TIME

Charles Manson: the man, the myth, the misreading

CHARLES MANSON NEVER RELEASED HIS GRIP ON THE American imagination. Since 1969, when his “Family” committed mass murder in L.A., he’s inspired operas, YA novels, South Park episodes. But the years surrounding his 2017 death and the 50th anniversary of the slayings have seen a surge in Manson mania. Beyond Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time… in Hollywood, Family lore has fueled Emma Cline’s buzzy novel The Girls, Mary Harron’s indie film Charlie Says, and parts of the shows Mindhunter and American Horror Story. Every month seems to bring a new memoir or podcast or TV special.

The latest is a six-part Epix docuseries from director and producer Lesley Chilcott with executive producers including the ubiquitous television creator Greg Berlanti. While schlocky Manson-ploitation projects make no attempt to avoid redundancy, nobly aspires to say something new. As Chilcott sees it, the Black-vs.-white race war Manson prophesied—and dubbed “Helter Skelter,” to help convince his followers that the Beatles’ White Album was a coded message intended specifically for them—wasn’t the true catalyst of the Tate-LaBianca murders. Manson, she argues, was simply a grifter looking to cover up earlier crimes and, ultimately, get famous. It’s a canny thesis; if only it weren’t submerged in such a conventional retelling of the Manson saga.

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from TIME

TIME2 min read
What’s With All The Cicadas?
More than a trillion noisy, inch-long (or larger) cicadas have surfaced from underground across much of the U.S. this spring, in a massive co-emergence that hasn’t been seen in more than 200 years. It was the first time since 1803—when Thomas Jeffers
TIME2 min readPolitical Ideologies
The Party Of Mandela Fails To Deliver
The African National Congress has led South Africa’s government since the end of apartheid in 1994. But as voters go to the polls on May 29, there’s good reason to wonder whether the ANC might be in real trouble. During the ANC’s most recent term in
TIME2 min read
A Man In Full, Adapted And Redacted
Tom Wolfe’s A Man in Full is a massive book, in more ways than one. The 742-page social novel about a swaggering Atlanta real estate mogul, which took Wolfe over a decade to write, sold a jaw-dropping 1.4 million hardcover copies after its publicatio

Related Books & Audiobooks