The Creepy Origins of the Best Horror Movie Bad Guys

by Kyle Tuttle on December 15, 2009

They might keep us up at night, but there’s something about horror movie bad guys that capture our imagination. Whether it’s their grotesque appearances, their sinister personalities, or the bloodshed and gore that follow in their wake, we just can’t stop watching them. As we follow them with both terror and delight, we often ask ourselves — “How did this maniac come to be?” Here are the origins to some of the most evil, most vile villains to ever grace the silver screen:

Jason

Jason Voorhees — The physically-deformed, mentally-challenged Jason was born to an already-imbalanced Pamela Voorhees, a cook working at Camp Crystal Lake. The boy was somewhat shy and reclusive, with his abnormalities often the cause for bullying from other kids. His mother Pamela, however, saw fit to protect her boy by any means necessary, even though she wasn’t quite playing with a full deck to begin with.

Pamela snapped, however, when Jason drowned due to the negligence of two amorous camp counselors. The following year, two counselors were caught making love when they were brutally murdered. Camp Crystal Lake understandably shut down after the tragedy.

Unfortunately, that didn’t stop people from trying to reopen it. Every year that someone tried to bring Camp Crystal Lake back to life, someone’s life was taken. The mysterious killer’s identity was discovered years after, when the sole survivor of a vicious attack learned that the murders were the work of none other than an enraged (and deranged) Pamela Voorhees. Using her wits and will to live, the survivor managed to decapitate Pamela, putting a stop to the killings for good.

But the killings didn’t stop. A few months after the harrowing ordeal, the survivor suddenly disappeared. Many began to wonder if Pamela Voorhees had found a way to return and avenge her dead son.

Only, Jason wasn’t dead. He somehow survived the drowning incident and had been in hiding for years. Upon finding his mother’s severed head, the imbalanced Jason was enraged and vowed revenge upon all those who dared wander into Camp Crystal Lake. So the slaughter continues…

Freddy

Freddy Krueger — Born out of rape and put up for adoption, Freddy Krueger spent a difficult childhood under an abusive alcoholic stepfather. The boy would eventually grow up to be a sociopath, withdrawn from the rest of the children and secretly learning to enjoy the pain from his adoptive father’s beatings. He eventually got revenge on his father by killing him in cold blood.

When Krueger reached adulthood, he married a woman named Loretta and had a daughter, Kathryn. Unknown to his wife, Krueger had developed a fondness for murdering children, having tortured and slain 20 kids over the years. He kept records of the killings and his instruments of torture in a secret room in the basement. When Loretta discovered the ghastly room, Freddy killed her in front of his own daughter, as she was “snooping in on daddy’s special work.”

Krueger was eventually discovered by the authorities and arrested for his crimes, which earned him the moniker “the Springwood Slasher”. Unfortunately, an error in the signing of the search warrant rendered the evidence inadmissible, and Krueger was set free. The victims’ parents, however, decided to take justice into their own hands. They stormed into the boiler room where Krueger committed the murders and burned him alive.

Moments before his death, however, Krueger was approached by three dream demons in search of a malevolent soul. They offered Krueger the chance to “be forever” and turn nightmares into reality, in exchange for continuing his evil work in the dream world. Krueger happily accepted, and gained the power to exist in people’s dreams, control them, and cause actual physical harm to them. Krueger would continue his heinous work through these newfound abilities.

Hannibal

Hannibal Lecter — Cold, cunning and ruthless, the cannibalistic Dr. Hannibal Lecter is a serial killer unlike any other — a brilliant man with a twisted outlook towards life. Born into an aristocratic Lithuanian family, Lecter’s earliest years were privileged ones. At the time of Hitler’s Blitzkrieg, things changed and his family fled to their forest lodge. They were unable to escape tragedy however, as Lecter’s parents and family retainers were eventually killed by a German bomber. Lecter and his sister Mischa were left to fend for themselves.

Tragedy struck once more when a group of former Lithuanian collaborators attempted to loot the lodge. Lecter and Mischa were taken captive by the looters, led by one Vladis Grutas. Starving and desperate, the looters resorted to eating Mischa. Lecter watched in horror as Grutas and his men cannibalized his sister, and he would never be the same again. Lecter would eventually escape captivity; however, the ordeal traumatized him and he became mute.

Lecter was later found by the Soviets and returned to his castle, which had been converted into an orphanage by the war effort. The boy was severely disturbed, attacking and severely wounding many of his fellow orphans. However, it seemed that the attacks were purposeful — Lecter resorted to violence only against the bullies.

He was eventually found by his uncle, Count Robert Lecter, and taken to his new home in France. There, he met his aunt, the Lady Murasaki, and he fell enamored with her. One day, a butcher named Paul Momund made obscene comments at Murasaki while she and Lecter were out and about. The boy retaliated by viciously attacking Momund. Momund, enraged by Lecter’s actions, took it upon himself to confront the Count. In the heat of the confrontation, Lecter’s uncle suffered a heart attack and passed away. Lecter blamed Momund for the Count’s death, and exacted his revenge by decapitating the butcher. Eerily recalling the cannibalization of his sister, Lecter then proceeded to slice the cheeks off of Momund’s severed head and eat the flesh.

Momund’s murder alerted the authorities, and much suspicion was directed towards Lecter. However, due to the Lady Murasaki’s intervention, and Lecter’s own ability to fool lie detection machines, he was found innocent of the murder. Lecter went on a fruitful academic life at the Lycée, capped by earning the recognition of being the youngest student to ever be admitted to a medical school in France. While on his studies at Paris, he chanced upon one of his family’s old paintings, and was reminded of the horrors of his past. He returned to the lodge where he was held captive as a child, hoping to give his sister a proper burial. As he searched the premises, he found the dog tags of the looters responsible for his sister’s brutal murder. He would then hunt each member down and murder them in vengeance.

Though his appetite for revenge was sated, his bloodlust was not, and Lecter continued to kill those who would cross him. He grew a fondness for the taste of human meat, and often disposed of his victims by including them in his epicurean dishes. An internship in Baltimore would eventually bring “Hannibal the Cannibal” to American shores, where he would continue his work with a terrifying and savage sophistication.

Michael Myers

Michael Myers — “Pure, unadulterated evil” is a phrase that gets thrown around a lot in horror films, but few of the antagonists embody it as well as Michael Myers. The silent hulk is an unnaturally powerful and resilient killing machine, dispatching his victims with cold brutality.

Myers was a bright child, speaking and reading at a rate that was advanced for his age. When he turned five, however, things changed and he slowly began showing signs of autism. The boy grew quiet and reserved, showing a strange preoccupation with certain objects and staring into blank space. On Halloween of 1963, the then-six year old Myers walked into his household kitchen, grabbed a butcher knife, and stabbed his older sister to death. The boy was later found sitting stoically outside the house, and seemed emotionally dead.

Psychiatrists were puzzled by Myers’ actions — he had absolutely no motivation to kill his sister, and no insight could be gained from his unwavering silence. The only time that Myers would ever show some sign of emotion was when his younger sister, Laurie, would come and visit; the boy would inexplicably start grinding his teeth and staring at her. After years of fruitless study, Myers’ psychiatrist could come up with no other theory than the boy being pure evil.

Unknown to anyone else, however, was the fact that Myers’ babysitter, Mrs. Blankenship, was a member of the mysterious Cult of Thorn. The cult believed that in order to bring balance to the conditions that bring about conflict in humanity, a chosen individual must kill all the members of his family. The young Myers was chosen to carry out this act, and was bestowed with the Curse of Thorn. It would be this curse that attributed to Myers homicidal urges, as well as his supernatural strength and seeming immortality. As long as his bloodline existed, Myers would continue to hunt his family down, killing anyone who would get in his way.

Norman Bates

Norman Bates — No other killer is a more popular cautionary tale than Norman Bates. Undergoing severe emotional (and implied sexual) abuse from his mother as a child, Bates’ mental state had become incredibly fragile. Things worsened when Bates’ father died, leaving mother and son to fend for themselves. Bates’ mother constantly warned him about the evils of sex, and told him that all women — save for her — were whores. This cycle of abuse and the demonization of all other women created an unhealthy co-dependence between the two.

That co-dependence was challenged when Bates’ mother suddenly took in a lover. Feeling abandoned by the only other person he felt safe with, Bates extracted his vengeance by poisoning both his mother and her lover with strychnine. Both horrified with what he had done and obsessed with his mother, Bates then took to preserving her body and acting as though she were still alive. In order to preserve his rapidly-crumbling psyche, Bates maintained the illusion of having a mother by developing a separate personality — “Norma” Bates. Bates would then go on to manage the family motel as both Norman and Norma.

His mother’s influence would never leave him, and Bates would continue to perceive women as “evil” and “dirty”. Whenever the “Norman” persona would become infatuated with ladies staying at the motel, the “Norma” persona would take over, leading Bates to dress up in his deceased mother’s clothing and murder the women. He would speak in his mother’s voice and scold himself (“Norman”) for forgetting that women were filthy whores, and that “mother” was the only one who mattered. Eventually, Bates’ fragile psyche would eventually break down, and the murderous “mother” would completely take over.

Leatherface

Leatherface — Two men would come to be known as the chainsaw-wielding Leatherface. The first was Bubba Sawyer, a mentally-retarded man under the control of his twisted family. Raised by a group of deranged cannibals, Bubba did the Sawyers’ dirty work in killing the people who would eventually become his family’s chili. Bubba had no true personality, only acting through the different personas of his masks made from human faces. As such, Bubba was different from most other serial killers in that he killed primarily out of fear, or out of his family’s orders.

The second man to wear the many masks of Leatherface was Thomas Hewitt. Hewitt was often bullied as a child due to his muteness, mental retardation, and the facial disfigurement he suffered as a result of a flesh-eating disease. He was eventually diagnosed with mental degeneration at the young age of twelve.

Hewitt eventually tried to live a normal life, finding work in the very meat factory he was born in. Unfortunately, health inspectors order the factory to shut down, and Hewitt’s boss and co-worker urge him to leave. Hewitt’s refusal to follow orders leads the two to call him a “dumb animal” and a “retard”. The insults trigger Hewitt’s memory of the cruelty he suffered in his childhood, and the years of abuse cause him to finally snap. He grabs a sledgehammer and bludgeons the two to death. As he goes around the factory, he chances upon a chainsaw, which would eventually become his weapon of choice. The murder is then discovered by local sheriff Winston Hoyt, who tries to stop Hewitt. Hewitt is saved, however, by his uncle, Charlie Hewitt, who kills Hoyt and assumes his identity.

The abusive Charlie takes advantage of Hewitt’s mental retardation and manipulates him into doing his twisted work. Hewitt becomes the family’s most prominent murderer, supplying them with the human flesh needed to supply their meat shop. Hewitt, sick of the ridicule he’s received because of his hideous appearance, eventually makes a mask by slicing off the face of one of his victims, creating Leatherface as we know and fear him.

Jigsaw

Jigsaw — John Kramer once made a living as a simple toy maker. He treated most aspects of his life with complacency, including his romantic relationships. His inability to make commitments eventually caused his girlfriend to leave him. However, even this didn’t help him realize the damage his indifference was doing to his life.

He had an epiphany, however, after one fateful hospital visit. He had been getting severely ill, often to the point of vomiting. He was later diagnosed with cancer and an inoperable brain tumor. Faced with his fast-approaching mortality, Kramer finally realized how much of his life he allowed himself to waste. While at the hospital, he became increasingly sensitive to people he perceived were wasting their lives as well. Heroin addicts and suicide attempters, in his opinion, failed to realize how precious life truly was.

Depressed with how futile he saw life was, Kramer decided to end it all and commit suicide. However, he survived the attempt, despite having driven his car over a cliff. Clinging on to the remaining bits of life he had made him realize just how valuable it is to be alive. Instead of ending his own life, Kramer vowed to help others take control and embrace their own lives.

Unfortunately, in Kramer’s own twisted perspective, that entailed bringing them to the brink of death. Just as he had his realization in the midst of anguish and looming death, so too, would his “subjects”. Kramer then spent the next few months following and observing people who he thought needed saving. He then fashioned cruel and sadistic puzzles that would “save” them by making them endure intense physical and mental torture. Kramer proceeded to abduct his subjects and force them into the specially-designed puzzles, in which they could only either escape with an increased appreciation for life, or die a horrible, agonizing death.

Most of Kramer’s subjects suffered the latter. At the end of each “experiment”, Kramer would cut off a small puzzle-shaped piece of flesh from the corpse, meant to represent the piece of humanity missing in the victim — the survival instinct. This odd modus operandi would later lead the authorities to dub Kramer the “Jigsaw Killer”.

Pinhead

Pinhead — The diabolical creature known as Pinhead was once a human by the name of Elliot Spenser. A captain of the British Army, Spenser engaged in the Battle of Flanders. Watching the carnage around him made him realize just how cruel mankind can be, and he eventually lost his faith in all humanity and in God, saying “to us, God fell at Flanders, too”. Shaken by post-traumatic stress disorder from the events, Spenser turned to a hedonistic lifestyle to take the edge off.

Spenser eventually found himself turning to baser forms of pleasure as he made his travels. He soon learned of the Lament Configuration, a puzzle box created by a Frenchman by the name of Phillip Lemarchand. It was rumored that solving the puzzle would open a gateway into Hell. After much effort, Spenser finally acquired the box and promptly solved it. To his surprise, hooked chains shot out of the box and dragged him down to Hell.

Trapped inside one of Hell’s many chambers, Spenser was tortured in gruesome fashion. A grid-like pattern was slowly carved onto his head, forming hideous scars. At each intersection of the grid, large nails were driven into his flesh. Spenser somehow grew to associate the pain with pleasure, and eventually learned to enjoy his own torment.

Spenser then began to lose all memories of his life. Once his former identity was completely wiped out, his transformation into a Cenobite, a servant of the ruler of Hell, was complete. He soon became the executor of the Lament Configuration, emerging from the box once the puzzle was completed. He and his Cenobite cohorts then examine the boundaries between pain and pleasure by putting whoever opens the Lament Configuration through excruciating, seemingly-endless torture.

Chucky

Chucky — Few stories are as bizarre as that of Chucky, the killer doll. One night in 1988, Charles Lee Ray, the infamous Lakeshore Strangler, was on the run from the authorities when he was mortally wounded in the chase. Without giving it much thought, the murderer decided to take refuge in an unassuming toy store. There, he desperately performed an ancient Voodoo ritual that would save his life by transferring his soul into a doll. The spell worked, and police found Ray’s lifeless body, unaware that the serial killer was actually sitting among the other toys.

Ray was eventually bought and given to a young boy named Andy Barclay. Ray, now called Chucky, eventually revealed his true nature to Barclay, and continued on his murderous ways. Telling Barclay his real identity turned out to be one Chucky’s worst mistakes, as he soon learned that he could only transfer his soul into the body of the first person he told his name to, or else be trapped in the body of the doll forever. Chucky would then hunt down Barclay, savagely killing anyone who got in between him and his only chance at returning to human form.

Kayako Saeki

Kayako Saeki — The ghost from The Grudge suffered a tragic past. The daughter of an Itako (Japanese Exorcist), Kayako Saeki was often used as a tool in her mother’s rituals. As her mother drove the malevolent souls away from her possessed clients, she would guide them to Kayako, who would then “eat” the souls to keep them away. Because of this, Kayako was often the subject of gossip and cruelty.

She did her best to live a normal life, and eventually enrolled in a university. It would be here that she would meet one of her great loves, Shunsuke Kobayashi (Peter Kirk in the American version). Unfortunately, their relationship was never meant to be, and so Kayako had to move on from her feelings for him. She later met Takeo Saeki and married him. Together, they had a son named Toshio.

Years later, Kayako found Kobayashi in her life once again, this time as Toshio’s teacher. Her feelings for him were immediately rekindled, and she professed this in her journal. When Takeo found and read Kayako’s diary, he immediately grew jealous. He began to suspect that Kayako may have been having an affair with Kobayashi, and that Toshio was not his son. Obsessed and paranoid, Takeo violently attacked Kayako, accusing her of infidelity. Kayako tried to escape, but Takeo chased her down and shoved her, causing her to break her ankle. Kayako painfully crawled down the stairs, trying to get away from him. At this point, Toshio stepped out of his room and witnessed the carnage through the banisters. Takeo reveled in Kayako’s torment as she dragged herself to the front door. He snapped her neck and shoved her into a trash bag, which he took back upstairs to his bedroom. Noticing that Kayako was still alive, struggling to breathe, Takeo grabbed a utility knife and stabbed her to death. He then kept her body in the attic.

Takeo’s rampage was not over. Consumed by rage and jealousy, he grabbed Toshio and drowned him in the bathtub. For good measure, he drowned Toshio’s cat, Mar, as well. He decided to hide his son’s body in a closet. After massacring his family, Takeo went after Kobayashi’s pregnant wife and killed her. As he ran through the streets in a blood-crazed frenzy, Kayako’s ghost emerged from a dumpster and killed him.

The family’s spirits are now cursed to repeat the horrifying events that unfolded every time someone enters the Saeki household. The ghosts then torment their guests, eventually killing them.

Candyman

Candyman — Daniel Robitaille was once a gifted painter. He was also the son of a slave in a New Orleans plantation. Ordered by the landowner to paint his daughter Caroline’s portrait, Robitaille slowly grew to love the girl. Robitaille and Caroline secretly had a torrid love affair, and the woman was soon with child.

This caused great scandal in those extremely racist times. Robitaille was hunted down by the landowner, who had organized a mob for his capture. Robitaille attempted to escape their cruelty by leaving town and running through the fields, but was caught just the same. The seething bigotry in the mob led to Robitaille’s subsequent torture — they sawed his hand off, and covered him in honey. A young boy, taunting Robitaille, tasted the honey and called him the “Candy Man”. The name caught on, and the crowd jeered Robitaille with chants of his new name.

The cruelty wasn’t over. Binding him near a beehive, they allowed Robitaille to slowly be stung to death. It was at this point that a forlorn Caroline appeared, grasping a small mirror. Caroline was restrained by her father and forced to watch her lover die. With his last breath, Robitaille parroted the crowd and uttered his new name, Candyman, as he stared into Caroline’s mirror.

Through some unknown force, Robitaille’s raging spirit was transferred into the mirror. With mirrors now acting as a sort of conduit for his soul, Robitaille is now able to re-enter the living world as a murderous spirit. Saying the word “Candyman” five times in front of a mirror summons Robitaille, who then lashes out against the injustice done to him through bloodshed.

If you enjoyed this article, please consider bookmarking it on Delicious or sharing it on StumbleUpon. It helps me to reach more readers. Thanks!

Share on Facebook. Bookmark on Delicious. Twitter this! Stumble It!.

{ 30 comments… read them below or add one }

Joshua December 22, 2009 at 4:15 am

Love it! These biographies are well done and perfect!

Reply

kisholoy mukherjee December 24, 2009 at 3:36 am

I think all these are very fearsome makeups. But some of them don’t have any real costume to talk of. Maybe you will come up with some more. I’ll keep checking. Thanks for the site anyway. Enjoyed it, being a movie buff.

Reply

Horror-101.com December 26, 2009 at 6:00 pm

Well done!

Reply

Evert January 12, 2010 at 12:06 pm

Great article! Nicely written, thanks for this!

Reply

Eustis January 21, 2010 at 7:38 pm

Very well done, but no Samara Morgan? I would prefer her over Kayako Saeki, personally.

Reply

Bryan February 16, 2011 at 2:04 am

i think i would have preferred her over chuckie….or jigsaw..

Reply

sp_21 April 14, 2011 at 12:37 pm

What? You mean: Sadako Yamamura

Reply

Kyle Tuttle January 21, 2010 at 10:08 pm

@Eustis I agree Samara was pretty spooky. But, for me, that image of Kayako crawling down the stairs is the all-time scariest thing I’ve ever seen. I didn’t sleep right for a week after seeing that :) So I had to go with her (referring to the Japanese version here).

Reply

Monsta January 23, 2010 at 2:41 pm

@Eustis
Samara was a kitten compared to her Japanese counterpart Sadako Yamamura, well in my honest opinion. With a more tragic past, a more fleshed out character, and actually more deadly.
The American Grudge was a lot more frightening than the American ring…however it would have been nice if they both actually redid the first movies or parts of these series instead of the second one (in the Grudge’s case) and then completely ripping out the story of Ring and replacing it with…that. ^^

Oh! Sorry for ranting! Don’t know what I was really trying to get at… o.O
Sorry again!

Reply

badillin February 2, 2010 at 12:09 am

I kind of remember Freddys mom being a Nun/Nurse that accidentally got locked for a week in the basement of a mental hospital, where all the worst patients lived; there she was raped and raped and raped for the whole week by insane patients…
Thats where, she got pregnant with Freddy, and went insane…

If im right (which im almost sure i am) i dont know why wouldnt you add this in his Bio… it certainly adds to his character “Son of 100 insane men and a nun”…

Reply

colgate April 17, 2011 at 3:17 pm

this is correct; you learn this in the 3rd movie

Reply

Gemma February 6, 2010 at 6:49 pm

badillin:

‘Son of 100 insane men and a nun”…?

Biologically, only ONE of the insane men could have impregnated Freddy’s mother even if all of them gang-raped her all week.

Reply

Melly February 9, 2010 at 1:10 pm

Cool article, but a LOT of the background of Jigsaw is wrong. A toymaker? He was an engineer. His girlfriend left him? He was married and his wife had a miscarriage which eventually caused their divorce because he was depressed and withdrawn. And if I remember correctly he started doing the traps before he found out he had cancer (or it was around the same time of his divorce) because the first trap was for the druggie that caused the miscarriage. It all may have happened around the same time because I do remember him trying to commit suicide by a car crash.

Reply

MoreHorror.com June 1, 2010 at 2:27 am

This rules. Great job!

Reply

lily September 11, 2010 at 3:52 pm

Samara wasn’t anywhere near as creepy as sadako….. I still prefer Kayako saeki over any of them though!!!okay all of us people that are obsessed with horror movies have no lives………who cares.

Reply

lily September 11, 2010 at 3:58 pm

oh yeah for you peoples that don’t know…..the actress that plays Kayako plays her in the ju on series also in anything else you see her in except the third grudge movie(that one was hilarious!!)a different directer plus a diff. actress =BAD MOVIE!the actress that plays Kayako is Takako Fuji….
sorry for going on and on!!

Reply

Ashley February 2, 2011 at 3:12 pm

This is amaazzziiinngg, i love horror movies! will you marry me?… PLEASE

Reply

Timothy March 10, 2011 at 7:41 am

Hey “Ash”,
So you’re a female with an interest and a passion for horror flicks…that’s WAY-cool! I’d enjoy proudly showing you my Lament Configuration collection…what do you say? We could discuss movies, perhaps debate plot-strengths and weaknesses, and maybe take in a horror convention. I’ve been waiting to meet a female just like you…waiting and waiting. I’ll wait for YOU, Ashley!
Timothy
(tmon41@hotmail.com)
PS As to the list of bests that appears above, Dr. Channard is a favorite of mine. This viewer feels the most connection with that character as we followed his entire experience with Hell, it’ s players, it’s rewards, and it’s jaunty elevators. Texas Chainsaw 2′s Leatherface is unique among the “face-heads”. I found THAT particular TCM to be a very enjoyable film and it remains my favorite of the series. I even have the soundtrack on vinyl.

Reply

Alyssa February 21, 2011 at 1:42 am

Yeah the one for jigsaw is all wrong, as Melly said in the movies they clearly said that he was an engineer and got hooked on the puzzles from the druggie accidentally killing his wife’s unborn baby. Please fix this, it is a rather large mistake. The rest of it is great though.

Reply

Psycho March 5, 2011 at 10:45 pm

First: I agree with most choices, but Samara would be a good ADDITION to this list. I would keep all listed above.
Second: The one about “Jigsaw” is 1. Incorrectly titled, as he NEVER called himself that. Also, the puppet’s name is Billy, John was the first person, then Amanda, then Hoffman. You didn’t include Amanda or Hoffman. John was an engineer, his WIFE left him, he had in infatuation with toys, and, while he did have cancer and try to kill himself, it was the addict who accidentally killed his son that sent him over the edge.
I appreciate the attempt, but that’s exactly what it is. An attempt.

Reply

Morgan March 6, 2011 at 7:43 pm

Just a small tid-bit: I believe that Ed Gein was actually an influence for Leather Face, Norman Bates, & Buffalo Bill.
For those who don’t know who Ed Gein is: He was a mentally-retarded fellow in Plainfield, WIsconsin. He kidnapped & murdered two women. He also had a corset-esque torso of a woman, which he would wear around his house (along with a mask he also skinned off of a woman) pretending to be his mother. “trophies” made from many people who’s graves he had robbed, men & women, displayed around his house. But no one ever suspected him, since everyone knew he was “slow” and thought he was harmless, they found out he was exhuming bodies from the local graveyard & making trophies out of them. They found the body parts from them in his house & he admitted to the murders. But, since he technically only murdered 2-3 people, he isn’t really considered a “Serial killer”, as most people have called him. He grew up on the farm his mother bought & only left to go to school. His mother would preach to both him & his younger brother (here comes the whole Norman Bates thing) about the evils of drinking & that all women, except her, were prostitutes & tools of the devil. The mother even punished the brothers if they tried to make friends. As they got older, the oldest brother started detaching from his others beliefs & began to live a normal life, he also worried about Ed’s attachment to her. Which he then began to speak badly about their mother in front of him.

Then one night, Ed reported his brother missing to the local authorities, but proceeded to lead them right to where his missing brother lay dead with bruises on his head, the coroner reported the death as asphyxiation, but no charges were pressed against Ed, even though the police suspected him of killing him.

There is definitely a pattern between deranged serial killers an their mothers. No? & that’s only a small summary of what I know haha. But I figured that was good enough of a background. :) if you’re more interested, look him up on google or something. It’s actually a really fascinating subject. (But then again, I just have a thing for mental disorders & stuff like that :) )

Sorry this is so long. <3

Reply

Morgan March 6, 2011 at 7:45 pm

I meant to say him & his OLDER brother. btw.

Reply

SA Blough April 6, 2011 at 4:45 pm

Sorry to burst your bubble, but that Michael Myers one was totally off. I recently watched an extended version of Halloween that backtracked to his childhood, and, though you got some stuff right, most of it is completely wrong. Here’s what actually happened: He grew up in a poor family, with a slutty mom and older sister, plus a deadbeat stepfather. He always wore masks, because he wanted to hide his ugly face, and he had an obsession with killing animals, which his mom (who he loved most out of anybody in the world, besides maybe his baby sister) discovered one day when he got in trouble at school. Then, on Halloween when he was TEN years old, he brutally murdered his stepfather, older sister, and her boyfriend. When his mom and the police came, he was sitting outside with his baby sister, emotionally dead. They then sent him to an insane asylum, where he lived for 15 years, before he escaped, intent upon tracking down his baby sister, but not to kill her, like you said. He loved her. Also, there was absolutely nothing about him ever having a babysitter, so I question where you got that Cult of Thorn thing.

Reply

Sev! June 2, 2011 at 12:56 am

Yeah, I was wondering about that too. I remember nothing about a babysitter or a cult, just him killing hamsters and a kid in the woods.

Reply

tim June 11, 2011 at 8:59 pm

Unfortunately you are referring to the Rob Zombie re-make of Halloween…the original John Carpenter Halloween gave no reason or motive for the killings…which made it good….the theories of the cult-member babysitter and other garbage, were weak attempts to flesh out a character in order to cash in on sequels… Rob Zombie’s version, outlying a troubled childhood, was interesting…but no more than another attempt to flesh out a successful movie killer from the 70′s…Halloween was a very successful movie for such a low budget film….why?…because no motive was given, other than evil and rage, for the brutal killings accredited to Michael Myers…

Reply

Mary April 12, 2011 at 7:37 am

Just when i got over grudge i had to see that picture….thanks..

Reply

a.bradley April 21, 2011 at 10:26 am

Michael Myers kicks arse

Reply

Skully April 23, 2011 at 1:03 pm

man, i was so intrigued reading all this. never realized that in the first texas chainsaw massacre, leatherface and his family were not the hewitts. overall it was a VERY interesting read, and yes i read every word of it. thanks for a great few minutes of reading!

Reply

noordinator June 15, 2011 at 6:56 pm

What about Carrie?

Reply

JigsawProdigy June 29, 2011 at 8:24 pm

you are slightly off in the Jigsaw history, are you not? it was the loss of his own child, due to a drug addict pushing his pregnant wife aside, that caused him to lose his sanity. the brain tumor came after that. because he started with that drug addict, killing him first

Reply

Leave a Comment

Previous post:

Next post: