Perfect Murder, Perfect Town
Perfect Murder, Perfect Town is a 2000 American television miniseries directed by Lawrence Schiller. The teleplay by Tom Topor is based on Schiller's book of the same title.
Including historic news and talk show footage, it covers in great detail what was considered a botched investigation into the murder of six-year-old JonBenét Ramsey, whose body was found in the basement of her Boulder, Colorado home on December 26, 1996. The police and district attorney openly feuded about how the case should be investigated. Their focus on the girl's parents drew intense worldwide media attention that ultimately made the adults appear guilty to the public. It was revealed in 2013 that a grand jury was willing to indict John and Patsy Ramsey with child abuse resulting in death and accessory to first-degree murder. The prosecutor decided against prosecution due to the unlikelihood of a conviction.
The miniseries originally was broadcast by CBS.
Principal Cast
The case includes:- Kris Kristofferson as Lou Smit
- Marg Helgenberger as Patsy Ramsey
- Ronny Cox as John Ramsey
- Dyanne Iandoli as JonBenét Ramsey
- Tyler Sharp as Burke Ramsey
- Scott Cohen as Steve Thomas
- Ken Howard as Alex Hunter
- John Heard as Larry Mason
- Peter Friedman as Peter Hofstrom
- John Rubinstein as Reverend Hoverstock
- Jane Powell as Dance Instructor
- Dennis Boutsikaris as Chief Koby
- Ann-Margret as Nedra Paugh
Principal production credits
- Executive producers – Lawrence Schiller, Richard Waltzer
- Original music – John Cacavas
- Cinematography – Peter Sova
- Production design – Steven Legler
- Art direction – Kevin Egeland
- Set decoration – Eric Weiler
- Costume design – Marilyn Matthews
Critical reception
The Entertainment Weekly critic observed, "The telefilm... is mostly a tedious slog through the legal details interrupted periodically by noxious images... Cox and Helgenberger are called upon to do so much weeping and wailing during the first half hour that you wonder if they'll make it through the full four. Cox's John remains a cipher, but Helgenberger manages to convey much of the melodramatic emotionalism that Patsy has frequently displayed without giving a melodramatic performance herself — that's an achievement, even in a big piece of schlock like Perfect Murder... Taking into account acting performances, script, and direction, Perfect Murder, Perfect Town averages out to a C; combine it with the F-grade moral scruples it took to embark on this exploitive abomination in the first place, however, and you get an all-too-generous D."
Caryn James of The [New York Times] called the film "leaden" and "competently made but dull", but praised Marg Helgenberger and Scott Cohen. She said they "rose above the script" while calling Ronny Cox bland and Kris Kristofferson drab.