Review

  • My wife and I watched this at home on DVD from our public library. It is about 5 hours + or - and presented in 6 episodes. We typically watched 2 per night. As is the norm with these mini series a good 2 to 3 hours of programming is stretched to have it fill 6 episodes so it often gets a bit slow. Still it is a very captivating story from the 1960s Los Angeles.

    India Eisley is Fauna Hodel, raised by a black mother just outside Las Vegas, she always was told she was a mixed race child. But her mom would never tell her much. After digging around in 1965 at age 15 and finding her birth certificate, she learned that Tamar Hodel was her birth mother and she became determined to find her. All that is pretty factual.

    A character was created for dramatic effect, Chris Pine as Jay Singletary, Los Angeles reporter and military veteran of the Korean War. This character suspects Fauna's grandfather, Jefferson Mays as physician George Hodel, in the murder of the Black Dahlia and perhaps other crimes. So the paths of Fauna and Jay eventually get intertwined.

    Another departure from truth comes from depicting George Hodel as living in Los Angeles during the 1960s when in fact he had left the country around 1950 after his trial.

    Still it is all a very interesting presentation, Fauna did find her mother, in Hawaii, and grew up to have an interesting and productive life, dying only in 2017 at the age of 66.