The Staircase

2022 - 5 - 5

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Image courtesy of "The Ringer"

'The Staircase' Explores a New, Meta Dimension of the True Crime ... (The Ringer)

The HBO Max drama poses questions beyond its central murder mystery as the documentary and media storm it's based on becomes the story itself.

It’s still rare for a show like The Staircase, which largely exists due to the wild popularity of its namesake, to acknowledge a third party in the relationship between a grim tale and its eager consumers. The Staircase’s pivot to a more meta direction doesn’t come until several hours in, and critics didn’t get to see it play out in full. In its first iteration, The Staircase condensed thousands of hours of footage into an exhaustive survey of the Peterson case and its many inconsistencies. It’s only once the initial verdict comes down and the action moves from the courtroom to the editing booth that The Staircase’s endgame truly comes into focus. The renewed suspicions around Elizabeth’s death, initially attributed to a cerebral hemorrhage, are a boon for the district attorney and an existential nightmare for two young women forced to question the very premise of their family. We are in the midst of a true crime boom within a true crime boom. And unlike Inventing Anna, which centered a journalist to the detriment of its primary plot, The Staircase proves far more purposeful in zooming out from story to storytellers. It’s also a story about, well, The Staircase. The final three episodes were produced by Netflix, also the distributor of Tiger King, Bad Vegan, Making a Murderer, and more bingeable rabbit holes. At first, The Staircase appears to be one more ripple in this cresting wave. Few cases are as high profile as the 2001 death of Durham, North Carolina’s Kathleen Peterson, potentially at the hands of her husband Michael, who was convicted of her murder in 2003. Not only have the past few years seen an explosion in podcasts, shows, and docuseries to feed a seemingly limitless appetite for gristle and gore; the past few weeks alone have seen a run of scripted adaptations, translating the lurid violence and dense facts into the somber rhythms of prestige TV. Peacock’s Joe vs.

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Image courtesy of "The Washington Post"

'The Staircase' has more twists than the true-crime doc it's based on (The Washington Post)

Colin Firth and Toni Collette star in HBO Max's "The Staircase," an uneven retelling of the famous case that's more intimate yet more meta.

“The Staircase” does limit some of its own potential by orbiting the docuseries so closely. The twists in the making of the docuseries, it turns out, rival the bizarre swerves in the homicide case itself. Against that lackluster standard, HBO Max’s dramatization of “The Staircase” — based on the French docuseries of the same name, which first debuted stateside in 2005 and added updates in 2013 and 2018 — is at least notable for trying something new. The dozens of cuts and wounds discovered on Kathleen’s body — but especially the seven deep lacerations on her scalp — persuade her sisters (Rosemarie DeWitt and Maria Dizzia), as well as her sole biological daughter, Caitlin (Olivia DeJonge), that Michael is responsible for her death. In contrast to most of its peers, the well-acted yet droopily paced eight-part miniseries challenges its audience to think more critically about its nonfiction predecessor, the storytelling choices it made and why. Just since February, we’ve gotten the scammer tales “ Inventing Anna” and “ The Dropout,” the murder mysteries “The Thing About Pam” and “ Under the Banner of Heaven,” and revisits of life-altering legal woes like “ Pam & Tommy,” “Joe vs.

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Image courtesy of "Radio Times"

Meet the cast of The Staircase and their real-life counterparts (Radio Times)

Colin Firth and Toni Collette lead the cast of HBO Max and Sky/NOW's The Staircase, which adapts the Netflix documentary into a thrilling eight-part drama.

What else has Tim Guinee been in? What else has Juliette Binoche been in? What else has Cullen Moss been in? What else has Parker Posey been in? What else has Rosemarie DeWitt been in? What else has Olivia DeJonge been in? What else has Odessa Young been in? What else has Sophie Turner been in? What else has Dane DeHaan been in? What else has Patrick Schwarzenegger been in? What else has Toni Collette been in? What else has Michael Stuhlbarg been in?

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Image courtesy of "BBC News"

The Staircase: The riveting tale of an unsolved mystery (BBC News)

A new true-crime series explores an unexplained 2001 death – but how does it compare to the gripping 2004 documentary of the same crime, asks Caryn James.

There is even a third audience of people fascinated enough by the case to go down a rabbit hole of research. He planned to use the Peterson case to examine the justice system from both the prosecution's and the defence's points of view. The fictional version, for example, depicts Jean-Xavier (Vincent Vermignon) and his producer in Paris searching for the subject of their next film. We come to see that he is a proven liar, who falsely claimed during a campaign for public office that he had won a Purple Heart for serving in Vietnam. Lying, of course, doesn't make him a killer. Sophie Turner is a strong presence as Margaret, the older of the two daughters Peterson adopted after their mother died (that's a whole other subplot and piece of evidence). Tim Guinee plays Peterson's loyal brother, Bill, thoroughly convincing us they could be siblings. It starts in 2017 when Peterson is about to go to court to finalise his plea, and quickly goes back to December 2001 when he makes a frantic emergency call, saying that his wife is unconscious. In one of the best fictional scenes, Kathleen angrily calls him "the great dissembler", capable of deflecting and talking his way out of almost anything. Throughout, the show flashes back to Kathleen and their family life, and forward to his legal battle. In 2013 and 2017, De Lestrade made two sequels, chronicling Peterson's release after eight years in prison and the plea deal that set him free for good. The defence said they had a lovely marriage and she died in a fall down a sharply-angled staircase. A reasonable conclusion, after watching the documentary, is that there are holes in both arguments. A scattershot structure and a couple of underwritten major characters, including Kathleen (Toni Collette) and Peterson's attorney, David Rudolf (Michael Stuhlbarg), make the show less taut and suspenseful than a crime story should be.

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Image courtesy of "iNews"

In The Staircase, Colin Firth shines new light on a true crime case ... (iNews)

The new drama takes a wider look at the phenomenon of 'The Staircase', inspired by the 2004 documentary.

The law says he did play a part in his wife’s death, but that sliver of doubt casts an unignorable shadow over The Staircase. True crime can sometimes feel predatory – a way to dig up old pain for the sake of entertainment – but Michael’s trial and the subsequent series invites viewers to engage with the topic on a more introspective level. Now, for the first time, the case has been dramatised in a new HBO Max series – showing in the UK on Sky Atlantic and Now – The Staircase. Michael became close with the filmmakers over the years, and as each new instalment of his story raked over evidence and peeled back the layers of his personality, doubt over whether he had a hand in his wife’s death grew. That we are still obsessed with the death of Kathleen Peterson comes down to the mastery of the storytelling it has inspired. The gruesome image is one of the first shocking pieces of evidence shown in The Staircase, the 2004 documentary series that is often credited with kickstarting the true crime boom that has gripped readers and viewers over the last two decades. A well-made, balanced courtroom drama, The Staircase revealed a man wracked with grief, yet strangely charismatic – a joker and a family man, accused of the worst crime imaginable.

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Image courtesy of "CNN"

'The Staircase' review: Colin Firth stars in an HBO Max series that ... (CNN)

There are many levels to "The Staircase," a drama as much about the making of the docuseries chronicling Michael Peterson's murder trial as the salacious ...

There's also the issue of how prosecutors leveraged that information, recognizing how it might play to a jury in 2003. (Netflix, notably, revisited the original 2004 series in 2018 The result is a production that constantly seems to be reassessing what we know, versus what we might think or assume, about what transpired.

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Image courtesy of "Variety"

'The Staircase' Writers on Michael Peterson's Queerness and ... (Variety)

Antonio Campos and Maggie Cohn spoke with Variety about adapting the seminal true crime series for HBO Max.

So that was always fun and was always in the forefront of the situations that we decided to put her in. So talking to people that worked with her, neighbors, friends, we started to construct a version of Kathleen. At the end of the day, this is a dramatized version of Kathleen based on a lot of things that we knew happened to Kathleen Peterson, that we knew Kathleen Peterson did and the kind of person she was. Ultimately, what we wanted to show is that people are capable of all sorts of things and to see something in themselves in him, as well. We knew how he spoke about it, and the ease with which he spoke about it, which was also a big part of what was fascinating in the documentary. CAMPOS: We anticipated that there are going to be people that jump on us about certain things, or want to put up a magnifying glass on certain parts of the story, and that’s fine. The discourse wasn’t happening, and that was part of the tension in the family. The world that the story starts off with in 2001 is very different from the world that Michael Peterson is in in 2017. No matter what the jury said afterwards, which is that they didn’t take that into consideration, we all know that they heard it and that it affected their perspective of Michael Peterson and that the D.A. knew that that would be the case. I want to get into something that really blew me away in the series, which was the aspect of queerness that comes through Michael Peterson, but also in so many other characters. They were there, they were part of the fabric of the story. That just feels like the best way to try and represent what is a very complicated series of events. The series pioneered a new, episodic style of gripping documentary storytelling, and in real-time revealed the details of Kathleen’s death, Michael’s trial and its aftermath, becoming an object of cult fascination that persists to this day.

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Image courtesy of "Vanity Fair"

The Staircase: Unraveling Michael Peterson's Real-Life ... (Vanity Fair)

How did The Staircase filmmakers' relationship with Michael affect the original 2004 docuseries? HBO Max's adaptation attempts to find out with a meta story ...

“The problem with any subject, as Maggie said, is that once you put on the camera, are you getting the real person?” adds Campos. “Are you getting someone performing? Playing devil’s advocate, Campos counters, “And I would argue that a good documentarian has to get close to a subject, to a certain degree, to get them to open up. Asked whether Campos had conversations about filmmaker-subject distance with de Lestrade, Campos says, “I think that Jean would argue that he was able to maintain his distance enough to know when Michael was putting on a show for the camera and when he felt like he was being more genuine. I got a very small taste of what that’s like to try to keep up that boundary…it’s very difficult, or it was for me.” I mean, I was in a three-hour conversation and I was struggling with it,” says Cohn. “So imagine, over the course of two years, trying to keep that separation and that distance when you’re so intimately connected. The fireplace tool, which mysteriously reappeared after an extensive search, was central to an episode in the original series titled “The Blowpoke Returns.” But Campos said that seeing the uncut footage from that plot twist gave him additional insight into Michael, who is played on the new miniseries by Colin Firth.

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Image courtesy of "NBC News"

'The Staircase' recasts focus in Kathleen Peterson murder case (NBC News)

The HBO Max show, based on the documentary series of the same name, stars Colin Firth as Michael Peterson and Toni Collette as his wife Kathleen.

“Over the years, the story just continued to get more and more interesting and complicated,” Campos said of the Peterson murder case. At some point in 2009, while Michael was imprisoned, a new theory of Kathleen's death emerged: she was attacked by an owl from outside that caused her to fall down the stairs and lose consciousness after hitting her head. “This particular retelling of it just balances out the relationship between Kathleen and Michael and gives a voice to someone who really isn’t present in the documentary.” And in 2003, Michael was convicted of first-degree murder and sentenced to life in prison. “I hope that viewers actually get a real insight into this intriguing family,” said Turner, who portrays Margaret Ratliff, one of Michael’s adopted daughters. The true crime story was turned into a 2004 popular docuseries, "The Staircase."

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Image courtesy of "The Guardian"

The Staircase review – Colin Firth and Toni Collette scale the ... (The Guardian)

The notorious documentary series about the death of an author's wife gets a star-packed fictionalisation that is practically fizzing with tension.

The former is slippery and arrogant, putting in a performance that teeters on so many brinks – deeply loving yet coercive with family, paralysed with grief yet sociopathically detached, self-indulgent yet narcissistic – that you cannot help watching to see if and which way he will fall. As evidence against Michael grows – if not probative of murder, then at least of the fact that he is not quite the man they thought he was – the family begins to fracture. It skates close to becoming disorientating – particularly when Lestrade (Vincent Vermignon) and his documentary team turn up to make their film – but the timeline-hopping generally adds to the growing tension. The subsequent investigation revealed a millefeuille of layers to the man, the family and the story. Then we move back again to a few months before, when Michael, Kathleen (Toni Collette) and their children/wards (one from Kathleen’s previous relationship, four from Michael’s) have gathered for a family dinner and college send-off for one of them. He claimed he found her at the foot of the stairs she had fallen down while drunk and cradled her as he called the emergency services and she breathed her last.

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Image courtesy of "Manchester Evening News"

The real story behind The Staircase and popular Netflix documentary (Manchester Evening News)

HBO's new Sky Atlantic drama has reignited interest in the Mr and Mrs Peterson murder case.

Mr Peterson was the last person to see her alive. A friend of the Petersons in Germany, her body was found at the bottom of a staircase with a coroner deeming her death to have been as a result of a haemorrhage, which caused her to fall down the stairs. The Petersons had dinner with Ratliff and her daughters that night, but Mr Peterson stayed to help put her children to bed. A case which saw twists unravel and revelations unveiled, Mr Peterson was ultimately convicted of his wife's murder after finding her at the bottom of the family home's stairs. This is despite Kathleen and her children she had with Michael reportedly accepting his sexuality. It concluded she had died from blood loss ninety minutes to two hours after sustaining the injuries.

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Image courtesy of "Radio Times"

How to watch The Staircase documentary which inspired Sky drama (Radio Times)

For almost two decades, true crime fans have been fascinated by the fate of Kathleen Peterson, whose death was examined in a groundbreaking documentary ...

The show’s creator, de Lestrade, told Digital Spy in 2018: “Now, the judge has given the final answer, and nobody can come back to that. Peterson, who insists that he is innocent to this day, was convicted of murdering Kathleen in 2001 and sentenced to life in prison. The launch of The Staircase (2022) on HBO Max in the US and Sky Atlantic/NOW in the UK is sure to reignite interest in the documentary series that first brought the case to international attention.

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Image courtesy of "The Globe and Mail"

Now a drama series, The Staircase mystery will last forever (The Globe and Mail)

Originally a classic true-crime documentary series, the case of Michael Peterson makes for a gripping series.

Much married, he was, at one point, in league with judges and U.S. social security officials, and part of the thrust of the story is the sheer complexity of the government system and the inadequate oversight. Also note the arrival of The Big Conn (streams AppleTV+), a four part docu-series that is, yes, about a scam artist. It opens the story out to present Kathleen (Toni Collette) as a woman weary of nurturing a blended family – her kids and Michael’s – and mentally racked by knowing about her husband’s other life as a bisexual with male lovers. As the trial and then retrial go on and on, the family splinters, with some remaining loyal to Michael and others at first suspicious and then repulsed. The Staircase (HBO, streams Crave) is new, a dramatization of the case. What happened to Peterson on a December night in 2001 has been the focus of much scrutiny.

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Image courtesy of "NationalWorld"

Is The Staircase a true story? Where is Michael Peterson now - and ... (NationalWorld)

It stars Colin Firth as novelist Michael Peterson, and Toni Collette as his wife, Kathleen.

You will be treated as guilty for murdering my sister Kathleen, and you will be a convicted felon forever.” It just didn’t happen," he said at the time. “It’s been a long and winding road, but well worth the wait... “Michael Peterson, you are pleading guilty to voluntary manslaughter. Peterson still wears his wedding ring, and claimed at the time of his release that he had tried not to be bitter about the years he had spent fighting the case. His release came after a judge ordered a new trial after it was discovered that one of the key witnesses against Peterson had given "deliberately false" testimony.

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Image courtesy of "British Vogue"

'The Staircase' Is Respectable Crime Drama At Its Addictive Best (British Vogue)

Privilege, legal wrangling and violent death in a handsome eight-part package: Vogue reviews 'The Staircase' on HBO and Sky Atlantic, starring Colin Firth ...

But the combination of marquee names, auteur production, and potboiler plotting has proved irresistible. The Staircase shares a title and subject with the award-winning 2005 television documentary series by Jean-Xavier de Lestrade. That Staircase, which aired on Canal+, the BBC, and the Sundance Channel and now can be found (with its less successful sequel episodes) on Netflix, has become a kind of ur-text of the true crime boom. Sharp Objects, The Undoing, Mare of Easttown: none of these could plausibly be called art, and if you took away the A-listers involved (the Nicoles, the Kates, the Amys) you might ignore them entirely.

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