The Killer Inside Me: Difference between revisions

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.
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Revision as of 05:58, 26 February 2014

Name of Joyce Lakeland. Lives about four or five miles out on Derrick Road past the old Branch place.

Oh, I know the old Branch place. She a hustling lady, Bob?

Well, I guess so, but she's - she's been pretty decent about it.
—Sheriff Bob Maples and Lou Ford

This 2010 film, based of the novel by Jim Thompson, is unflinchingly violent and deliberately disturbing. It begins when the polite, seemingly normal Lou Ford is sent to encourage local prostitute, Joyce Lakeland to leave town. The confrontation leads to him beating her with a belt, and their romance begins. Together they concoct a plan to scam money from the wealthy Chester Conway. But Lou secretly had an even darker plan for Joyce. He beats Joyce unconcious and shoots Chester's son, makeing it appear as if the two of them got into a fight. From there he must keep commiting more murders to cover up his crimes, and also, because he enjoys it.


This movie provides examples of:

  • Freudian Excuse: The camera pans over the main character's bookshelf, lingering prominently on a volume of Freud. He immediately takes a bible off the same shelf, opens it, and finds forgotten photographs of his mother's sadomasochistic sex life.
  • No-Holds-Barred Beatdown: Lou gives one of these to both Joyce and Amy in graphic, prolonged, horrific scenes. And they both die. Except not really, because Joyce is revealed to be alive at the end, although disfigured--and then he immediately kills her for real.