The Deliberate Stranger

The Deliberate Stranger
Directed by Marvin J. Chomsky
Produced by Executive Producer:
Malcolm Stewart
Producer:
Marvin J. Chomsky
Written by Screenplay:
Hesper Anderson
Novel:
Richard W. Larsen
Starring Mark Harmon
Frederic Forrest
George Grizzard
Maggie Roswell
Music by Gil Melle
Cinematography Michael D. Margulies
Editing by Lori Jane Coleman
Howard Kunin
Ronald LaVine
Studio Lorimar Productions
Distributed by Warner Bros. Television
Release date(s) 4 May 1986 (television premiere)
Running time 185 min.
Country United States
Language English

The Deliberate Stranger is a book and television film about serial killer Ted Bundy.

Contents

Book

Bundy: The Deliberate Stranger was written by a Seattle Times reporter named Richard W. Larsen and published in 1980. Larsen covered politics for the Times and had interviewed Bundy in 1972, years before he became a murder suspect, when Bundy worked as a volunteer for the re-election campaign of Gov. Daniel J. Evans and had been seen trailing the campaign of Evans' Democratic opponent with a video camera. Larsen would go on to cover the "Ted" murders in 1974 and then cover the Ted Bundy story up until Bundy's execution in 1989. Bundy: The Deliberate Stranger was published in paperback in editions as late as 1990 but has since gone out of print.

Television film

The Deliberate Stranger was adapted into a two-part TV movie originally broadcast on NBC in May 1986. The film, based on Larsen's book, starred Mark Harmon as Bundy. The film omits Bundy's childhood, early life, and first five known murders, picking up the story with the murder of Georgeann Hawkins and following Bundy's further crimes in Washington, Utah, Colorado and Florida. Frederic Forrest starred as Seattle detective Robert D. Keppel, and George Grizzard played reporter Larsen.

Bundy's lawyer Polly Nelson, in her book Defending the Devil, characterized the film as "stunningly accurate" and said it did not portray anything that was not proven fact. She singled out for praise Harmon's portrayal of Bundy, noting how Harmon reproduced Bundy's rigid posture and typically suspicious expression.[1] According to Nelson, her client, still on death row when the program aired, showed no interest in seeing the film.[2] Ann Rule, who had known Bundy before the murders when they worked together on a suicide crisis hotline, felt that Harmon's portrayal missed the insecurities that lurked under Bundy's confident facade.[3] Harmon was nominated for a Golden Globe for his portrayal of Bundy.[4]

While the film is accurate in its portrayal of events, the names of all the victims (as well as Bundy's girlfriend) have been changed, with the sole exceptions of victim Denise Naslund and her mother Eleanor Rose.

References

Specific references
  1. ^ Nelson, 68
  2. ^ Nelson, 66
  3. ^ Rule 482
  4. ^ The Envelope - LA Times
Other sources

External links