We Value Your Privacy

This site uses cookies to improve user experience. By continuing to browse, you accept the use of cookies and other technologies.

I UNDERSTAND
LEARN MORE

The Zodiac Killer: The 1971 Grindhouse Flick That Tried to Trap the Real-Life Zodiac Killer

The director believes he interrogated the man responsible...

zodiac killer movie
  • camera-icon
  • Photo Credit: AGFA

Director David Fincher’s Zodiac (2007) is a film that’s long been well-respected by many true-crime aficionados. But that critically acclaimed, $65 million Hollywood production is not the first—nor the most unique—motion picture to take on notorious terror spree of the Zodiac Killer.

In terms of sheer moxie, perhaps no other movie can quite measure up to director Tom Hanson’s 1971 opus Zodiac, later retitled The Zodiac Killer.

Related: 35 Gripping True Crime Books from the Last 55 Years  

The Zodiac Killer is a $13,000, made-on-the-fly exploitation blowout filmed in San Francisco during the Zodiac’s peak period of serial slaughter and media manipulation right on those same streets.

As such, The Zodiac Killer delivers the gritty, gory goods in terms of grindhouse audience gratification. It’s just been re-released in Blu-ray as a deluxe edition from AGFA/Something Weird Video, sure to amaze fans of way-out cinema.

Still, what elevates Hanson’s endeavor beyond its considerable B-flick pleasures is that he actually made the movie to be "bait." He hoped the film would lure the real-life Zodiac Killer to a theater where the director set up further traps to ensnare the murderer.

Before we get to the movie, though, let’s explore some Zodiac Killer facts.

In August 1969, someone claiming to be an active serial slayer wrote taunting letters to San Francisco’s top daily newspapers. At first, the sender issued a 408-character pictogram puzzle in lieu of a signature. Later, he began referring to himself as Zodiac.

Related: 6 Serial Killer Movies Based on Real-Life Murderers 

With each new delivery, a tragic pattern emerged. The Zodiac would take out a target, fire off a letter to the press and, eventually, strike again.

Authorities worked frantically to identify the mystery assailant, but to no avail. That’s when Tom Hanson, owner of a restaurant chain called Pizza Man and part-time filmmaker, took action.

The erstwhile Pizza Man himself rushed Zodiac into production, filmed fast and slapped it together frantically (a fact that becomes obvious when, at one point, a scene ends with the director audibly yelling, “Cut!”).

zodiac killer movie
  • camera-icon
  • Golden Gate Theater

    Photo Credit: Wikimedia Commons

From there, Hanson booked Zodiac at the Golden Gate Theater just off Market Street, San Francisco's major throughway and tourist attraction. Believing that the Zodiac Killer must be so egotistical that he wouldn’t be able to avoid seeing the film, Hanson aimed to catch the psycho right on the spot.

In the theater lobby, Hanson set up a motorcycle giveaway as part of a cross-promotion with Kawasaki. Everyone who bought a ticket got a yellow card with an open-ended prompt, “I think the Zodiac kills because…”

Related: Gary L. Stewart Thinks He Knows Who the Zodiac Killer Is–His Father  

Attendees would then jot down a theory, along with their name and address, and place the card in a box.

Unbeknownst to the entrants, a Hanson associate was hidden inside the box, analyzing the responses—trying to match the handwriting on each card to that of the letters sent to newspapers by the Zodiac Killer.

In addition, Hanson had somebody else staked out inside an ice cream freezer, watching the crowd as it passed by. The only real hitch occurred when “one of the guys almost died because the g–damn vent wasn’t working right and we left him in there too long.”

In a stunningly informative and entertaining interview with the titanic cult film site Temple of Schlock, Hanson explains his plan:

“In the lobby on the second floor, I had a display built that didn’t look like there could be anybody underneath it. The motorcycle was on top of that, and the box was there to drop yellow cards in…

If a card came through that had some significance, [the guy in the box] was supposed to push a button that would alert all of us. I also had a guy in a freezer, one guy across the street, one guy in the theater, and one guy in the office, and we just kept more or less alert.

People went and saw the movie, and they dropped those cards in to win the free motorcycle. We would look at them, and there was all kinds of bull— in there — ‘He kills because he’s been treated badly,’ on and on. And then on the fifth or sixth night, I forget which night it was, one of those yellow cards came through the box – ‘I was here, the Zodiac.’ That was all that was on there.”

In the same Q&A, Hanson also said that he believes he encountered the Zodiac Killer face-to-face in the theater’s restroom.

The director claims that, while relieving himself, someone snuck up behind him and said, Y’know, real blood doesn’t come out like that!”

zodiac killer movie
  • camera-icon
  • Sketch of the Zodiac Killer

    Photo Credit: San Francisco Police Department

Upon turning around, the speaker looked unmistakably like the sketch on the Zodiac’s SFPD wanted poster. In a panic, Hanson assembled his team. They grabbed the patron in question and dragged him into the theater office.

The six amateur sleuths interrogated the guy. According to Hanson, the man remained unshaken by their accusations. Eventually, their suspect calmly talked them into letting him just walk out.

Hanson claims the guy returned the next day, said, “I just thought I’d stop by and see if everything is okay”, and then left.

Related: 8 Serial Killers Who Were Never Caught  

The director maintains that even if that oddball wasn’t the actual killer, he still believe he was most likely the one who claimed to be Zodiac on the yellow contest card.

When asked why he didn’t pursue the lead even further, Hanson says, “I had to leave... you gotta try and make a living.” That’s show biz!

The new Zodiac Killer Blu-ray contains even more interviews with Hanson, other special features about this one-of-a-kind moment in movie history, as well as a second off-the-wall true-crime cash-in feature, 1977’s Another Son of Sam.

Read more: Temple of Schlock; American Genre Film Archive; Dangerous Minds