Henry, Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer (1986)
Inspired by: Henry Lee Lucas and Ottis Toole
Few films are as chilling as Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer. Director John McNaughton based Henry directly on the real confessions of Henry Lee Lucas, one of America’s most prolific and controversial serial killers. Lucas claimed to have killed hundreds of people, often with his drifter companion Ottis Toole, though many of those confessions were later proven to be false or exaggerated.
The film strips away sensationalism to deliver a cold, documentary-like portrayal of a killer without a conscience. Michael Rooker’s Henry is soft-spoken, detached and terrifying in his unpredictability. He kills with no clear motive, echoing Lucas’s claim of dozens of random murders across the U.S.
McNaughton’s film was meant to reflect the banality and unpredictability of real serial killers, who often don’t have elaborate motives or cinematic origin stories. Henry kills simply because he can.
Buffalo Bill, The Silence of the Lambs (1991)
Inspired by: Ted Bundy, Ed Gein, Gary Heidnik
Buffalo Bill is a composite character whose traits draw from several notorious real-life criminals. According to criminologist John Douglas, Thomas Harris (author of the book from which the film was adapted) found inspiration from a lecture Douglas once gave on serial killers Ted Bundy, Ed Gein and Gary Heidnik.
Gein's gruesome acts of exhuming corpses and creating items from human remains, including a "woman suit," directly inspired Buffalo Bill's method of skinning his victims to fashion a similar garment. Bundy's modus operandi of feigning injury to lure victims was incorporated into Buffalo Bill's character. Heidnik's captivity of women in a basement dungeon served as a model for Buffalo Bill's lair.
By amalgamating elements from these real-life figures, Harris created a character that embodies the darkest aspects of human nature, making Buffalo Bill one of cinema's most terrifying villains.
Mickey and Mallory Knox, Natural Born Killers (1994)
Inspired by: Caril Ann Fugate and Charles Starkweather
Oliver Stone’s hyper-stylized crime spree film Natural Born Killers tells the story of Mickey and Mallory, two lovers who become media darlings as they blaze a trail of murder across America. Their story mirrors the 1958 killing spree of Charles Starkweather and his teenage girlfriend, Caril Ann Fugate.
Starkweather, 19, and Fugate, 14, murdered 11 people over the course of 10 days. The pair’s crimes captured national attention not just for their brutality, but for the seeming randomness and the young lovers’ lack of remorse. Stone’s film (written by Quentin Tarantino) amplifies the chaos, using satire to critique how media sensationalism can turn killers into celebrities.
At its core, the film is rooted in the same shock that gripped 1950s America: the idea that two young people could become so detached from morality—and so obsessed with each other—that murder became a form of emotional expression. Starkweather and Fugate were also the inspiration for another classic film, Terrence Malick’s 1973 film Badlands, in which Martin Sheen and Sissy Spacek play a young couple on a murderous spree.
Frank Zito, Maniac (1980)
Inspired by: David Berkowitz
William Lustig’s Maniac is one of the most disturbing horror films of the 1980s. Its central killer, Frank Zito, isn’t a supernatural monster or masked slasher, but a deeply damaged loner stalking the streets of New York with terrifying intimacy. According to Lustig, Frank was inspired by several real-life killers, including “Son of Sam” David Berkowitz, who terrorized New York in the 1970s.
Like Berkowitz, Frank is driven by internal voices, paranoid delusions and a seething hatred of women. Berkowitz claimed a demonic dog instructed him to kill (though he later admitted he faked that order); Frank hallucinates conversations with his mannequins and sees his mother in every victim.
With its grimy realism and emphasis on Zito’s internal torment, Maniac feels less like a slasher film and more like a descent into a fractured mind. Lustig’s gritty direction makes it one of the most psychologically disturbing portrayals of a killer ever put to screen.
Carl Stargher, The Cell (2000)
Inspired by: Jeffrey Dahmer, Edmund Kemper
Carl Stargher, the villain of The Cell, is a serial killer who traps women in a glass tank, slowly drowning them while escaping into a fantasy world inside his own mind. While the film leans into science fiction and surreal visuals. Stargher’s crimes were grounded in real-life killers like Jeffrey Dahmer and Edmund Kemper.
Screenwriter Mark Protosevich noted that he was drawn to the frequency of childhood trauma found in adult serial killers and the impact it had on their psyches. Like Kemper, Stargher presents a calm, intelligent exterior that hides a deeply disturbed emotional core. Kemper’s complicated relationship with his mother echo through Stargher’s violent fantasies and twisted inner world. Dahmer’s desire to create passive, compliant “companions” through brain surgeries parallels Stargher’s control over suspended, lifeless victims.
Though The Cell is stylized and often dreamlike, its horror is rooted in reality. Stargher is a fictional creation, but his pathology draws directly from documented killers.
Patrick Bateman, American Psycho (2000)
Patrick Bateman is the smiling face of corporate evil—Wall Street’s answer to the serial killer. But behind his designer suits and empty narcissism are echoes of real-world killers like Ted Bundy.
Bateman’s charm, good looks and intelligence are Bundy-like to the core. Bundy used his charisma to lure victims, even feigning injury to appear vulnerable. Bateman does the same, projecting an image of control while hiding his sociopathic urges. Director Mary Harron and star Christian Bale drew inspiration from Bundy, noting psychopathic killers who know they are committing evil but are unable or unwilling to stop.
Yet American Psycho is just as much a satire of the culture that enables monsters like Bateman to thrive. His murders often feel secondary to his obsession with image, status and masculine identity. His victims are interchangeable, and it’s never clear how much of his violence is real or imagined. Like Bundy before him, Bateman shows how violence can hide behind a charming smile—and how society often chooses to look the other way.