Former
teen idol Zac Efron plays serial killer Bundy in new
drama
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[May 02, 2019]
LONDON (Reuters) - Zac Efron, who won legions
of female fans in the "High School Musical" films, takes
on a more sinister role in crime drama "Extremely
Wicked, Shockingly Evil, and Vile", playing American
serial killer Ted Bundy.
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The film, released on Netflix in the United States and Sky
Cinema in Britain on Friday, follows the 1979 trial of Bundy,
who was executed in Florida in 1989, through the eyes of his
girlfriend Liz, played by "Mirror Mirror" actress Lily Collins.
Before his death, Bundy admitted to killing more than 30 young
women across several U.S. states in the 1970s.
For Efron, the role is very different to his past work, with
recent credits including musical "The Greatest Showman" and
comedy "Baywatch".
"This was a way into a genre that I thought was a little bit
more cerebral than your standard hack and slash movie," he told
Reuters in an interview, adding he liked versatility.
"This is an in-depth look into one of the worst mass
manipulators of the public and mass murderers of young girls and
women probably ever and it's a hard story to tell."
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The film takes its title from the words of judge Edward D.
Cowart - played by John Malkovich - when he sentenced the
32-year-old Bundy to death, calling his crimes "extremely
wicked, shockingly evil, vile".
The televised Miami trial saw charismatic former law student
Bundy, who escaped police custody twice, represent himself in a
courtroom attended by fans.
"Nobody believed Bundy was capable of these horrible crimes
because of how he looked, how he acted," director Joe Berlinger
said.
"We live in an era of ... people putting out false imagery of
who they are, and so the lessons of Bundy today, I think are
even more relevant than ever before."
(Reporting by Lisa Keddie; Writing by Marie-Louise Gumuchian,
Editing by William Maclean)
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