Josef Fritzl: The Story of a Monster

August. 16,2010      NR
Rating:
4.9
Trailer Synopsis Cast

Interviews with family members, doctors and victims of 73-year-old Josef Fritzl, who held his daughter captive in a basement for 24 years and fathered seven children with her.

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Reviews

Karry
2010/08/16

Best movie of this year hands down!

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Moustroll
2010/08/17

Good movie but grossly overrated

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Ella-May O'Brien
2010/08/18

Each character in this movie — down to the smallest one — is an individual rather than a type, prone to spontaneous changes of mood and sometimes amusing outbursts of pettiness or ill humor.

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Billy Ollie
2010/08/19

Through painfully honest and emotional moments, the movie becomes irresistibly relatable

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goregabba
2010/08/20

This doc is very interesting but needs more minutes for a very important story like this.

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Janus Høi
2010/08/21

This documentary is very hard to watch. Not only for the story of an evil man, but for the bad work behind the film.The story has to be told, but not at this way.Everything in this film is annoying. Not a single name on the interviewed persons. You have to guess who those people is.When the letters from the daughter Elisabeth is spoken out loud, it is with the most annoying voice, like It's read out by a retarded person. Why? Why can't she sound like a normal person with knowledge?And there is no in-dept description of the man what so ever.Maybe some day, the story will be told in a good and understandable way, to enlighten us all. This day is not here yet.

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gavin6942
2010/08/22

Interviews with family members, doctors and victims of 73-year-old Josef Fritzl, who held his daughter captive in a basement for 24 years and fathered seven children with her.We often think the worst crime is murder, which would make serial killers the ultimate in evil. But this documentary shows us that we are wrong. Even if Fritzl never killed anyone (though it seems he did at least once), he is the worst kind of monster. A rapist, a kidnapper, someone capable of the worst kind of incest.If this has not yet been turned into a movie, it will be. A fuller documentary might also be nice. This one is excellent, but it seems that there is still more to the story out there.

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A. B.
2010/08/23

For a bit of context, I watched this documentary having never heard of this case before.I'll just cut to the chase. Generally speaking, this documentary begs so many questions that are never addressed or answered. For starters, logistically, how on earth did Fritzl manage to keep FOUR children underground without anyone noticing? How big was the cellar? How did he feed them? Did he teach them stuff? Did they have radio, television? Could any of them read? Did Elisabeth teach her own children stuff? Childbirth is a loud, messy, life-threatening affair; how did that happen seven times down there? Why were so many family members and neighbors suspicious but so eager to look the other way? Did she try to escape? Did her children? There is some mention that following the discovery of the truth about Elisabeth and her children, "questions" arose about the original investigation into her disappearance; what this investigation entailed or why it may have been viewed as insufficient at the time is not discussed in any meaningful way. The documentary barely delves into Fritzl as a person, or the circumstances of what was going on in his home. At the end there is a psychiatrist who spouts off a series of hypothetical justifications that fathers may attach to engaging in incest with their children - though a) none of the stuff she says is apparently specific to Frtizl and b) it is pretty clear that incest was a tiny portion of the horrible things wrong with this man. Also, throughout the movie there is a voice-over of an actor reading things that Fritzl presumably said at some point - but under what circumstances? Did he write a tell- all? Was it part of his confession? Trial? This is never made clear, and the answer to that question may very well affect how the listener interprets what he is saying, the veracity of what is being said, or whether what the psychiatrist is saying resonates with any of what Josef apparently said (it doesn't seem to, oddly). I can see that the filmmakers were, understandably, maybe trying to downplay the sensationalism of this case and rather focus on something else... but what? There are no interesting insights; the whole thing lacks any kind of organizing principle, and I was essentially left wondering what the point of watching it was. I just read the Wikipedia entry after and feel like I learned a lot more.

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