A chronicle of the interaction between college student Jason Moss and the object of his obsession, serial killer John Wayne Gacy.
William Forsythe
John Wayne Gacy
Jesse Moss
Jason Moss
Emma Lahana
Alyssa
Cole Heppell
Alex Moss
Belinda Metz
Valerie Moss
Michael Ryan
Frank Moss
Eric Keenleyside
Stan
Daryl Shuttleworth
Guard Thompson
Patrick Gilmore
Glen Phillips
Andrew Airlie
Professor Harris
Michael Kopsa
FBI Agent
Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman
Male Hustler
Hunter Elliott
Butcher Shop Victim
Michaela Mann
Prostitute
Dee Jay Jackson
Desk Guard
Libby Osler
Counter Girl
Brett Dier
Marcus
James Ralph
Armed Guard
Jaren Brandt Bartlett
Mike
Lynn Colliar
TV News Reporter
Richard Harmon
Victim
Andrea Brooks
Stalked Girl
Anthony Shim
Paul
Karissa Tynes
Amy
Josh Goring
Marcus' Friend (uncredited)
Kai Kennedy
Bobby (uncredited)
John Andrew Vaas
Undercover Detective (uncredited)
Director
Svetozar Ristovski
Novel
Jason Moss
Novel
Jeffrey Kottler
Screenplay
Kellie Madison
Story
Clark Peterson
November 20, 2014
7
Dear Mr. Gacy.
The Last Victim (AKA: Dear Mr. Gacy) is directed by Svetozar Ristovski and adapted to screenplay by Kellie Madison and Clark Peterson from Jason Moss' memoir novel The Last Victim. It stars Jesse Moss, William Forsythe, Emma Lahanna, Jeffrey Bowyer-Chapman and Patrick Gilmore. Music is by Terry Frewer and cinematography by Larry Lynn.
John Wayne Gacy, the mere mention of his name brings shivers, his legacy that of the rape, torture and murder of 33 young men between 1972-1978. Serial Killer films have always been popular, they tap into the psyche where fascination resides. Unfortunately more often than not the films don't contribute much in the way of provoking interesting discussion or adding insight to the killer who is the topic. In fact some skirt the line of tastelessness and exploitation to the point of making the adult viewer a trifle sheepish having just watched them. The Last Victim is thankfully a different beast.
Jason Moss was a criminology student who was fascinated by serial killers. Choosing to use that for the major part of his thesis, he would go on to form a dangerous relationship with the incarcerated Gacy. Posing in profile to that which Gacy was attracted to, Moss began with letters, then phone calls and eventually a meeting with the beast himself. Jason Moss would kill himself in 2006, the significance of which, dates and state of mind etc, are not covered here. This is purely about the naiveté of youth, dangerous fascination and the perils of letting a bona fide monster inside of your head.
It's not a blood soaked film, it's very character driven, the horrors more of the human mind. Boosted by an intense performance from Forsythe as Gacy, the pic is always compelling, though some poetic licence has been taken to advance the plot dynamics. The flashbacks used are well tied into the narrative thrust, tension is well orchestrated by Ristovski and Frewer's score is unobtrusive but still orchestral and eerie. One of the better serial killer movies available to the intrigued audience, but not because of any stalk and kill tactics and portrayals. 7/10