The Gray Man (2007 film)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Gray Man | |
---|---|
Directed by | Scott Flynn |
Produced by | Aaron Osborne |
Written by | Lee Fontanella Colleen Cochran |
Starring | Patrick Bauchau Jack Conley John Aylward Jillian Armenante Silas Weir Mitchell Vyto Ruginis Mollie Milligan Lexi Ainsworth Shaun Senter Ben Hall |
Music by | Justin Caine Burnett |
Cinematography | David Rudd |
Editing by | George Folsey Jr. John Sitter Brad E. Wilhite |
Distributed by | RavenWolf Films |
Release date(s) | 2007 |
Running time | 97 minutes |
Country | United States |
Language | English |
Official website | |
IMDb profile |
The Gray Man (previously known as Wisteria: The Horrible Story of Albert Fish) is a 2007 biographical thriller film based on the actual life and events of American serial murderer, rapist and cannibal Albert Fish. It premiered at the Montreal World Film Festival on August 31, 2007[1], and is scheduled for a theatrical release sometime in 2007. It is directed by Scott Flynn and stars Belgian actor Patrick Bauchau as Albert Fish.
[edit] Plot
The shocking true story of Albert Fish, the most monstrous yet least known serial killer in the history of true crime in America. In 1928, the angelic 10-year-old Grace Budd is abducted by a kindly old grandfather and never seen again. After scouring the country for her for six years, detectives finally arrest Albert Fish for her kidnapping but are unprepared for the horrors they are about to uncover... Aged 55 when the film opens, Hamilton Fish, aka Albert Fish, is the father of six grown children whom he has raised on his own after his wife abandoned the family to run off with their boarder. A compulsive liar and letter writer, Fish corresponds with women through "friendship" magazines, woos several under false pretenses, and even marries a few -- even though he is still technically married to his first wife -- but eventually repulsing all of them with his sexual perversions. Having always struggled with leading his life according to his religious convictions, Fish now teeters on the brink of complete surrender to his sadomasochistic tendencies. It is the kidnapping of Grace Budd that leads to his downfall. When he is finally arrested, the authorities discover a trail of murder, mutiliation and cannibalism. Fish is found guilty despite overwhelming evidence of his insanity, and promptly sentenced to die in the electric chair.