Berdella is a 2009 American horror film written and directed by William Taft, and co-directed by Paul South. A limited theatrical release, it is based on the crimes of Robert Berdella, an American serial killer who raped, tortured, and murdered at least six men in Kansas City, Missouri during the 1980s. It stars Seth Correa as Berdella, and co-stars Marc Saleme, Vito Spino, and Steve Williams.[1]

Berdella
Film poster
Directed byPaul South
William Taft
Written byWilliam Taft
Produced byPaul South
William Taft
StarringSeth Correa
Marc Saleme
Vito Spino
Steve Williams
Narrated byGeorge Taft
CinematographyRocky Varela
Edited byPaul South
Music byTopp Boom
Production
companies
Savage Cinema
Northeast Film Group
Distributed byNortheast Film Group
Release dates
  • 10 September 2009 (2009-09-10) (Kansas City, Missouri)
Running time
83 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Plot edit

Beginning in 1984 and ending in 1988, the film follows Robert Berdella, a homosexual bazaar owner and sexually sadistic serial killer who is introduced drunkenly bludgeoning Jimmy Hower, a man who Bob had been holding captive in the basement of his Kansas City home, 4315 Charlotte Street. Bob subsequently goes to work and skims pornographic magazines in the park, returning home afterward to sell drugs to his friend, Larry. Bob then invites over a drug addict, and slits the man's throat after he stumbles onto a file pertaining to Jimmy.

During a game of poker, Bob serves the other players chili that is implied to contain human remains, and later drugs, sexually assaults, and murders a yard worker named Mike Walton. The next day, Bob masturbates to photographs of his crimes, disposes of Walton's body, and heads out to tend to his shop, leaving a pair of junkies who he had been counseling alone in his house, which the two ransack, infuriating Bob.

After selling a victim's skull to an oblivious buyer, Bob visits a gay bar, where he entices one of the addicts who had earlier robbed into returning to 4315 Charlotte Street. There, Bob angrily tortures and mutilates the man, gouging out the junkie's eyes and going on a religious-themed rant before finally suffocating the addict with a plastic bag while repeatedly yelling, "You fucking robbed me!" Bob later bails Larry out of jail, and subjects him to similar torture and mutilation, eventually asphyxiating and decapitating him after lobotomizing him with a power drill and an injection of Drano.

Bob goes on to abduct a prostitute named Cliff, who he intends to condition into becoming his sex slave, keeping him tied up on the second floor of 4315 Charlotte Street. While at work, Bob begins suffering from chest pains after being attacked by a relative of Jimmy Hower. The film ends with Bob being informed that he will have to close his bazaar, and with Cliff escaping and begging a passing meter man to call 911. A series of intertitles state that Bob was arrested for murder, plea bargained his way out of a death sentence, and died of an apparent heart attack in 1992.

Cast edit

  • Seth Correa as Robert Berdella
  • Steve Williams as Larry
  • Marc Saleme as Mark
  • Vito Spino as Cliff
  • Elmer Parker as Jimmy Hower
  • Steve Bellinger as Joe
  • Rose Marie South as Kathy Greene
  • Denise Carroll as Larry's Wife
  • Kent Downing as Roger Schelling
  • George Taft as Charlie
  • Cody Ross as Mike Walton
  • Rebecca Scott as Female Customer
  • Marcia Trayford as Joe's Wife
  • Desiree Brockett as Prostitute
  • Rocky Varela as Meter Man

Release edit

The film had a limited theatrical release in 2009,[2] and was made available on DVD in 2010.[3]

Reception edit

Dread Central's Erik W. Van Der Wolf awarded the film a score of 3½ out of 5, and concluded, "Berdella is far from perfect and definitely looks like a low budget film in just about every aspect, but that didn't stop Taft and South from delivering something worth watching."[4] Todd Martin of Horror News praised the film's cinematography and Seth Correa's performance, but otherwise found Berdella to be "so-so" and wrote, "while I didn't hate it I still didn't really see anything special about it that would make me want to watch it again either."[5] Writing for The Pitch, Alan Scherstuhl condemned Berdella, deriding its "halfwit script, wretched acting, glib amorality, and inability to establish a clear relationship between the action that takes place in any one scene to whatever happens in the next."[6]

References edit

  1. ^ Haberfelner, Mike (December 2008). "An Interview with Bill Taft, Writer, Co-Producer, Co-Director, and Paul South, Co-Producer, Co-Director of Berdella". searchmytrash.com. (re)Search my Trash. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  2. ^ Wells, Mitchell (26 December 2008). "The Butcher of Kansas City". horrorsociety.com. Horror Society. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  3. ^ Wells, Mitchell (25 June 2010). "Berdella on DVD". horrorsociety.com. Horror Society. Retrieved 24 April 2022.
  4. ^ Wolf, Erik W. Van Der (2 September 2010). "Berdella (2010)". dreadcentral.com. Dread Central. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  5. ^ Martin, Todd (23 June 2015). "Film Review: Berdella (2009)". horrornews.net. Horror News. Retrieved 13 February 2017.
  6. ^ Scherstuhl, Alan (24 September 2009). "Berdella: The Movie is torture to sit through". thepitchkc.com. The Pitch. Retrieved 23 April 2022.

External links edit