'Dahmer': Netflix's 'Monster' Show Making Viewers' Skin Crawl
09/27/2022 09:17 am EDT
'Hard to watch'
"I knew dahmer on Netflix was gonna be hard to watch. But the description they gave at the police station and the photos had me gaggy with my eyes closed," tweeted one viewer. "I may be crying. This is mad disturbing. My god."
'Harrowing'
"The series has me conflicted," wrote somebody else. "I don't wanna say its great and I liked it,because I didn't like it,it was harrowing.And that's how every one of yall should feel. It should make you uncomfortable,it shouldn't be easy to watch.But it was so well made,the acting."
'Most disturbing things I've ever seen'
"I think this has to be genuinely one of the most disturbing things I've ever seen, more so as is based on factual events," wrote another person. "Hearing the real life phone calls to the police threaded in between scenes makes your skin crawl. Can't stop watching though."
Left viewers in tears
"I'm not easily disturbed and I already knew of Dahmer of course... yet to say [Dahmer] made me want to scream, run, hide, cry and throw up all at once would still be an understatement," tweeted one person.
Viewers 'heartbroken' by preventable crimes
"Homophobia, racism, police negligence the perfect recipe for this man to continue for as long as he did," added somebody else. "So many lives lost because this man was left to his own devices because of his privilege. All of the signs were there!"
Respect for the victims
"When you watch these glorified serial killer series like [Dahmer] which is #1 trending, remember the victims! Remember their families, go watch the very real impact statements," one person tweeted amid the rush of discourse surrounding the show. "This isn't entertainment. These were real people who's lives were destroyed."
Victim's family speaks out
As Dahmer premiered and the show began trending on social media, Eric Perry, cousin of Errol Lindsey, one of Dahmer's victims, spoke out, sharing on Twitter that the show was "retraumatizing" the victims' families, who were not required to give the "ok" for the series to be produced due to the the murders being public record. Perry wrote, "So when they say they're doing this 'with respect to the victims' or 'honoring the dignity of the families,' no one contacts them. My cousins wake up every few months at this point with a bunch of calls and messages and they know there's another Dahmer show. It's cruel."
Disclosure: PopCulture. is owned by Paramount. Sign up for Paramount+ by clicking here.
-
Every TV Show, Movie, and Original Coming to Netflix This Week (April 15)
-
Netflix's Top 5 Movies Today (Saturday, April 27, 2024)
-
Hulu Reality TV Star's History of DWIs Uncovered: Arrest Records for Andre Mitchell Surface
-
Mike Flanagan Movies: See the Full List
-
Sydney Sweeney Movie Owns Top of Netflix Charts Amid 'Not Pretty' Criticism