The Ripper (TV Mini Series 2020) Poster

(2020)

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8/10
A very well made series.
Sleepin_Dragon18 December 2020
This is a very powerful, very factual documentary series detailing the five year killing spree of The Yorkshire Ripper, Peter Sutcliffe.

Lots of interviews, new and old, you will hear from The Police, Journalists, families, and more shockingly, survivors.

It's very well produced, and doesn't at any point jar, it focuses on the case, but also gives you glimpses of life at the time for people.

It's hard to imagine how he got away with his crimes for so long, the final part gives a good insight into the actual investigation.

The only thing I would have liked a little more information on, was just how he was caught, what exactly happened etc.

Chilling, 8/10.
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6/10
Good to a point but...
gregoryrobbie18 December 2020
Overall a good documentary series but it gets hijacked towards the end by a couple of contributors peddling their political agendas. Yes the police made horrible blunders and judgements but the idea it was all some male conspiracy is over the top. The contributions by the people at the centre of the story - the victims' families, the survivors and the police officers are fascinating and often heartbreaking. The emphasis on the women who died rather than the murderer is welcome too.
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8/10
The arrogance of 70's Policing...
karlmartin-4735216 December 2020
New 4 part documentary on Netflix which has frustratingly accurate footage of the police's disregard for the victims. It was their arrogance which blinkered their investigation for far too long before he was finally caught. Not by the extent of their police work, but by officers arresting him for a completely unrelated offence, which the bigwigs happily took the praise for. Although I've seen something very similar before, it's still a very worthy watch.
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7/10
Decent concise documentary
Calicodreamin17 December 2020
A concise and well put together documentary. The doc style lent it self well to this story with very good use of archival footage. The people interviewed were relevant to the cases and added good insight into the police work and political climate.
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6/10
A good detailed documentary that should be seen, but derails in episode 3
nathanhogan-5865120 December 2020
Very informative and detailed show with Netflix's typical high standard but it does get derailed by a diatribe in episode 3 that took away from the following of the criminal case
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6/10
Could have been great - but . . . .
donb-519-3350757 June 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Just finished watching "The Ripper" on Netflix. Very captivating story told in an effective, if not plodding manner. The obvious agenda of the documentary "Let's give focus on the victims and not just the killer" is proper and appreciated. But it appears that the agenda got in the way of some necessary elements. At the end when The Ripper has been id'd and convicted, and the bungles of the Yorkshire police exposed, we do not get the status of the killer. As it turns out, he died Nov 2020 from COVID-19 - one of the few justified deaths at the hand of the pandemic virus. But, I had to Google it to find it out. We should have been told what happened to the scum. The conclusions reached about the critically inept approach of the Police (he must have a Geordie accent - and 'the dead girls' not a prostitute, ignore her, our guy only kills prostitutes') was re 'spot on.' And they spent millions of dollars chasing after fake letters and an audio recording. They were clearly blinded by their prejudices, etc.

Two other points: this dramatically illustrates the lunacy of the "no capital punishment" belief. If anyone deserved the death penalty, this piece of crap did. But no, he was allowed to live for 35 years in a soft existence denied his victims. And, of course the British taxpayers funded his "retirement."

But, the most ridiculous part of the documentary was the reaction of the feminist community who were outraged that they had to be protected by men - and "Why can't we walk the streets at night, if we want to?" mentality. The answer was obvious: because you may get slaughtered as these women were. I know that we have a different, more equitable situation concerning women today (although there is not doubt a ways to go) but such stupidity was laughable. Of course this stupidity is not the fault of the makers of the documentary. In conclusion, we were glad we watched the documentary, we knew very little about "The Ripper" before this. But the ending was mismanaged.
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9/10
Great viewing
ginger-202027 December 2020
A lot of reviewers have noted there was too much reference to the feminist movement during this series. To my mind, this was an integral part of the programme. I didn't see this as male bashing, but more about the incompetence of the police at the time, their use of derogative language to describe the victims, while highlighting their preconcieved notions about the women from the outset of the murders. These dated and, frankly, mysoginist views hampered the investigation. Well worth the watch.
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7/10
Well made, another series about a famous serial killer.
deloudelouvain22 November 2022
Documentary about the Yorkshire ripper, a serial killer that had the entire United Kingdom in its grip for several years. Lately there are a lot of shows about famous serial killers, it's just something people like to watch, and I get that as you just want to try to understand what is going on in a mind of a sick person. This one is divided in four episodes, maybe a tiny bit too long but still interesting to watch. Again you can't help it to be a bit disappointed by the investigation, the police forces are again not completely faultless even though not as failing as with Dahmer, Gacy, the Night Stalker or the Golden State killer but still the ripper should have been arrested much sooner. The episodes are basically interviews of investigators, victims that were lucky to got away, reporters, and the public opinion. Everyone adds to the story, everyone has their opinion, good or bad. I won't say it was the best series about the Yorkshire ripper but it was certainly interesting to watch.
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10/10
A chilling documentary
moonz197217 December 2020
As a young kid growing up in Yorkshire in the 1970's I remember this time so well. My Mum was single in the late 70's and never went out on a night out alone. It was really scary that these crimes were so close to home and the sense of relief when he was finally caught was palpable. This documentary shows the level of investigation and methods used and is well worth watching.
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6/10
Worthy - with flaws
mike-390526 December 2020
Overall this is not a bad documentary, revealing much more than I previously knew about the subject. I'm glad there are plenty of female voices, but it's a shame the makers chose to feature such extreme views such as those claiming men were forcing them to behave a certain way when in truth they all made informed choices. The world would obviously be a far better place without the likes of the Ripper but to blame all men for his actions cannot be taken seriously. So too the misrepresentation of objective observations as naked prejudice: an agenda in search of evidence. Unfortunately this is a dripping tap in one particular episode.

That the Ripper was not caught sooner is obviously cause for regret. But I haven't seen anything showing the cops weren't trying - quite the opposite. They just didn't have the tools to do much better: no DNA matching, very few computers, profiling in its infancy. Anyone can criticize.
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8/10
In-depth quality series...!
Idle_Hands0829 December 2020
Some might say that this series is a touch too long, and they could be right, but it left no stone unturned. I would rather that, then it end leaving me with further questions. The series chronicles the serial killer case, the Yorkshire Ripper, in Northern England from the mid 70's to the early 80's. Seeing the actual detectives and police offers interviewed who worked the case all those years ago was fascinating, not just to hear them tell their part of the story, but to see how it still affects them today, and their personal view point on what happened all those years ago. Many survivors, and the victims families were interviewed as well, and this is how you make a documentary interesting. You can't help but be moved by their stories and perspectives of those horrible events that befell them all those years ago. You will find the the 70's detective work frustrating to watch, but this story is also told in conjunction with the social inequalities and life as it were in 1970's England at the time. This was an interesting way to tell the story as all perspectives were explored, and I felt this was a fair way to present all view points on the crimes, the people trying to solve it, and the general public's concern and interest at the time. This is a serial killer docuseries that is detailed, at times a little repetitive, but importantly is very interesting and will challenge what you thought you knew of this true story...
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6/10
Starts good - ends slow
RussHog12 January 2021
I thought the first two episodes of this show were really interesting. The final two episodes were less interesting. I agree with some of the negative reviews that it becomes very preachy instead of based on the facts of the case. I do think the cops botched the case, I would have liked to have known more. Either way - starts great and is still good. But the final two episodes are kinda slow.
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5/10
First 2.5 epsiodes move along well, but it falters after that
mformoviesandmore18 December 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Ok, there isn't a lot new to be learned about (I want name the person) the killer for anyone who has seen other coverage or lived through the times.

The first 2.5 episodes do well at filling in some of the background of the case work.

But it then seems to jump around and not be really sure whether it is trying to be social commentary, investigative analysis or a tale of a killer.

The team that did this documentary could have done better.

BTW: The killer died with covid-19.
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Boring
GoalDigs18 December 2020
This was poorly made. I found it lagging and uninteresting, which is a shame really when you have such fascinating content to go on. Reading about Sutcliffe on Wikipedia was so much more compelling. Too much bias and politics and boring woke reporters on the series and so much more confronting information left out, such as: the numerous attacks on him in prison and at broadmoar, one which left him blind in one eye and the other seriously damaged only to have the remaining eye attacked at a later period, his first victim's daughter committed suicide over the death of her mother, his wife slapping him silly like a schoolboy and later on to be described as dancing on the graves of her husband's victims when filing lawsuit after lawsuit to gain monetarily. And SO much more. That would have been riveting to watch.
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6/10
We get it Netflix, men are bad...
cewyble3 April 2021
Warning: Spoilers
The Ripper is a decent 4 part documentary that clumsely weaves in a 4 part mini series within the doc about feminism and all men are bad. Eh, okay.

My first point is that because there is a murderer killing women that walk the streets alone at night the police advised women to not walk alone on the streets at night. Seems like good advice. The police never said you must be escorted by a man nor did the government make a law forbidding women to walk the streets alone at night. What's the femisist take on this? Patriarchy! So, ironically in order to protest the good advice of to not walk alone in the streets at night the femisist organize a women's group, yes a women's group walk in the streets at night. So you're protesting the advice by following the advice. Ok, cool, you show'em sister!

My second point is the condemnation of the police that it was released that the majority of victims are labeled as prostitutes by police. The femisist scowl at this then while interviewing the last women who the killer was with said she would have been killed if not for a traffic stop conducted by the police because she was a prostitute. Even the killer admits he was targeting prostitutes. The police have to form victim profiles in order to determine investigation strategies. If the killer is targeting prostitutes then you don't deploy the majority of your surveillance teams at 9am in the banking district. It also serves to warn ladies of the night that they are being targeted.

My third point is that yes, mistakes where made in the investigations. In fact huge mistakes happened. However, I will say that when a case likes this grows to the size it did it gets uncontralbe. So much data is pouring in that it becomes very easy for information to fall through the cracks. A single homicide investigation with little to no evidence is extremely difficult, now multiply that tenfold and it becomes a miracle when the killer is finally captured. It's an odd thing when it comes to the public and police. Everyone becomes and expert and with the benifit of hindsight says they should have done this of that. It may be the only profession that this happens in. You never hear about the public opinion on how they would have designed a building different when it collapses but everyone has an opinion on police work.
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7/10
Well made with actual footages
beach_wolf3 February 2022
The story obviously is gripping, but what makes it more compelling is the shear amount of actual footages...considering that event has happened more than 40 years, it should get a good credit...
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7/10
Solid work
aggiemp-730154 February 2021
When you watch the whole documentary it becomes pretty clear that the creators wanted to give some insight on the sociopolitical state in the period that the killings happened. The reaction from the public due to the fact that many of the victims were prostitutes, how women lived though all this and why was the police unable to catch this serial killer for so many years. All of these are important, and crucial factors, in every case like this and they need to be included. But after a point it kinda loses it's original purpose and instead of analysing the murders, the police work insight and all the detail of the case as a case, it feels like the documentary focuses more on the society picture and how the police mechanism failed to deliver results due to horrible handling. Which would make a very interesting documentary on it's own so the creators would have all of the time to focus on the affects a case like this has on society and how people's mindsets affect the handling of such cases. But from a documentary called "The Ripper" you expect a more focused analysis on the crimes. The series kinda tries to balance these two but as a result the main subject is neglected to some extend. I have to say though, it's a interesting documentary nontheless. We get to listen to the policemen that worked on the case, journalists, some of the victims that survived, relatives of the victims and in general people who lives through this nightmare. And of course each murder is exhibited although there could be a more detailed insight into the events.
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8/10
This is a very smart docuseries with a fascinating killer but even more fascinating circumstances around the investigation and era
kevin_robbins22 February 2023
The Ripper (2020) is a 4-part Netflix docuseries that I recently wrapped up. The storyline follows the infamous Yorkshire Ripper's killing spree in the late 70s/early 80s that plagued England and went unsolved for 5 years as the killing spree reached the 20s and the authorities could seemingly do nothing about it.

This series was cocreated by Jesse Vile (Gypsy's Revenge) and Ellena Wood (First Cut). This series does a great job of depicting this era in England and the perception of women in society. There's also a strong message on how men controlled access to certain roles and positions at the time and how that narrow mindness impacted the case, the search and the events. The meticulous details of the events and how the killer covered his tracks was smart. It was also interesting how details were right in front of the police and audience and you completely miss it until the reveal at the end, even with subtle hints throughout the series.

Overall, this is a very smart docuseries with a fascinating killer but even more fascinating circumstances around the investigation and era. I would score this series an 8/10 and strongly recommend it.
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6/10
OK Documentatry
agro_sydney18 December 2020
OK documentary dragged out over 4 episodes. I have seen better documentaries about the case which have been more chilling and not as boring. I think it needed better direction, editing and narration to tell the story.. I guess it would be more interesting if you don't know the story.
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10/10
Not a documentary about an evil maniac because there is none
oykuulusoy23 December 2020
Are you scared that one of us is the ripper? asks men in the pub to the women -probably very content with their wittiness.

Every now and then under a movie title, I run into reviewers that claim they created their account to make that very review. Well, this is mine. I owe it to the victims of Peter Sutcliffe and I do not only mean the women he attacked personally. I also mean the women who had to endure the period of his attacks until the end of it. The Ripper is a crime documentary that focuses on the societal aspect of one of the most notorious feminicides in the history. Naturally, it gives us a glimpse of how the women in that time were affected by the events even if they were not personally attacked.

The rest may contain spoilers though I am not sure.

It was the admiration and the fascination of the men towards the attacker that made Sutcliffe go on for so long. (At one point, police openly plea him to stop, which makes you think wtf..) That and of course the misogynistic environment in which he had been groomed. This documentary reveals these aspects excellently and that is why it gets so many bad reviews for being 'feminist'. Apparently, crime doc enthusiasts want to think of murderers as bizarre mysterious men who have 'different' thinking. Gruesome details on killings also don't hurt lol. The Ripper does not give you any of that. It gives you the true face of a women hater and the truth is they are average men with average minds filled with unexceptional stereotypes about women and men (like what is a 'strong' men). Frequently, the police officers themselves share many of those stereotypes and beliefs so they cannot be the ones who recognise them. Yet women killers are hardly ever outcasts or extreme cases. They are regular people. Family men. Respected members of communities. Promising young fellas. Trust me, I am a keen researcher on serial killers of women, I am yet to find a mastermind of evil. Everywhere I see a forced storyline that tries to put that make up on these normal men, partly because men have lot fo sympathy for 'troubled' men and men do not want to accept that they are the main problem. This is the first crime documentary that straightforwardly states it.

It was an excellent work but not an easy watch. Being deprived from basic rights like going out at night, walking home by yourself, being in public without being afraid is a female reality. We cannot let men overlook this reality or downplay it by saying its for our own safety. I am very proud of those women who held the night time protest. It was the most sentimental moment for me.
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7/10
The other Ripper
kosmasp31 December 2020
I have to admit, I thought this was going to be about Jack the Ripper. The one I actually know or would expect with a title "The Ripper". But you may have known this before reading my review. Just to make this clear, I never read up on things I'm about to watch. Trying to keep a fresh and unoccupied mind about whatever it is I'll watch.

Same here then and the documentary is quite nice overall. It becomes clear who it is talking about and the horrible things that were commited. Since this is real life or a documentation of what happened with some murders, it will depend on your thresshold and if this is even something you want to watch. Psychologically alone this is quite draining. Consider those things and if you have the time to watch a show about horrible real life stuff ... the show ain't bad
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8/10
Society overlook of UK's 70's-80's
simonavoicescu29 December 2020
The series is much more than the story of a serial killer, is the story of police patriarchal mentality, is about blaming victims, and evaluating the value of lives according to what a person does for a living. They didn't take him seriously until an "innocent" young woman became the victim of this serial killer. It's about prejudice and a case that changed mentalities inside the police but also among the general population. I saw this series as a society overlook at that time. They were looking after something they created in their mind because they couldn't see much more nor were they interested in understanding, a non-existent entity. Unfortunately is not the last case treated like this by police all over the world, but clearly his acts were horrific to say at least. Is not a masterpiece, but it says a lot about the entire social-economical status of the period. It creates a pretty good image. I believe the critics of this series are undeserving.
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7/10
Typical true crime documentary
Leofwine_draca10 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
THE RIPPER is a new four-part Netflix documentary series exploring the crimes of the Yorkshire Ripper, one of Britain's most notorious serial killers, whose crimes were unchallenged by an incompetent police force for many years. I've seen documentaries about Sutcliffe before and this is just as good, exploring the social and political milieu and how it made it all so easy for Sutcliffe to get away with. It's simply made, merely consisting of 'talking head' interview footage interspersed with news footage from the era and lots of little linking shots, but it does the job. If anyone wants a more thorough account of Sutcliffe's crimes, the book WICKED BEYOND BELIEF is a definitive exploration.
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4/10
In itself an interesting subject
Porphyry18 December 2020
There was a bit much repetition. As often with Netflix docu-series, a documentary of an hour and a half would have been more suitable. But they had a lot of involved people to talk to, which adds value, so perhaps more time was needed. The feminism was understandable and necessary at first because of the way the first victims were presented. However in the third and fourth episode they went too far. Conclusions about society and men were drawn, from murders that were committed by one insane individual.
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7/10
Very good series...until
tmdarby21 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
Well done documentary. The police made a lot of mistakes, but it's easy to criticize in hindsight. It was really good up until they decided to make it all about feminism instead of the poor victims of this evil killer. I can see the points to a degree, but they take it way to far and in my opinion do a disservice to the victims by trying to make this about them instead. Typical of this entire society, it's all about how it effects them. What about the people that were murdered and their families. That's the focus of the first 2 episodes. Then it veers off into feminism somehow, like the rippers real victims were women that....gasp...we're asked by men if wanted to be escorted to their car because there was a psycho out there. Takes a pretty selfish attitude to compare that to a woman who was beat to death with hammer.
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