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  • Monster: The Josef Fritzl Story on Random Stomach-Churning Documentaries About Inbred Families

    (#1) Monster: The Josef Fritzl Story

    • Daisy Beaumont, Josef Fritzl, Elisabeth Fritzl, Rosemarie Fritzl

    One of Austria’s most notorious criminals is Josef Fritzl, a man who kept his daughter Elisabeth captive in a cellar below his house and repeatedly assaulted her for 24 years. As this 2010 documentary about Fritzl recounts, then-18-year-old Elisabeth was kept in a prison cell her father had been built and designed as a hidden extension of the basement. It had three cells, a toilet, and appliances for cooking.

    Fritzl impregnated his daughter numerous times, and Elisabeth gave birth to seven children. Three were raised in the chamber with her, while another three were raised in the above apartment by Fritzl and his unwitting wife. The seventh died at only a few days old after Fritzl denied the sick newborn medical care.

    Elisabeth and her basement children were rescued in 2008 when the eldest daughter, Kerstin, had to be taken to the hospital. Fritzl tried to come up with an elaborate lie to explain the girl’s condition, but suspicious health professionals alerted the police, who placed him under arrest.

  • (#2) 'Incest: A Family Tragedy'

    In the 2007 documentary Incest: A Family Tragedy, director Edward Blackoff offers real interviews with real offenders. The film is overwhelmingly a call to action, as it asks people to become a part of a community effort to prevent child sexual abuse, specifically in the home.

    "Over my entire life," one assailant who spoke to the filmmaker said, "I’ve probably had a hundred, hundred fifty victims."

    Blackoff also interviews victims, law enforcement personnel, medical professionals, and social service officials to shape a piece that addresses how the system is failing to protect and prevent victims. 

  • 'Brothers & Sisters in Love' on Random Stomach-Churning Documentaries About Inbred Families

    (#3) 'Brothers & Sisters in Love'

    The internet has allowed more people to reach out to individuals from their past, like long-lost parents and siblings. But when they meet in real life, something called “Genetic Sexual Attraction” can make it a bit more complicated. The 2008 documentary Brothers & Sisters in Love explores one such story about German siblings.

    One expert in the film explains "Genetic Sexual Attraction" as an increasingly more common occurrence: "If you meet someone and one sees the genetic similarities without even knowing it, this could trigger a... very, very powerful erotic charge." When estranged siblings Patrick Stübing and Susan Karolewski met in 2000, they reportedly experienced this.

    But when Susan, a minor, became pregnant with Patrick’s child, it gave the police hard proof that they were guilty of inappropriate sexual contact. Patrick was imprisoned and attempted to appeal his sentence when the documentary was made. Together they bore four children, but three reportedly suffer disabilities.

  • 'House of Incest' on Random Stomach-Churning Documentaries About Inbred Families

    (#4) 'House of Incest'

    This French documentary from 2010, released under the original foreign title Incestefamilles empoisonnées, investigates seven separate cases of incest in which each were assaulted by either a father, uncle, or father-in-law. Years later, they share experiences to help raise awareness. The painful details also highlight the psychological manipulation involved in such cases. One victim, Nadia, was told by her father-in-law: "Anywhere you go, I will find you."

    Another victim, Sandrine - who later started an organization for victims - explains how these crimes unfold: 

    It's a spider web thrown on the child. When an adult in whom he has confidence does that to him, he does not understand. He does not say no. It's not like a stranger assaults him, there is an emotional connection. The child is under control, alone, walled in silence. 

  • (#5) Family Affair

    In this 2010 documentary, Chico Colvard interviews family members three decades after his father's abuse against Colvard's three sisters was revealed. The film explains that Colvard accidentally shot his sister in the leg when he was 10 years old. She was taken to the doctor, and suspicions were raised about the children's home life. The police came to their home, and their father was subsequently imprisoned for harming the children.

    Family Affair follows Colvard and his sisters years later in Kentucky as they discuss their past and struggle with forgiving their father.

  • (#6) 'Journey Through Fire'

    As the aspiring documentary Journey Through Fire recounts, Elisabeth K. was assaulted by her brother throughout her childhood, and he then exchanged access to her for drugs. As an adult, two of Elisabeth's friends strived to create this documentary to inspire hope in those struggling to heal. The film is a personal journey that reveals Elisabeth's raw experience: "I envy all those people that have only been raped once or twice." 

    The movie delves into how survivors of this issue cope with pain and guilt throughout their lives.

  • Just, Melvin on Random Stomach-Churning Documentaries About Inbred Families

    (#7) Just, Melvin

    • James Ronald Whitney, Melvin Just

    The 2000 documentary Just, Melvin: Just Evil recounts one family's torment at the hands of Just Melvin, both a father and stepfather. His numerous victims were all related to the director of the film, James Ronald Whitney, who was subsequently assaulted by one of his uncles. In 1979, Melvin was sentenced to 13 years in prison due to the extensive abuse. 

    Whitney, a broker when he decided to create the film, said that he wanted to draw attention to an insidious situation: ''I want it to serve as a wake-up call to society and as a warning to those monsters like my grandfather who are still out there.''

  • (#8) 'NO! The Rape Documentary'

    NO! The Rape Documentary aims to break the silence on sexual assaults in African-American communities. The 2004 film consults numerous experts on the cause and effect of sexual abuse against children, and why these harmful acts are so often committed by people they trust. 

    The filmmaker, Aishah Shahidah Simmons, is also a survivor who champions the rights of abuse victims across the country: “I had to deal with [the assault], but I wasn’t able to deal with the incest because it was within the family.” Speaking to both men and women, the documentary stresses the importance of a person’s choice and how it all hinges on respecting one word: "NO."

  • (#9) 'VICE News: The Foster Home From Hell'

    In this 2014 documentary short, VICE follows the story of a hippie leader named Jay Ram, who adopted dozens of children and took them to a commune farm in Chico, California, or later to a property in Hawaii. Several of these "brothers" tell stories of being assaulted from a young age and being forced to find more children for Ram to prey on. The first to report Ram was a child named Zane Dittman, who later assaulted a boy himself and took his own life during a police standoff.

    Even after the abuse was discovered, Ram was never convicted. VICE's investigative short film hopes to expose Ram's fraudulent persona as a caring community figure and simultaneously address the institutions and organizations that fostered Ram's alleged actions.

    New "Child Victims Acts" are allowing those who have missed the statute of limitations a period of "revival" in which they may file suits against offenders. In 2012, six of Ram's alleged victims came together to file in Hawaii. 

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