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Fantasy abandoned by reason produces impossible monsters, united with her, she is the mother of the arts and origin of their marvels.
- Francisco Goya
Between his birth in 1960 and his death at the hands of a fellow prison inmate in 1994, Jeffrey Dahmer gained notoriety for killing 17 men, for cannibalizing parts of their bodies and for incorporating them into bizarre sexual rituals. According to a poll, he is more familiar to the American public than several recent presidents. Yet little is known about the emotionally and intellectually intriguing story behind the scandalous headlines.
Shocking, suspenseful and strangely touching, DAHMER is no conventional crime drama. Written and directed by David Jacobson whose debut feature, Criminal, received critical acclaim at both the Berlin and Toronto Film Festivals the film seeks to recast a modern symbol of evil as a man driven by very real weaknesses and needs and, in so doing, to broaden our sense of what it is to be human.

Featuring a richly textured, break-out performance by star Jeremy Renner (Fish in a Barrel, The WBs "Angel"), as well as strong supporting work from Bruce Davison and rising talent Artel Kayàru (Save the Last Dance), DAHMER offers a stunning portrait of a man crumbling beneath the weight of his simultaneous need for isolation and communion.
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