, my name is David Wilson.
I research, write about,
and work with people
who've committed violent crimes,
specifically murder and serial murder.
Today, we're gonna be breaking
down clips from TV shows
and movies about serial killers.
This scene is from "Zodiac."
- Don't get up.
I want her to tie you up.
- Okay.
- What's interesting about this clip
is that you begin to see
one of the basic original
FBI binary classifications,
that serial killers are organized
or they're disorganized.
By organized, we simply
mean that the serial killer
brings with him those things
which he's going to need to
incapacitate his victims.
So in this scene, the Zodiac
Killer brings with him rope,
he's wearing gloves, he's masked.
Usually we would also say
that if you're an organized serial killer,
that will imply, for example,
that you're employed,
that you've got a higher intelligence,
that you're sexually competent,
that you're able to drive a car.
The other aspects of organization
that we see in this particular clip
is just how much control
the serial killer has over his victims.
A serial murderer as a
phenomenon, in my experience,
always starts from a sexual fantasy.
And I think we've got some
of that sexual fantasy
in this particular clip around bondage,
being powerful, being in control.
Not only is he masked and wearing gloves,
he's also wearing black clothing.
He's also got a symbol
on his black clothes.
All of these things are about
instilling fear in his victims.
It's also about how he
can make his fantasy real.
He's fantasized about
what he's going to do
for a very long period of time.
I always say that nobody
wakes up overnight
and decides that they're
going to be a serial killer.
A serial killer is a
long time in the making.
This is simply a way
that he now wants to make
the fantasy become real.
Once they've engaged in
the fantasy once or twice,
it's no longer fantastic,
and therefore, the sorts
of things they'll do
within the crime scene
will become more bizarre,
more exaggerated, more extreme.
It's interesting that
he also brings a gun,
but he chooses not to
use the gun initially.
He ties his victims up,
he's gonna threaten them with the knife.
This is the difference
between those serial killers
who are act focused,
and those serial killers
who are process focused.
The act focused serial killer
simply wants to kill his victims.
End of, bang, they're dead.
The process focused serial
killer is interested
in extending the length of time
that he has with his victims.
He wants to tie them up,
he wants to see the fear
that they're experiencing,
he wants certain words to be spoken,
he wants them to plead for their
lives before he kills them.
That actually makes him
feel sexually powerful,
sexually in control, to be the
person that he wants to be.
- Get on your stomach
so I can tie your feet.
- We hear the flatness in
the Zodiac Killer's voice.
- I'm taking your car and going to Mexico.
- That is often characteristic
of an underlying personality
trait called psychopathy,
an inability to show
empathy, to show sympathy,
to walk in another person's shoes.
- It gets really cool out here
at night, we could freeze.
- Of course, we see the
male victim in the scene
trying to engage in conversation.
In my experience of working
with serial murderers,
they are simply not interested
in that kind of rapport.
They don't want to see you
as being another human being.
Usually they're psychopaths,
and therefore they can't
walk in your shoes.
They don't care about your suffering.
In fact, your suffering is actually
what they're seeking to do.
Next up is a fictional
serial killer called Dexter.
[man grunting]
- You're mine now, so do exactly as I say.
- Dexter fits a type of serial killer
called the mission
orientated serial killer.
He's a serial killer who's on a mission
to rid the world of other serial killers.
And that's very typical of a number
of actual serial killers criminologically.
- Trust me, I definitely understand.
See, I can't help myself either.
But children?
I could never do that.
Not like you.
Never, ever kids.
- He establishes very quickly
that there's some kind of moral hierarchy
in the phenomenon of serial murder.
Of course, there's no such
thing as a moral serial killer.
Everybody who takes another person's life
is by the very nature of the fact immoral.
In "Dexter," we've got the ultimate
organized serial murderer.
He has a garrote that he's
able to control his victim.
Ultimately he's going to inject his victim
so that he becomes paralyzed.
Dexter has a very elaborate MO
and a very unique signature.
MO stands for modus operandi.
It is the means by which the serial killer
or the murderer kills.
The MO would change because
of how the victim might react,
whilst the signature is a particular way
that a killer will leave the crime scene
what will be unique to
that particular individual.
Dexter is somebody who's going to torture,
and the context for that
torture is almost medicalized.
He's usually giving poisons,
he's in a particular
medical room, his kill room.
That kind of medicalized signature
is not that common in my experience,
with one particular caveat,
because, of course, a significant number
of healthcare professionals
have been serial killers.
This next clip is one that is
a particular favorite of mine,
"The Silence of the Lambs."
- You're one of Jack
Crawford's, aren't you?
- I am, yes.
- May I see your credentials?
- Certainly.
- Hannibal Lecter does something
which is very true to
life, in my experience.
When I'm interviewing murderers,
they're only prepared to talk
to me once they've got my CV.
They love knowing that
they're being interviewed
by the "top bloke."
- You use Evyan skin cream,
and sometimes you wear L'Air Du Temps,
but not today.
- I've never had a serial
killer mention my aftershave,
but that seducing behavior
is something that I have to
manage on a regular basis.
So, for example, I had
to speak on the telephone
to an infamous serial
killer who's in jail.
He was sometimes known as the
Bikini Killer or the Serpent.
He said, "You look much
younger than your 64 years."
It was the very first thing that he said.
It just shouted out as psychopathy.
The next scene is from
"Se7en" by David Fincher.
- This was found on the
wall behind the refrigerator
in the obesity murder scene.
- Long is the way and hard,
that out of Hell leads up to light.
- It's from Milton.
"Paradise Lost."
- Some serial killers do leave evidence,
clues if you want to call them clues.
And often in my implied work,
I'm asked, "Is that because
they want to be caught?"
Well, that's not why the clues are left.
That's not why the
evidence is left at all.
It's usually simply by the
end of their killing cycle,
they're operating in an
entirely parallel moral universe
that is different to the moral universe
that you and I inhabit,
that they simply don't understand
that what they're doing is so
bizarre, is so extraordinary,
that of course these kinds of
things left at the crime scene
are going to be able to be harvested
to identify who the killer is.
However, there are some serial killers
who do want to be caught,
ultimately, a very small number,
because of course they want to stand out.
They want to be seen as extraordinary,
and therefore they can't
be seen as extraordinary
if they don't get caught.
- Have you ever seen anything like this?
- No.
- What we have in "Se7en"
is the sense in which
the serial killer is super
intelligent, is a super predator.
And again, this is playing
on one of the stereotypes
that the media have about serial killers,
that they'll be super
intelligent and trying to outfox
almost as if they were
playing a game of chess
with the law enforcement.
The other thing about "Se7en"
that I think is interesting,
spoiler alert if you haven't seen "Se7en,"
but the head of one of
the chief characters
in the movie is cut off.
Serial monitors will often
take body parts as trophies,
and we tend to call that,
in my world, overkill.
The killer is using much greater
violence than is necessary
to achieve what it is
that he wants to achieve,
which is to affect the kill of his victim.
- Put your gun now.
- No, show me the box.
What was in the box?
- When I first started out
in my professional world,
I had only ever encountered one man
who had beheaded his victim.
Of late, I've seen overkill
during the pandemic
become much more common.
I now encounter overkill
and mutilation all the time.
This next scene is from Alfred Hitchcock's
extraordinary movie, "Psycho."
- Is anyone at home?
- No.
- Is somebody sitting up in the window?
- N-N-no, there isn't.
- Oh sure, go ahead, take a look.
- Oh, that must be my mother.
She an invalid.
It's practically like living alone.
- Ah, I see.
- Norman Bates, Anthony
Perkins, is wonderful
as a particular type, or a trope,
of what we've come to understand
as being the serial killer,
somebody who is transsexual, transvestite,
he wants to dress up as his mother.
What Hitchcock gets wrong
is the sense in which
it's these transgressive sexual identities
that is the motivating
force behind serial murder.
And, of course, he's also
wanting to present Norman Bates
as effectively psychotic.
I wouldn't necessarily
describe Norman Bates
as a psychopath.
He probably does have
some psychopathic traits
as a character.
I would see him as having
some sort of psychosis.
In other words, he's hearing
voices, having visions.
He's operating in an unreal world.
If Norman Bates had existed in reality,
Norman Bates would have
behaved so bizarrely,
so aberrantly that he would
have been caught very quickly,
because he would have stood out.
Of course, there's another
media trope being used here,
which is that the detective
is actually interviewing
the serial killer, but doesn't realize,
but might suspect that he's
interviewing the serial killer.
That really doesn't happen in real life,
although a phenomenon that
does occur on a regular basis
is that often murderers will return
to where they've committed murder.
Sometimes they just simply
like the risk taking
that they are engaging with,
which is one of the reasons
why often photographs are taken
at the crime scene,
because there might be the perpetrator
within that photograph.
- Let's just say, just
for the sake of argument,
that she wanted you to
gallantly protect her.
You'd know that you were being used,
that you wouldn't be made
a fool of, would you?
- But I'm not a fool, and I'm
not capable of being fooled,
not even by woman.
- In my real work with people
who've committed serial murder,
I often say that they are beta males
trying to become alpha males.
They are often losers,
and we get that sense of the
loser I think in Norman Bates.
This is somebody who doesn't
seem to be able to be competent
in any way that one would
expect of an adult man.
And therefore, for me,
Bates fits that pattern
that I see a lot of my applied work
that the serial killer, far
from being a super predator,
is often just simply a loser.
Our next clip is from the film "Ma,"
played by Octavia Spencer.
- I can feel those big
doe eyes watching me.
Maggie.
You are something else.
That much diazepam can
knock out a Great Dane
for five hours.
- "Ma" really is just simply
a genre Hollywood's movie
about a serial murderer,
but what's really interesting about it
is that we tend to think
of serial murderers
as white professional
men, as super predators,
and rarely do we get a character portrayed
who is of a different gender
and of a different ethnicity.
And yet, the reality of serial
murder in the United States
is that some 20% of serial
murderers will be women.
- I got us a beer pong table
and a keg of Bud Light is on ice.
- The thing though about Ma as a character
is that she's desperate to be liked.
She wants to fit in,
but of course, in fitting in,
she's also secretly
desperate to stand out,
and that's actually got a
kernel of truth it seems to me.
They want to be seen as
being like you and me,
but secretly, they want
to also be different.
They want to stand out from you and me,
because they want to be
seen as somehow special.
Ma's victim group, of
course, are also students.
We tend not to see students
as being particularly
vulnerable in reality
to serial murder.
If a serial killer was to
start to attack a group
who had social capital, and
who certainly have parents
who are likely to have social capital,
that serial killer will
by and large be caught
much more quickly than serial killers
that would target sex workers,
the homeless, the elderly.
This next clip is from "American Psycho."
- Howard.
It's Bateman, Patrick Bateman.
You're my lawyer, so I
think you should know
I've killed a lot of people.
Some escort girls in the apartment uptown,
some homeless people, maybe five or 10,
an NYU girl I met in Central Park.
I left her in a parking
lot behind some donut shop.
I killed Bethany, my old
girlfriend, with a nail gun.
- I've never encountered a
white collar investment banker
as a serial killer.
They will often be delivery
drivers, taxi drivers.
They will often have a
background in law enforcement.
I've encountered several
white investment bankers
who undoubtedly were psychopaths,
and if I was to encounter
Patrick Bateman in real life,
I would just simply find
him very fetishistic.
He is wearing particular clothes,
he has a particular look,
he's very surface, he's very
shiny, he has no deep emotion.
I would think of him as a psychopath.
And frankly, I'd try and avoid him.
- I don't want to leave anything out here.
I guess I've killed maybe
20 people, maybe 40.
- I have encountered
serial killers in real life
who just simply couldn't remember.
Certainly wouldn't remember
the names of their victims.
Certainly wouldn't remember
what they did with their victims.
And that's partly because
often by the stage
that they have been arrested,
there have been killing for
such a long period of time
and so regularly, that they
literally don't remember.
With one or two serial killers
that were prepared to talk about
the murders that they committed,
I felt that they were
talking to me about them
because they were wanting
to relive the moment
that they took another person's life,
and I merely became, therefore,
a vehicle for them to
relive their fantasy.
And you see a sense of joy
in this particular characterization
of Patrick Bateman.
You know, he moves from being remorseful
to one in which he's boastful.
- I killed Paul Allen
with an ax in the face.
His body is dissolving in a
bathtub in Hell's Kitchen.
- Batement ends this clip by
having this sort of insight.
- I mean, I guess I'm a pretty sick guy.
- He's a pretty sick guy,
which of course he is.
But by and large, I've
never had serial killers
talk about themselves
in that derogatory way.
I've had serial killers
who've thought of themselves as Superman,
as extraordinary human beings.
And you think, "My gosh, do
they have no insight at all
"about what they've done?"
And the answer to that question is,
of course they have no
insight into what they've done
or they wouldn't have done
it in the first place.
This next clip is from
"No Country For Old Men."
- What's this about?
- Step out of that car, please, sir.
- What is that?
- I need you to step out of the car, sir.
- What is that for?
- You.
Would you hold still, please?
- We're dealing really
with a characterization
of the serial killer
that isn't really at all based on reality.
This is the serial killer
as the super predator, the bogeyman.
What is accurate about the
movie is the sense in which
lots of serial killers who
are able to repeatedly kill
without being caught have to
be geographically transient,
have to be mobile, are
often engaged in occupations
which allows them to
be in different places
at different times legitimately.
You see instrumental
reasons being expressed
by Javier Bardem's character,
and also psychological
reasons being shown.
He simply wants to steal the car,
that's the instrumental,
whereas the psychological
will be when he's playing
cat and mouse with the gas station owner.
He's simply expressing his power.
He's simply expressing his control.
- [Chigurh] What's the most
you ever lost on a coin toss?
- Sir?
- The most you ever lost on a coin toss.
- But here's the downside
that I think the Cohen
brothers get completely wrong.
If somebody like Javier Bardem's character
existed in real life,
he wouldn't need to kill
because he's so powerful
and in control anyway.
He'd be running
multinational corporations.
He'd be running for president.
He doesn't need to get his kicks
through killing people in gas stations.
It just doesn't hold water for me.
This next clip is from
the show "Riverdale."
- Can any of you guess
what the murderers all have in common?
- Nothing.
Isn't that kind of the point?
- Actually, they all
have one thing in common.
A specific set of genes.
[dramatic music]
- They discovered that you have the MAOA
and the CDH 13 genes.
- CDH 13.
Also known as--
- The serial killer genes.
[dramatic music]
- Let's get rid of immediately
the idea there's a serial killer gene.
It's an attractive idea,
and of course it's cropped
up repeatedly in our history,
and so we have to nail
that one on the head.
- Now, before I start
filling in all the details,
any guesses on which one of
these men is the murderer?
- It's the third man.
- The idea that there could be somebody
who is going to be able to
simply look at photographs
or walk down the street
and identify who the serial killer is,
is just complete nonsense.
I hope that isn't too
disappointing to you,
but it is complete and utter nonsense.
Serial killers are banal and ordinary.
Serial killers are never spectacular.
They're always too human.
If the serial killer really
wants to be effective,
they've got to fit in,
because if they stand out,
they're not gonna be able
to get access to the people
that they want to kill.
This next clip is from "Copycat."
- Nine out of 10 serial
killers are white males,
age 20 to 35, just like these.
- I love this movie,
because it both plays
on some of the cliches
that I've been talking about,
but it also provides just enough
authentic information to be credible.
- The FBI estimates that there could be
as many as 35 serial
killers cruising for victims
even as I speak.
- The truth is, well, the FBI has said
that there are between 25
to 50 active serial killers.
What Sigourney Weaver's doesn't say
is that they will only kill about 1%
of all the murder victims
in the United States.
She makes it sound as if there
are lots of serial killers
killing lots of victims.
- The act of killing makes
him feel intensely alive.
What he feels next is not
guilt, but disappointment.
It was not as wonderful as he'd hoped.
Maybe next time it will be perfect.
- The other thing that she captures
that seems to me to be
absolutely authentic
is what the serial killer is
getting from having killed,
and how he probably feels
disappointment after killing
because he wants to kill again,
because it's the moment
of killing that he seeks.
That scene is so like
scenes from my own life
whereby I've had to
address public audiences,
and I've had to have
security at those lectures
because I've had to deal with
some pretty bizarre things.
This next clip is from the
TV series "Mindhunter,"
when we see the real
serial killer, Ed Kemper,
being interviewed.
- You see, Bill, I knew
a week before she died,
I was gonna kill her.
She went out to a party.
She got soused.
She came home alone.
I asked her how our evening went.
She just looked at me.
She said, "For seven years,"
she said, "I haven't had sex
with a man because of you,
"my murderous son."
So I got a claw hammer
and I beat her to death.
Then I cut her head off
and I humiliated her.
I said, "There, now you've had sex."
- It is true that Ressler and Douglas
did interview 36 convicted serial killers,
which was the beginning
of the FBI's understanding
about serial murderers,
and one of the serial murders
that they did interview
was Ed Kemper.
And, of course, what
we see portrayed there
is a very chilling picture
of the kinds of things
that he did, and he did
indeed kill his mother
in the way that he was describing,
and he did indeed behead her,
and he did indeed have sex
with her decapitated body.
So, there's a lot going on here
that's completely and utterly accurate.
- Even as a child, I had
kind of a rich fantasy life.
- You had fantasies of what, real women?
- Oh yeah.
And my mother would yell and scream at me,
tell me I was sick.
- The one that seems to connect
all of the serial murderers
is that there is an
underlying sexual fantasy
that is a seed that then
grows and grows and grows
until that particular
individual serial killer
wants to make that fantasy real.
And why they choose to do that
will be specific and
unique to that individual.
- In this modern society,
what do we do with the
Ed Kempers of the world?
- Death by torture?
- Of course, Kemper
requested the death penalty.
Lots of serial killers I've worked with
can be quite moral in other
aspects of their life.
They will have standards about behavior
that they will insist the I
should have about my life.
One serial killer would
constantly correct my grammar
or my punctuation in letters
that I'd send to them.
- Did your mother humiliate you?
[disquieting music]
Ed?
- What's interesting about the series
is that it's also about
that other trope that we see
in a lot of Hollywood
movies, that people like me
would try and enter the
mind of a serial killer.
I am not interested in what
motivates a serial killer.
I am much more interested in who is is
the serial killer is able to kill.
If we concentrated our
attention on the groups
that serial killers constantly target,
we would do a lot more
to reduce the incidence
of serial murder in our cultures,
as opposed to any number
of offender profilers
who claim that they can enter
the mind of a serial killer.
If you really want to do something
to reduce the incidence of
serial murder in our culture,
let's challenge homophobia,
let's have a grownup
debate about how we police
those young men and young
women who sell sexual services,
and above all, let's try and work out
why the elderly are so
vulnerable in our culture
because they don't have a
voice and have no power.
Thank you so much for watching,
and thank you Vanity Fair for inviting me.