13 Serial Killers Who Inspired Some Seriously Sick Movies and TV Shows

When it comes to finding inspiration for scary movies, it turns out that the truth is not only stranger than fiction but also a hell of a lot grislier. Hollywood frequently turns to the world's most prolific serial killers for inspiration, feeding pop culture's fascination with these real-life villains. In addition to award-winning biopics like 2003's Monster, you might be surprised to discover that some of the most disturbing moments and characters on shows like American Horror Story actually went down in real life. Once you make your way through all of Netflix's serial killer documentaries, take a look at the many movies and TV shows they've inspired.

The Zodiac Killer
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The Zodiac Killer

Part of what makes movies and TV shows inspired by the Zodiac Killer so terrifying — a list that includes 1971's The Zodiac Killer (pictured above), 2007's Zodiac, and 2005's The Zodiac, as well as an episode of American Horror Story — is that the perpetrator was never caught. He could still be out there and could strike at any moment. The killer is believed to have carried out at least five murders in the late '60s in San Francisco's Bay Area and gained notoriety for the cryptic messages he'd send local newspapers about his murders. One segment of a decoded note read, "I like killing people because it is so much fun." Every message concluded with a symbol of a circle with a cross through it, as well as a portion of a three-part cipher that he promised contained his identity.

Jack the Ripper
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Jack the Ripper

In 1888, Jack the Ripper tore through London on a killing spree, murdering five prostitutes in sadistic, torturous ways that suggested a particular distaste for the female gender. His mutilations quickly became the stuff of legends and made police think he had an astute knowledge of the human anatomy. Since he was never caught, the murders remain some of England's most infamous unsolved mysteries. His acts have inspired countless onscreen iterations, most notably Johnny Depp's 2001 film From Hell (pictured above) and Alfred Hitchcock's riveting 1927 thriller, The Lodger.

The Axeman of New Orleans
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The Axeman of New Orleans

American Horror Story is full of appearances from prolific serial killers, but its interpretation of the Axeman of New Orleans during its Coven season remains one of its most bone-chilling. The character in the show, played menacingly by Danny Huston (pictured above), is based on real-life murders — mostly on Italian grocers — that occurred in New Orleans between 1918 and 1919. He first murdered an Italian couple who owned a grocery by slitting their throats as they slept and then bashing their skulls in with his ax. A month later, he attacked a second couple (also grocers), but both survived their brutal wounds (the woman blamed the attack on her boyfriend, who was arrested and thrown in jail before being acquitted nine months later).

A few months after that, reports of more and more attacks rolled in: a young pregnant woman who awoke to a dark figure standing over her before he bashed her face in with his ax (she miraculously survived), an elderly Italian grocer who died from head trauma, and an immigrant grocer who was attacked along with his wife and 2-year-old daughter (the parents survived, but their daughter did not). The killer later sent a threatening letter to the Times-Picayune newspaper that made a bizarre proposition to the city's residents:

"I am very fond of jazz music, and I swear by all the devils in the nether regions that every person shall be spared in whose home a jazz band is in full swing at the time I have just mentioned. If everyone has a jazz band going, well, then, so much the better for you people. One thing is certain and that is that some of your people who do not jazz it on Tuesday night (if there be any) will get the axe."

Although no one died that night, attacks continued until Oct. 27, 1919, after the murder of grocer Mike Pepitone. Police were unable to determine who was responsible, and thankfully he was never heard from again.

John Bunting
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John Bunting

If you've seen The Snowtown Murders floating around Netflix, just know that the real-life crimes were also known as the "bodies in barrels murders," so that should clue you in to how brutal the film version (pictured above) of one of Australia's longest and most publicized murder cases is. In the late '90s in a poor suburb of Adelaide, Australia, a charismatic, homophobic man named John Bunting murdered 11 people (with the help of some friends) so that he could steal their welfare payments.

Eight of the bodies were found stored in barrels in an abandoned bank vault, and the other two were in the backyard of his former home. When he was caught and the case went to trial, a witness claimed the killers were cannibals, eating portions of flesh from one of their victims. He is currently serving 11 consecutive sentences of life imprisonment without the possibility of parole.

John Wayne Gacy
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John Wayne Gacy

Chicago resident John Wayne Gacy (pictured above) was convicted of sexual assault in 1968, which led investigators to the shocking discovery that he was responsible for killing 33 other young men. Most of their bodies had been buried under Gacy's home, where he lured them with the promise of a construction job. He would then kidnap, sexually assault, and strangle his victims (except his first kill, whom he stabbed to death), all of which he'd occasionally do while dressed as his alter ego, "Pogo the Clown." He was given the death penalty in 1980 and was executed by lethal injection on May 10, 1994.

His actions resulted in films like Gacy, Dear Mr. Gacy, To Catch a Killer, and the 2001 documentary Serial Killers: The Real Life Hannibal Lecters, and he was rumored to have been the inspiration behind Pennywise the clown in Stephen King's It. He also appears in American Horror Story's "Devil's Night" episode.

The Phantom Killer
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The Phantom Killer

The Town That Dreaded Sundown (both the original 1977 film and its 2014 sequel) is a gore-filled slasher (pictured above) that might seem too over-the-top to be real, but its inspiration comes from a string of deranged killings in Texarkana in the Spring of 1946 by the Phantom Killer. Over the course of 10 weeks, eight people (all couples) were attacked in twisted ways (many of the women were sexually assaulted, and most victims were shot multiple times). Curfews were initiated and businesses began to close early, leaving streets looking like a ghost town by nightfall (hence the film's name). The killer was never found, but the teenagers in his first attack described him as a large man wearing a plain white mask that had holes cut out for his eyes and mouth.

Jeffrey Dahmer
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Jeffrey Dahmer

Jeffrey Dahmer is one of America's most well-known serial killers and sex offenders, who murdered 17 men between 1978 and 1991. After killing his victims (whom he lured to his grandmother's basement with the promise of drugs and alcohol), he would mutilate their bodies, photograph them, and perform sexual acts on the corpses. He kept their genitals or skulls as mementos and often ate their remains or used chemical means to dispose of the rest of the bodies. Dahmer was captured in 1991 and put in prison for 16 life terms, but his time was cut short after fellow inmate Christopher Scarver killed him in 1994.

Dahmer's lengthy killing spree has inspired a number of films: The Secret Life: Jeffrey Dahmer, The Jeffrey Dahmer Files (pictured above), Dahmer (starring Jeremy Renner), Raising Jeffrey Dahmer, and more. Most recently, the acclaimed graphic novel based on Dahmer's childhood, My Friend Dahmer, has been adapted as a soon-to-be-released film starring Nat Wolff, Anne Heche, and Vincent Kartheiser. As far as TV, Dahmer's likeness made an appearance in the same "Devil's Night" episode of American Horror Story that Gacy's did.

Ivan Milat
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Ivan Milat

The idea of backpacking through the Australian wilderness might sound fun for some, but for anyone who's seen the Wolf Creek movies, it probably sends a few chills down your spine. In the '90s, a man named Ivan Milat (later known as the Backpack Killer) would hunt down campers in remote areas of Australia so he could torture and kill them in gruesome ways. One woman was decapitated, another was found shot in the head 10 times, and her companion had been stabbed so brutally that it seems likely she was paralyzed midattack while he continued to wound her. He murdered seven people in total and was sentenced to six years imprisonment for an attack on a man who survived and then seven consecutive life sentences for each of the other murders.

If that doesn't frighten you, you should give Wolf Creek a watch. Milat inspired the terrifying franchise, which spawned two films and one TV miniseries and follows the activities of Mick Taylor (John Jarratt, pictured above), a psychotic man in the Outback who kidnaps and brutally tortures a group of young backpackers.

Ted Bundy
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Ted Bundy

When it comes to American serial killers, Theodore "Ted" Bundy (pictured above) is one of the worst. Charming and intelligent, he was able to sweep young women off their feet before raping and beating them to death across several states in the 1970s. His victims typically looked like a college girlfriend who dumped him while he attended the University of Washington (attractive students with long, dark hair), and he captured many by pretending to be injured and in need of their help.

He was eventually caught by police but managed to escape custody and drive to Tallahassee, FL. It was there he broke into the Chi Omega sorority house at Florida State University and killed two female students. He then kidnapped and murdered Kimberly Leach, a 12-year-old girl, which was his last kill before being captured for good. Although some say his kill count is around 100, evidence only linked him to 36 murders, which led to his execution by electric chair in Florida in 1989.

In 1986, his crimes were turned into a film starring Mark Harmon, The Deliberate Stranger, which earned Harmon a Golden Globe nomination and prompted Bundy's defense attorney to call it "stunningly accurate." There is also 2002's straight-to-DVD Ted Bundy, 2003's Ann Rule Presents: The Stranger Beside Me, and 2008's Bundy: An American Icon.

The Hwaseong Serial Murders
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The Hwaseong Serial Murders

A 2003 Korean crime drama called Memories of Murder (pictured above) depicts the harrowing story of Seoul's first serial killer, whose murders are known as the Hwaseong Serial Murders and earned him comparisons to the Zodiac Killer. The unidentified killer murdered 10 women between 1986 and 1991, all of whom were found strangled to death with their own clothes in the rural city of Hwaseong in South Korea's Gyeonggi Province.

The Boston Strangler
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The Boston Strangler

In 1968, neo-noir thriller The Boston Strangler (pictured above) was released, chronicling the murders committed by Albert DeSalvo, who strangled 13 women to death in the Boston area in the early 1960s. All were single and between the ages of 19 and 85, and most were sexually assaulted before being strangled in their apartments. None of the crime scenes showed signs of forced entry, which led police to believe he disguised himself as a maintenance man or delivery guy. DeSalvo confessed in 1964, but still many had doubts that he was the true perpetrator until DNA evidence confirmed it in 2013. He was convicted and sent to maximum-security Walpole State Prison, where he was stabbed to death by a fellow inmate in 1973. A new movie is in the works about the Boston Strangler Task Force called Stranglehold.

Ed Gein
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Ed Gein

Of all the serial killers on this list, Edward Theodore "Ed" Gein, also known as the Butcher of Plainfield, is one of the most disturbing. His murders and grave-robbing habit led him to be the inspiration for everyone from Norman Bates (Psycho) to Leatherface (The Texas Chainsaw Massacre). As a young man, Gein became obsessed with his religious fanatic of a mother and began robbing graves containing recently buried female bodies after she died in 1945. He'd cut off body parts as souvenirs (and then return the rest of the body to the grave), which led to him experimenting with necrophilia and human taxidermy.

He tanned the skins of the corpses to make corsets, leggings, belts made from female nipples, and masks (much like the Buffalo Bill character in Silence of the Lambs) so he could make a "woman suit" and become his mother. He eventually went on to kill two women in his town in 1957. Once caught, Gein pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity and was committed to a criminal mental hospital. Around a decade later, he stood trial again and was found guilty of murder and sent to the Central State Hospital in Wisconsin and the Mendota Mental Health Institute, where he later died of heart failure in 1984.

(Michael Wincott's portrayal of Gein in Hitchcock is pictured above)

Aileen Wuornos
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Aileen Wuornos

If Aileen Wuornos (pictured above) looks familiar, it's likely due to her appearance in the "Devil's Night" episode of American Horror Story or Charlize Theron's Oscar-winning portrayal of the murderous prostitute in Monster. The 2003 film documents Wuornos's murders of seven men (although she was only tried for six), all shot at point-blank range in Florida between 1989 and 1990. She attempted to defend her actions by claiming her victims had raped her (or attempted to rape her) and that everything she did was an act of self-defense. She was executed by lethal injection in 2002 in Florida, and her last words are rather odd: "Yes, I would just like to say I'm sailing with the rock, and I'll be back, like Independence Day, with Jesus. June 6, like the movie. Big mother ship and all, I'll be back, I'll be back."