Monster: The Ed Gein Story

Monster: The Ed Gein Story

Before The Texas Chainsaw Massacre... there was Ed.

7.2

The shocking true-life tale of Ed Gein, the infamous murderer and grave robber who inspired many of Hollywood's most iconic on-screen killers.

  • Release Date: October 3, 2025
  • Status: Ended
  • Languages: German, English
  • Production: Ryan Murphy Television, Prospect Films
  • Production Country: United States of America
DramaCrime

Cast

Seasons

  • Miniseries

    Miniseries

    6.9

    October 3, 2025

    Serial killer. Grave robber. Psycho. In the frozen fields of 1950s rural Wisconsin, a friendly, mild-mannered recluse named Eddie Gein lived quietly on a decaying farm - hiding a house of horrors so gruesome it would redefine the American nightmare. Driven by isolation, psychosis, and an all-consuming obsession with his mother, Gein's perverse crimes birthed a new kind of monster that would haunt Hollywood for decades. From Psycho to The Texas Chainsaw Massacre to The Silence of the Lambs, Gein's macabre legacy gave birth to fictional monsters born in his image and ignited a cultural obsession with the criminally deviant. Ed Gein didn't just influence a genre -- he became the blueprint for modern horror.

    Episodes: 8

Reviews

  • misubisu

    misubisu

    1

    November 26, 2025

    misubisu

    ## **Monster: The Ed Gein Story (2025) Review: A Deceptive and Exploitative Misfire - 1/10** *Monster: The Ed Gein Story* is not just a bad series; it is a fundamentally deceptive one. By branding itself with the name of a real-life, horrific figure, it invites scrutiny and promises a harrowing, fact-based psychological portrait. What it delivers is a cheap, sensationalised horror-thriller that abandons truth for tawdry fiction, earning its abysmal score through sheer betrayal of its own premise. The first two episodes, which chronicle Gein's disturbing relationship with his mother, provide a fleeting, misleading glimpse of a grounded drama. However, this is merely bait. **From episode 3 onwards, the series is totally off-target, painting a completely fictional picture of Ed and his activities.** It invents a ludicrous, serial-killer slasher narrative, complete with elaborate chases, fictional victims, and a dramatic, cinematic showdown that never happened. The real Ed Gein was a reclusive, pathetic grave-robber whose two murders were horrific but isolated; this series transforms him into a cartoonish, proactive monster straight out of a network procedural. ### The Verdict **1/10 - An Insult to True-Crime and History** This series is an exploitative failure on every level that matters. It disrespects the memory of the real victims, misleads its audience, and fails as both a documentary and a compelling drama. The one point it earns is for the initial setup, which it promptly sets on fire. Do not watch this for history. Do not watch this for quality. It is a cynical, poorly-researched piece of fiction that should have been honest enough to use a fictional name. A truly contemptible waste of a disturbing, real-life story.

  • Dean

    Dean

    9

    November 29, 2025

    Ditendra

    To be honest, I don't know how accurate is this show compared to real life events and real character, so I won't be judging this show as a history based show, however we can't argue that this is a high quality production series. The entire effort—from the cinematography and directing to the performances and overall execution—is top-tier. It's also very morbid and sick, so it's definitely not for faint-hearted people. Actor who plays Ed Gein does a terrific job!

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