• Network: Netflix
  • Series Premiere Date: Dec 16, 2020
Metascore
62

Generally favorable reviews - based on 5 Critic Reviews

Critic score distribution:
  1. Positive: 3 out of 5
  2. Negative: 0 out of 5
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Critic Reviews

  1. Reviewed by: Nick Schager
    Dec 21, 2020
    80
    Interviews with their families and friends, conducted in the ‘70s and recently, further foreground their tragic plights. At the same time, Wood and Vile’s wealth of archival material not only retraces the police’s steps—and reporters’ efforts to cover them—but creates a powerful sense of life in West Yorkshire circa the second half of the ‘70s, when economic hardship led to rising unemployment, infrastructural breakdowns, and an air of modernity fraying at the seams.
  2. Reviewed by: Joel Keller
    Dec 16, 2020
    80
    Even though the case has been settled for almost 40 years — and Sutcliffe died in November — The Ripper is fascinating to us because it will examine the underlying factors that slowed down the investigation, instead of talking about the killer himself.
  3. Reviewed by: Ryan Lattanzio
    Dec 21, 2020
    75
    It becomes as challenging for the viewer to distinguish between the victims as it did for investigators, and that appears to be by design. But the series nimbly shows how economic despair caused by a rapidly over-industrialized England forced women like McCann, Emily Jackson, Irene Richardson, Patricia Atkinson, and many more into the streets and made them prey to a misogynistic killer. It’s also hard to look away from the trainwreck of miscommunication passing around the police department.
  4. Reviewed by: Ashlie D. Stevens
    Dec 21, 2020
    40
    While the series "The Ripper" attempts to dismantle some of that celebrity, instead putting police incompetence in the spotlight, it still neglects to truly center Sutcliffe's victims. Perhaps it's time to retire both the moniker and the same tired retellings of stories where sex workers are portrayed as one-dimensional or culpable in some way for the killer's crimes.
  5. Reviewed by: Ed Power
    Dec 16, 2020
    40
    At just four hours, Ripper is a relatively brisk retelling of the case. But it doesn’t achieve anything that Williams’s The Yorkshire Ripper Files didn’t do better. Beyond pandering to a ghoulish fascination with Sutcliffe, there really is little reason for it to exist.
User Score
7.4

Generally favorable reviews- based on 8 Ratings

User score distribution:
  1. Positive: 6 out of 8
  2. Negative: 0 out of 8
  1. Nov 20, 2021
    8
    Didn’t know much about the Yorkshire ripper until I saw this documentary and what a shock it was. RIP victims
  2. Jan 15, 2021
    8
    While it covers the crimes in detail, it's greatest strength is when it delves into the procedural errors that lead to Sutcliffe roaming freeWhile it covers the crimes in detail, it's greatest strength is when it delves into the procedural errors that lead to Sutcliffe roaming free for so long, as well as the effect his crimes had on the community, particularly the women. Full Review »
  3. Dec 22, 2020
    10
    binged it in one session, everyone who loves true crime its a must watch, very addicting stuff