''In the Light of the Moon'' (also known as ''Ed Gein'') is a 2000
crime horror film
Horror is a film genre that seeks to elicit fear or disgust in its audience for entertainment purposes.
Horror films often explore dark subject matter and may deal with transgressive topics or themes. Broad elements include monsters, apoca ...
directed by Chuck Parello, and written by Stephen Johnston. It is based on the crimes of
Ed Gein, an American murderer who killed at least two women in
Plainfield, Wisconsin
Plainfield is a village in Waushara County, Wisconsin, United States. The village is located almost entirely within the Town of Plainfield. A tiny portion extends into adjacent Town of Oasis. The population was 897 at the 2010 census.
Histor ...
during the 1950s. It stars
Steve Railsback
Stephen Railsback is an American theatre, film, and television actor. He is best known for his performances in the films ''The Stunt Man'' and Lifeforce (film), ''Lifeforce'', and his portrayal of Charles Manson in the 1976 television mini-series ...
as Gein, and
Carrie Snodgress
Caroline Louise Snodgress (October 27, 1945 – April 1, 2004) was an American actress. She is best remembered for her role in the film ''Diary of a Mad Housewife'' (1970), for which she was nominated for an Academy Award and a BAFTA Award as w ...
as Gein's domineering, fundamentalist mother, Augusta.
Plot
Growing up on a farm in rural Wisconsin,
Ed Gein is abused by both his
Christian fundamentalist mother, Augusta, and his alcoholic father, George. George dies of a heart attack in 1940, and four years later, Ed kills his older brother, Henry, in a fit of rage after Henry insults Augusta. Ed makes it look like Henry died in a brush fire, and lives alone with Augusta until she dies of a stroke in 1945. Ed becomes depressed after his mother's death, and lets the family farm become squalid and dilapidated, with the exception of Augusta's room, which is sealed off by Ed.
Living off of
agricultural subsidies and the money that he makes from leasing land and babysitting children, the increasingly unstable Ed makes nightly excursions to the Plainfield Cemetery and digs up recently deceased elderly women. He makes futile attempts at reviving them, before decorating his home with pieces of their corpses, at one point passing "shrunken heads" off as gifts from a cousin in the
Philippines.
Ed begins suffering from hallucinations of Augusta, who commands him to kill "sinful" women, starting with a tavern owner named Mary Hogan. Ed shoots Mary and takes her to his farm, where he leaves her bound to a bed until she dies. Ed butchers her body, consuming some of it, and using the rest to add to his crudely-designed "woman suit." Ed's delusions worsen, and he becomes convinced that Mary's death has resurrected Augusta, who implores Ed to kill a hardware store owner named Collette Marshall. Ed shoots Collette and brings her body back to his farm before having dinner with the Andersons, a neighboring family who he surprises with "
Venison steaks."
Colette's employee, Brian, returns from a hunting trip to find the unmanned store full of blood, and calls the police. Brian suspects Ed of being involved in Mary and Collette's disappearances, and races to Ed's farm, followed by Sheriff Jim Stillwell. After finding Collette's decapitated and "
dressed out" body hanging in Ed's barn, an enraged Brian tracks Ed down to the Anderson residence, but is talked out of shooting Ed by Sheriff Stillwell, who arrests Ed.
The film ends with a nonlinear montage that consists of the police uncovering evidence in Ed's home, interviews with Ed after he was diagnosed with
schizophrenia and placed in a psychiatric hospital, and scenes in which Ed tries to keep his urges in check through prayer and rituals. He also exhumes corpses, only to rebury them after snapping out of a
fugue state
Dissociative fugue (), formerly called a fugue state or psychogenic fugue, is a mental and behavioral disorderDrs; that is classified variously as a dissociative disorder,Dissociative Fugue (formerly Psychogenic Fugue) 'DSM-IV 300.13, Diagnost ...
. An
intertitle states that Ed died of respiratory failure in 1984, and was buried next to his mother.
Cast
Release
''Ed Gein'' premiered in America, in a single theater in
Los Angeles, on May 4, 2001. On its opening weekend, the film
grossed $5,708, and by May 11 had grossed $11,821.
Home media
''Ed Gein'' was released on
VHS by Millennium on July 24, 2001. That same year, the film was released on
DVD by both First Look Home Entertainment on June 24 and Tartan Video on November 29. On April 22, 2003 it was re-released by First Look as part of a three-disk box set which included ''
Dahmer'' and ''
Ted Bundy''. That same day, it was released as a single-feature by Velocity Home Entertainment. It was last released in 2005 by both Prism and First Look on February 14 and August 26, respectively.
Reception
On
Rotten Tomatoes, the film holds an approval rating of 10% based on , with a
weighted average rating of 4.1/10.
Ain't It Cool News praised
Steve Railsback
Stephen Railsback is an American theatre, film, and television actor. He is best known for his performances in the films ''The Stunt Man'' and Lifeforce (film), ''Lifeforce'', and his portrayal of Charles Manson in the 1976 television mini-series ...
's performance as Gein, and concluded, "''Ed Gein'' is not must-see but it's a lot better than I thought it would be. I would recommend a rental to the curious horror or
true crime fans out there looking for something sort of along the lines of ''
Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer'', but tamer, but at the same time a lot sicker." ''
Time Out
Time-out, Time Out, or timeout may refer to:
Time
* Time-out (sport), in various sports, a break in play, called by a team
* Television timeout, a break in sporting action so that a commercial break may be taken
* Timeout (computing), an enginee ...
'' found the film to be "a surprisingly sober response to a potentially salacious subject" and wrote, "As with the best scenes of ''
Deranged'', the conjunction of colourful case history, odd impulses,
gallows humour, low budget austerity and genuinely grotesque
iconography
Iconography, as a branch of art history, studies the identification, description and interpretation of the content of images: the subjects depicted, the particular compositions and details used to do so, and other elements that are distinct fro ...
produces a felicitous and engaging variant of
American Gothic
''American Gothic'' is a 1930 painting by Grant Wood in the collection of the Art Institute of Chicago. Wood was inspired to paint what is now known as the ''American Gothic'' House in Eldon, Iowa, along with "the kind of people efancied shoul ...
."
In a review written for
AllMovie
AllMovie (previously All Movie Guide) is an online database with information about films, television programs, and screen actors. , AllMovie.com and the AllMovie consumer brand are owned by RhythmOne.
History
AllMovie was founded by popular-cult ...
, Richard Gilliam commended the film's historical accuracy, production design, and "low-key" approach to its source material, but also found it to be lacking in style, writing, "The problem with the authenticity here is that the filmmakers have managed to authentically capture the dull, boring parts of life in 1950s rural Wisconsin. ''Ed Gein'' is so under-the-top that what should be compelling merely becomes unpleasant."
Nathan Rabin of ''
The A.V. Club'' had a lukewarm response to the film, writing, "Half character study, half
exploitation film, ''Ed Gein'' is most effective when it focuses on Gein's halting attempts to connect with his neighbors, who treat him with the polite but decided distance of an adult dealing with a misbehaving but well-intentioned child. Where the film falters is in its attempts to explain away Gein's madness with a massive dose of
pop psychology."
While ''
The Guardian's''
Philip French
Philip Neville French Order of the British Empire, OBE (28 August 1933 – 27 October 2015) was an English film critic and radio producer. French began his career in journalism in the late 1950s, before eventually becoming a BBC Radio prod ...
offered praise to Railsback's performance as Gein, he found the film itself to be "a generally unsensational chunk of bizarre
Americana" that "adds little to our understanding of the man." Fellow ''Guardian'' reviewer
Peter Bradshaw had a similar response to the film, writing, "Really, it's the same old
pulpy, paranoid voyeuristic stuff, and Ed's fear and hatred of women is never that edifying. It's well acted, and effectively put together, but there is an insurmountable problem: gloomy, grave-robbing, body-chopping old Ed is, in the end, just a little bit of a bore."
Kevin Thomas of the ''
Los Angeles Times'' afforded the film moderate praise, commending the performances, the atmosphere, and the historical accuracy, but went on to write, "''Ed Gein'' resists cheap humor in favor of moments that are inherently darkly comic, and tries for a seriousness of purpose, yet is at times awkward and under-inspired, creating a question as to whether so gloomy and repugnant a tale was worth telling simply for its own sake."
Neil Smith of the
BBC called the film "gross and repellent" and awarded it a score of 2/5, writing, "Parello's stated intention is to explore the psychology of his twisted protagonist, but the result has all the hallmarks of a low-budget exploitationer, right down to its
B movie
A B movie or B film is a low-budget commercial motion picture. In its original usage, during the Golden Age of Hollywood, the term more precisely identified films intended for distribution as the less-publicized bottom half of a double feature ...
leads Steve Railsback and
Carrie Snodgress
Caroline Louise Snodgress (October 27, 1945 – April 1, 2004) was an American actress. She is best remembered for her role in the film ''Diary of a Mad Housewife'' (1970), for which she was nominated for an Academy Award and a BAFTA Award as w ...
. Would it be too much to expect some thought or consideration for Gein's victims? Evidently so, given Hollywood's depressing habit of turning serial killers into cult heroes." ''
Variety's'' Robert Koehler gave ''Ed Gein'' a wholly negative review, deriding it for being both lackluster and "a disappointingly mild re-creation of true events."
Chuck Parello and Steve Railsback won Best Film and Best Actor, respectively, at the 2000
Sitges Film Festival
The Sitges Film Festival ( ca, Festival Internacional de Cinema Fantàstic de Catalunya, links=no) is an annual film festival held in Sitges, Spain, specialized in fantasy and horror films, of which it is considered one of the world's foremost in ...
.
See also
* ''
The Hillside Strangler'', another true crime film directed by Chuck Parello and written by Stephen Johnston
References
External links
*
*
* {{Rotten Tomatoes, ed_gein, Ed Gein
Interviewwith Chuck Parello at Fake Shemp
with Chuck Parello at Irresistible Targets
Interviewwith Chuck Parello at Serial Killer Calendar
2000 films
2000 horror films
2000 independent films
2000s American films
2000s biographical films
2000s British films
2000s English-language films
2000s exploitation films
2000s psychological horror films
2000s serial killer films
American biographical films
American exploitation films
American films based on actual events
American independent films
American nonlinear narrative films
American psychological horror films
American serial killer films
British biographical films
British exploitation films
British films based on actual events
British horror films
British independent films
British nonlinear narrative films
British psychological horror films
British serial killer films
Biographical films about serial killers
Cultural depictions of American men
Cultural depictions of Ed Gein
Cultural depictions of kidnappers
Cultural depictions of male serial killers
Films about alcoholism
Films about cannibalism
Films about child abuse
Films about Christianity
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Films about dysfunctional families
Films about fratricide and sororicide
Films about grieving
Films about kidnapping in the United States
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