True Crime in 2025: New Voices, Old Stories
USATue Mar 17 2026
The year 2025 offered a surprising shift in the true‑crime world, moving away from flashy rehashes and toward deeper, more human stories.
Some releases still followed the old formula: a new angle on a famous serial killer or a celebrity drama that feels rushed to beat online rivals.
But many filmmakers stepped outside the usual tropes, focusing instead on victims’ families, questioning who we label as heroes or villains, and using unconventional footage to tell the story.
One film dives into a chilling cyber‑stalking case in Michigan’s tight‑knit community. 13‑year‑old Lauryn Licari and her boyfriend faced harassing, intimate messages from an unknown number for over a year. The director shows the investigation and the emotional toll on the couple, culminating in a dramatic police body‑cam moment that reveals the stalker’s identity.
The Tylenol murders of 1982, long discussed for their impact on product safety and corporate reputation, were revisited with fresh insight. A new documentary includes an interview with a convicted extortionist who once claimed he could stop the killings for money, and it explores theories that an insider might have been involved.
In Idaho, four university students were killed in a tragic campus‑off‑site shooting. A film produced years later captures the families’ grief and the suspect’s eventual guilty plea, allowing the story to stay centered on those affected rather than the perpetrator.
The “mortician” drama takes a different approach, presenting a funeral‑home owner’s ruthless business practices that led to a scandal. The narrative, shaped by interviews with the man himself and his victims, reads less like a crime thriller and more like an exposé on corporate greed.
Liz Garbus’s work on the Gilgo Beach killings brings attention to how authorities’ slow response may have been influenced by victims’ professions. The documentary highlights the families of four sex workers who were murdered, offering a humanizing perspective that counters stigma.
A meta‑documentary about the Zodiac Killer examines why the genre often recycles the same unsolved mystery. Instead of chasing a killer, it critiques how true‑crime productions sometimes prioritize style over substance.
Geeta Gandbhir’s film on a Florida murder exposes systemic violence and the dangers of “stand‑your‑ground” laws. Using body‑cam footage, it turns a personal tragedy into a broader critique of social injustice.
In another piece, the creators investigate how communities deal with unresolved grief when a killer remains unknown for decades. By focusing on the lasting trauma, the film shows how storytelling can provide a form of healing when closure is missing.
Finally, a new series revisits the story of a notorious prison in Alabama, using covert footage and inmate testimony to reveal ongoing abuse. The filmmakers risked their safety for the truth, and their work earned an Academy Award nomination, underscoring how true crime can spark real change.
These 2025 releases collectively push the genre toward more ethical storytelling, centering victims and questioning the very definition of justice.
https://localnews.ai/article/true-crime-in-2025-new-voices-old-stories-df7e2c1d
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