Zodiac Killer Project
ZODIAC KILLER PROJECT drops us into absence. There’s no dramatic reenactment. No archival bombshell. No grieving family framed in soft focus. Instead, Charlie Shackleton narrates a film that never got made. And somehow, that very documentation becomes the film. The premise is unpretentious. Shackleton had the makings of a traditional true crime documentary, centered around a highway patrolman’s obsessive theory about the Zodiac Killer. He gathered interviews. He shot moody California B-roll of freeways and parking lots where violence once lingered. Then the rights fell through. The project collapsed. What remains is what we see, with a twist, a reconstruction of an unrealized documentary and a dissection of the genre that might have contained it. That concept alone could’ve turned into an indulgent exercise in self-worth, but it doesn’t.