

She knew him, as her loving brother John, and was crying, as she spoke of the last time they saw one another, before he was put to death by the state of Illinois. She said that none of what Gacy had done, in relation to his killing, and the other acts of depravity he had committed on the men he had murdered, made sense for his character. What I remembered hearing spoken at the end of the Gacy biography was by his sister.

BTK killed ten people in Kansas between 19. Stephen King, who wrote the screenplay, adapted from one of the stories in his 2010 novella “Full Dark, No Stars” was inspired by the real story of BTK (Bind, Torture, Kill) murderer, Dennis Rader.

Nothing that transpires in the 102 minute thriller, “A Good Marriage,” specifically reminded me of Gacy. I am not sure if the channel is contractually obligated to show each individual biography a certain number of times, but the one on Gacy seemed to be on quite a bit. The biography was on serial killer John Wayne Gacy, and there was a period of time, where it, and biographies of other members of his deadly and disturbed ilk, were shown on the BIO channel, on what seemed a regular basis. Instead, they were about a biography I had seen on cable several years prior. At the conclusion of the film that shares the same name as the title of this blog, my first thoughts were not about what I had just watched.
