karanana wrote:svrsih drugu sezonu mindhuntera.
precjenjeno.
ne kazem da je bas lose, gledljivo je, ali na momente dosadno i vrtenje u krug sa radnjom.
vise nisam siguran ni o cemu je serija. da li je o izucavanju serijskih ubojica? da, mi vidimo te neke fol intervijue koji su po meni potanki. onda vidimo ovo ganjanje ubice u atlanti pa vidimo komadice BTK-a, i onda dosada sa onim lezbacama (da barem sta konkretno imam vidjeti - ni sekunde tijela ispod glave), od kojih me jedna podsjeca na onu frankovu zenu, predsjednicu iz house of cards, i onda imamo i ono sa onim trenchovim usvojenim sinom.
recimo da je serija samo o ganjanju ubice iz atlante ili BTK-a, dobro bi bilo. ovako, glavna premisa serije skoro pa ni ne igra nikakvu ulogu, osim eto sto je ko agent ford kreirao profil ubice iz atlante na osnvovu nekih intervijua. ali vala mu nisu ni trebali intervijui da skonta neke osobine ubice iz atlante.
Ford je baziran na liku Johna Douglasa pa ima veze
While traveling around the country providing instruction to police, D
ouglas began interviewing serial killers and other violent sex offenders at various prisons. He interviewed some of the most notable violent criminals in recent history as part of the study, including David Berkowitz, Ted Bundy, John Wayne Gacy, Charles Manson, Lynette Fromme, Sara Jane Moore, Edmund Kemper, James Earl Ray, Sirhan Sirhan, Richard Speck, Donald Harvey, Gary Ridgway and Joseph Paul Franklin.
Douglas first made a public name for himself with his involvement in the Atlanta murders of 1979–81, initially through an interview he did with People Magazine about his profiling of the as yet unidentified killer as a young black man. When Wayne Williams was arrested, Douglas was widely reported as stating that Williams was "looking pretty good for a good percentage of the killings." Douglas received an official letter of censure from the FBI Director for this. However, he attended the subsequent legal proceedings and helped the prosecution trap Williams into showing anger, which was key in showing the jury that Williams was the murderer.[5]
Douglas was consulted in another controversial case known as the "West Memphis Three". In 1993, three eight-year-old boys were murdered and police and the prosecutor's office claimed the children died as a result of a Satanic ritual sacrifice. Three teens were later tried and convicted. Douglas was consulted by the defense in 2006-7, by which time there was new evidence of the three's innocence, and his report concluded that the killings were not related to Satanism but rather were unplanned homicides by a lone adult who knew the victims and felt rage against them.[6] In 2011, the three men were released under an Alford plea.[7]