Karla
Based on real events, Paul Bernardo and his wife, Karla Homolka, kidnap, sexually abuse, and murder three young girls.
20 May 1980, Detroit, Michigan, USA
29 September 1948, Chicago, Illinois, USA
25 November 1947, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA
19 January 1946, Jersey City, New Jersey, USA
25 February 1977, Atlanta, Georgia, USA
1943
3 December 1984, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA
9 October 1979, Des Moines, Iowa, USA
22 November 1977
9 August 1959, Montréal, Québec, Canada
2 January 1979, Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
20 August 1974, Massachusetts, USA
15 August 1950, Mammoth Spring, Arkansas, USA
January 20, 2006
What proves most disturbing is the way in which the film portrays Homolka as a victim.
January 20, 2006
Controversial and innately creepy, it left me feeling... well, dirty.
January 20, 2006
In truth, nothing in the movie Karla will add much to the debate, other than serving as yet another reminder. But I do not believe it will do any harm, either.
January 22, 2006
...hopelessly inept and thoroughly awful...
December 08, 2006
Movies about real life serial killers are released frequently. It's when they're missing grief that they become an insult to the memory of the dead.
January 24, 2006
Because we only see one side of the events, "Karla" rings unconvincing and sensationalistic.
August 13, 2006
dispicable
January 20, 2006
You can call it guilty of exploitation, tastelessness or insensitivity if you like, but its greatest failing is a certain deadly pointlessness.
January 21, 2006
Little ambiguity or tension at the core of this hollow karaoke version of the Bernardo-Homolka murders . . . Karla seldom probes its title character's own complicity.
January 20, 2006
No audience, Canadian or otherwise, will learn anything here outside of the macabre facts. Worse, they won't feel anything either, not even -- and this is inexcusable -- for the victims themselves.
April 29, 2006
Victims outshine their captors
March 16, 2007
Things in the movie, like the slasher movie music cues, hint that Karla has exploitation in its veins. The reasons for making it -- and seeing it -- remain more than slightly suspect.

