The Devil's Cinema

The Untold Story Behind Mark Twitchell's Kill Room

Nonfiction, Social & Cultural Studies, Social Science, Crimes & Criminals, Murder, True Crime
Cover of the book The Devil's Cinema by Steve Lillebuen, McClelland & Stewart
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Steve Lillebuen ISBN: 9780771050343
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart Publication: March 27, 2012
Imprint: McClelland & Stewart Language: English
Author: Steve Lillebuen
ISBN: 9780771050343
Publisher: McClelland & Stewart
Publication: March 27, 2012
Imprint: McClelland & Stewart
Language: English

Reality and fantasy collide with shocking results in this riveting account of the notorious case of Mark Twitchell - and the police investigation into one of the most bizarre murders in recent memory.

In October 2008, Johnny Altinger, a 38-year-old Edmonton man, was on his way to a tryst with a woman he had met on an online dating website when he emailed the directions to their rendezvous to a concerned friend. He was never seen again. Two weeks before Altinger's disappearance, independent filmmaker Mark Twitchell began shooting a low-budget horror film about a serial killer who impersonates a woman on an online dating website to lure his victims to their gruesome deaths. But these are just the starting points of the stranger-than-fiction case of Mark Twitchell, a man with a startling plan to turn his life-long love of fantasy and desire for fame into reality:

- Did Twitchell, in a horrific example of life imitating art, act out the grisly premise of his own script?

- Obsessed with Dexter, the popular TV show and book series about a fictional vigilante serial killer, Twitchell assumed Dexter Morgan's profile on Facebook. But how far did he intend to take his fascination with Dexter?

- Is the shocking document "S.K. Confessions" a graphic work of fiction that, as Twitchell claims, he wrote to promote his film? Or is it a diary he kept of his transformation into a killer, and proof that the police stopped a prolific serial killer at the very beginning?

Veteran journalist Steve Lillebuen provides a gripping investigative account of the nesting doll intricacies of the case, plunging us into the world of pop culture fanaticism and into the mind of a self-professed psychopath. Drawing on extensive interviews, Lillebuen illuminates what can happen when some of our culture's darkest obsessions are pushed to extremes.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Reality and fantasy collide with shocking results in this riveting account of the notorious case of Mark Twitchell - and the police investigation into one of the most bizarre murders in recent memory.

In October 2008, Johnny Altinger, a 38-year-old Edmonton man, was on his way to a tryst with a woman he had met on an online dating website when he emailed the directions to their rendezvous to a concerned friend. He was never seen again. Two weeks before Altinger's disappearance, independent filmmaker Mark Twitchell began shooting a low-budget horror film about a serial killer who impersonates a woman on an online dating website to lure his victims to their gruesome deaths. But these are just the starting points of the stranger-than-fiction case of Mark Twitchell, a man with a startling plan to turn his life-long love of fantasy and desire for fame into reality:

- Did Twitchell, in a horrific example of life imitating art, act out the grisly premise of his own script?

- Obsessed with Dexter, the popular TV show and book series about a fictional vigilante serial killer, Twitchell assumed Dexter Morgan's profile on Facebook. But how far did he intend to take his fascination with Dexter?

- Is the shocking document "S.K. Confessions" a graphic work of fiction that, as Twitchell claims, he wrote to promote his film? Or is it a diary he kept of his transformation into a killer, and proof that the police stopped a prolific serial killer at the very beginning?

Veteran journalist Steve Lillebuen provides a gripping investigative account of the nesting doll intricacies of the case, plunging us into the world of pop culture fanaticism and into the mind of a self-professed psychopath. Drawing on extensive interviews, Lillebuen illuminates what can happen when some of our culture's darkest obsessions are pushed to extremes.

More books from McClelland & Stewart

Cover of the book Nights Below Station Street by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book Two Solitudes by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book A Choice of Enemies by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Battle of Alberta by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Journey Prize Stories 25 by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Radiant Inventory by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Winners' Circle by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book Requests and Dedications by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Healthy Boomer by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book The Acrobats by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book Excessive Joy Injures The Heart by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book An Innocent in Cuba by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book A Wild Peculiar Joy by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book Settlements by Steve Lillebuen
Cover of the book Stephen Harper by Steve Lillebuen
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy