SPOILER ALERT: This story incorporates gentle spoilers for “Woman of the Hour,” now streaming on Netflix.
“Girl of the Hour” screenwriter Ian McDonald confronted a novel problem along with his sophomore characteristic: Inform a real crime story that felt “obligatory and helpful.” Fortunately, the stranger-than-fiction story of Rodney Alcala, who gained “The Relationship Recreation” throughout a 1978 look amid a serial killing spree, was ripe for examination.
“There’s lots on the market the place a serial killer assaults a bunch of girls, and there’s completely no motive to inform it,” McDonald says. “There was one thing about this that felt prefer it may very well be socially and culturally related now. You’ll generally hear individuals say, ‘Rodney’s form of like Ted Bundy,’ by which I feel they imply he’s good-looking and well-educated. However he was truly very totally different: He was a chameleon. He was good at pretending he was one thing he wasn’t. That’s precisely what I discovered fascinating, as a result of it was the tradition that routinely regarded the opposite approach, and that enabled him.”
Directed by Anna Kendrick, who additionally stars as Cheryl, an actress who picks Alcala to win the sport present, the movie debuted to acclaim on the 2023 Toronto Worldwide Movie Competition and premiered on Netflix on Oct. 18. Days later, it’s sitting on the prime of the streaming service’s most-watched movie listing, which may very well be a testomony to a compelling story blended with unconventional storytelling.
McDonald says that one necessary ingredient of crafting the script was narrowing down which sufferer interactions he wished to painting, on condition that Alcala might have killed as much as 130 individuals.
“That was the factor that modified essentially the most all through growing this,” he says. “It was much less about ‘Which sufferer will we wish to write about by way of the individual?’ and extra that the way you open and shut a film says a lot concerning the movie’s intentions thematically, and has a large dramatic impression. You are able to do it chronologically, the place you begin along with his earliest homicide, after which transfer to his most up-to-date. You are able to do it thematically and discover particular occasions that you simply really feel construct upon one another in a revealing approach, or based mostly round character. How does every crime reveal one thing new concerning the killer? It was a cross between these final two — that’s form of the place we landed.”
Whereas recreating the murders, McDonald and Kendrick are intentional about not displaying a gratuitous quantity of violence, but additionally not sanitizing McDonald’s horrific crimes.
“Any of the moments of violence have been one thing I actually agonized over as a result of this isn’t [David Fincher’s influential 1995 crime thriller] ‘Seven.’ I like ‘Seven,’ however on this film, just by advantage of it being a real crime story, you use with the data that these have been actual individuals,” he says. “That they had households and their worlds have been taken from them. You wish to just remember to’re doing it in a approach that responsibly reveals the killer for what he was, and that precisely displays the darkness that he represents with out being gratuitous. It’s a tricky line to stroll, however it was one thing I took very severely. There was quite a lot of, ‘Add that line, lower that line’ — trimming and shifting round simply to guarantee that the story was all there.”
That empathy for the victims additionally reverberated by means of the script’s viewpoint, as characters interact with Alcala’s more and more sinister nice-guy act. One standout scene — wherein Cheryl leaves a bar with Alcala after which walks away as he casually stalks behind her — was written with empathy by McDonald.
“Males discover themselves in compromising conditions too, normally with different males,” he says. “ when issues instantly really feel awkward and uncomfortable, and possibly threatening. I’ve been in some spooky conditions, and so forth that degree, I used to be in a position to attract considerably from my private expertise. Nevertheless it’s additionally not the identical, as a result of I’m 6’1”, 200 kilos. It’s definitionally at all times going to be totally different. At that time, it comes down to simply listening. Within the very early levels of penning this, I reached out to a bunch of feminine pals and I mentioned, “Hey, can we get lunch? Are you able to inform me tales about your experiences the place you’ll go on a date and it might really feel threatening or upsetting? What did that truly seem like?” That’s one thing that continued to be finessed over the course of the event of the script.”
Past that engagement, McDonald says Kendrick was additionally an lively participant in exploring the movie’s themes with him.
“There was one scene between the hitchhiker and Rodney,” McDonald says. “Anna regarded on the script and mentioned, ‘I actually like that you simply’re writing her with a lot company, however you’ll want to give her much less, as a result of proper now she’s being actually forthright and form of combative with him. The reality is now we have to do that little dance the place we’re well mannered and we placate, however with out contradicting them.’ At that time, you simply hearken to individuals who have experiences you don’t, and attempt to be sincere and ensure it finds its approach into the doc.”
Watch the “Girl of the Hour” trailer under.