The documentary Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers takes us on a haunting journey into the life of Aileen Wuornos, a woman whose story defies easy categorisation. The film opens by tracing her tumultuous childhood in Michigan, where she faced abandonment, abuse and early trauma. This early arc helps set the stage for understanding how a vulnerable young woman drifted into sex work, hitchhiking and a transient lifestyle long before her crimes began.

From 1989 to 1990, Wuornos committed a string of murders across central Florida, targeting men she encountered at truck stops or while hitchhiking. The documentary emphasises that her case shocked the public and law-enforcement alike because she did not fit the stereotypical serial killer profile at the time: she was female, had been a sex worker, and claimed self-defence in many of the shootings. As the film unfolds, we see how the investigation progressed: forensic links, witness statements and eventually her arrest in January 1991.
One of the most compelling aspects of the documentary is that it includes rare death-row interviews with Wuornos herself, giving her a voice in the narrative for the first time in many years. Through her remarks we are reminded that behind the sensational headlines lay a deeply troubled individual grappling with her own self-image and motivations: she even states, “The real Aileen Wuornos isn’t a serial killer… I was so lost I turned into one.”
In parallel, the film examines how the media and culture responded: the framing of Wuornos as a “female serial killer,” the moral panic surrounding her crimes, and the ways society struggled to understand her. The documentary doesn’t just recount facts: it asks thorny questions about trauma, identity, justice and the meaning of self-defence. The archival footage, audio recordings and interviews with people close to her combine to paint a multi-layered portrait of someone both vilified and, paradoxically, humanised.
The direction by Emily Turner is measured and reflective rather than sensationalist. Rather than simply dramatise the grim facts, the film pauses on the silences, the landscapes where the crimes occurred, and on emotional undercurrents. Viewers are invited to sit with the discomfort of unanswered questions: Were these murders purely acts of revenge? Was she driven by a lifetime of abuse? Or by choices she made under desperate circumstances? The documentary leaves space for reflection.
In its final stretch, Aileen: Queen of the Serial Killers reminds us that the story does not end with conviction and execution. Wuornos was executed in 2002, but her cultural legacy has persisted: in films like Monster, in true-crime podcasts, lectures and debates about female violence and victimhood. This film becomes not just a retelling of one woman’s crimes, but also a meditation on who we consider monsters, victims, survivors — and how society chooses to listen. For anyone ready to confront uncomfortable truths about crime, gender and humanity, this documentary offers a bold and thought-provoking experience.





