Ted Bundy needs no introduction no matter where you live geographically.  His infamous tales have been covered numerous times. Here are 10 movies that capture his terror perfectly 

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Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil, and Vile

The Ted Bundy movies that don’t spend much time on the murders are the finest. The story’s perspective is what makes “Extremely Wicked, Shockingly Evil, and Vile” unique

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Bundy: An American Icon

The 2008 film “Bundy: An American Icon” (also known as “Bundy: A Legacy of Evil”) presents Bundy’s life narrative via a narrow perspective despite being billed as a biography.

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Ann Rule Presents: The Stranger Beside Me

In this movie, Bundy’s crimes take a backseat to the focus on his friendship with Rule. “The Stranger Beside Me” has a distinctly distinct point of view.

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No Man of God

No Man of God” is one of the Bundy filmography’s more unexpected inclusions. The tale is reexamined in the film by Bundy’s “relationship” with FBI agent Bill Hagmaier.

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Bundy: The Deliberate Stranger

The fact that “Bundy: The Deliberate Stranger” was published when Ted Bundy was still alive shouldn’t be shocking. The movie provides an accurate representation of Bundy’s crimes.

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Bundy and the Green River Killer

It is a feeble attempt to go into the life of notorious murderer Gary Ridgway, whose case notably sought advice from outsiders, including death-row convict Ted Bundy.

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Ted Bundy

The movie “Ted Bundy,”  contrasts Bundy’s ostensibly beautiful family background with the horrific violence that earned him notoriety.

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The Capture of the Green River Killer

This Norma Bailey-directed film, which is touted as a two-part miniseries and is similar to 1986’s “The Deliberate Stranger,” delves further into the tale of the search for Gary Ridgway

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Ted Bundy: American Boogeyman

“Ted Bundy: American Boogeyman,” which is directed by Daniel Farrands, is refreshingly less exploitative than his awful depictions of the killings of Sharon Tate and Nicole Brown Simpson.

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The Riverman

The investigation in the movie involves Robert Keppel (Bruce Greenwood), a professor of criminology at Washington State who was on the task force that apprehended Ted Bundy ten years earlier.