Is Lizzie Borden Took An Axe Based On A True Story?

2025-12-09 11:48:03 152

5 回答

Quincy
Quincy
2025-12-10 01:14:25
The Borden murders are the OG true crime obsession—pre-dating podcasts by a century. That rhyme cemented it in pop culture, but the real case was grimmer. No flashy courtroom speeches, just a daughter smelling paint during the inquest (weird flex). The movie’s fun if you want campy vibes, but for depth, I recommend Paula Vogel’s play 'The Mineola Twins,' which ties the case to broader themes of female rage. What sticks with me is how Lizzie’s story reflects societal fears—uncontrolled women, hidden violence behind picket fences. The truth might be lost, but the unease lingers.
Grayson
Grayson
2025-12-11 12:12:51
Oh, the Lizzie Borden case is one of those chilling true crime stories that feels almost too wild to be real! The rhyme 'Lizzie Borden took an axe' definitely oversimplifies it, but yeah, the 1892 murders of her father and stepmother in Fall River, Massachusetts, were very much real. The trial was a media circus, with Lizzie acquitted despite all the suspicion. What fascinates me is how pop culture keeps revisiting it—from cheap tabloid retellings to nuanced dramas like 'The Legend of Lizzie Borden.' The lack of concrete evidence left so much room for speculation—was it really her? A disgruntled servant? The ambiguity makes it perfect for adaptations, but the core tragedy was very real.

I’ve fallen down rabbit holes reading old newspaper archives about the case, and the details are haunting. The brutality of the attacks, the stifling Victorian morality shaping the trial… It’s no wonder it became folklore. Even if later shows like 'American horror story' took creative liberties, they tapped into that lingering cultural unease. True crime buffs still debate it over coffee—proof that some stories just won’t die.
Will
Will
2025-12-11 20:07:00
Growing up near Fall River, I heard the Borden case treated like local ghost lore—whispered at sleepovers with extra gory details. The TV movie 'Lizzie Borden Took an Axe' (2014) plays fast and loose with facts, but the bones are true: two people murdered, an unlikable heiress as prime suspect, and a verdict that left everyone side-eyeing the legal system. What’s wild is how Lizzie’s life after the trial gets glossed over. She lived decades free but ostracized, which kinda feels like its own gothic novel. The house is now a B&B where tourists dare to sleep in the murder room—morbid, but hey, capitalism! The real story’s messier than any adaptation: class tensions, unreliable witnesses, and that infamous 'burned a dress' moment. Makes you wonder how much 'based on' really means when profit’s involved.
Ian
Ian
2025-12-13 20:39:34
Yep, 100% true—and way messier than the rhyme suggests. The film amps up the gore, but reality had its own drama: Lizzie’s alibi shifting, that weird inquest where she laughed. I binged trial transcripts once, and wow, the circumstantial evidence was thick. Yet she walked. Whether it’s movies, books, or ghost tours, we keep retelling it because the unanswered questions itch. My hot take? The Hatchet was just the beginning; the real weapon was gossip.
Abigail
Abigail
2025-12-14 05:00:30
True story? Absolutely. Accurate adaptation? Eh, depends. The 2014 film cranks up the melodrama—Lizzie snarling, blood splatter artistry—but the core facts align. No one disputes Andrew and Abby Borden’s murders happened. The debate’s always been about Lizzie’s guilt. The movie leans hard into her as a calculated killer, while historians waffle. My take? She probably did it, but Victorian sexism meant the jury couldn’t fathom a proper lady swinging an axe. The real intrigue is how true crime morphs in retellings. Like how 'Lizzie' (2018) framed it as feminist rebellion. Truth’s slippery, but the axe (allegedly) isn’t.
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5 回答2025-10-16 09:50:38
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2 回答2025-10-17 23:39:44
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