Movie · 2007 · Crime, Mystery, Thriller · 2h 37m · R · English
Curator score: 8.4/10 (2.4M ratings)
There's more than one way to lose your life to a killer.
Overview
Over the course of a decade, editors of the San Francisco Chronicle entice themselves in the murders of the Zodiac Killer. However, as time runs its course, interest in the case dwindles in the eyes of the professionals. The Killer stops interacting with the public. However, believing he has the answers, an amateur cartoonist from the initial sightings races against time to prevent what he believes is another murder.
Ratings
Curator score: 8.4/10
IMDb: 7.7/10
Letterboxd: 4.02/5
Rotten Tomatoes: 90%
Metacritic: 79
TMDB: 7.5/10
Director
David Fincher
Production
Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros. Pictures, Phoenix Pictures
Cast
Jake Gyllenhaal, Mark Ruffalo, Anthony Edwards, Robert Downey Jr., Chloë Sevigny, Elias Koteas, John Carroll Lynch, Brian Cox, Dermot Mulroney, Charles Fleischer, Zach Grenier, Philip Baker Hall, James Le Gros, Donal Logue, Richmond Arquette, Bob Stephenson, John Lacy, Ed Setrakian, John Getz, John Terry
Where to watch
Paramount Plus Premium, Paramount Plus Essential
Curator Review
Verdict
A meticulous, unsettling procedural that turns a true-crime investigation into a study of obsession, institutional frustration, and the cost of not knowing. It’s long, controlled, and deliberately anti-cathartic, but the craft and tension are exceptional.
Best for
Viewers who like slow-burn investigations
Fans of procedural detail and forensic obsession
People who enjoy bleak, atmospheric thrillers
Audiences who appreciate precision filmmaking and strong ensemble work
Skip if
You want a fast-paced thriller with constant payoff
You need a neat resolution or clear culprit
You dislike long runtimes and methodical storytelling
You prefer lighter, more sensational true-crime stories
Overview
Zodiac is one of the great American obsession movies, a crime thriller that cares less about solving the case than about what the case does to the people who chase it. David Fincher builds dread through repetition, paperwork, phone calls, and the slow erosion of certainty, making the investigation feel both compulsive and futile. The result is unusually immersive and deeply unnerving.
Worth noting
What makes it so effective is the discipline. It refuses the usual serial-killer-movie theatrics and instead finds horror in process, ambiguity, and time passing. The performances are grounded and precise, with the ensemble giving the story a lived-in, newsroom-to-police-desk texture that keeps the film human even as it becomes increasingly haunted.
Bottom line
This is not a movie that rewards impatience, but it does reward attention. By the end, the mystery matters, yet the larger ache is about how a case can consume lives without ever fully yielding its truth. It’s a masterclass in controlled tension and one of Fincher’s most complete works.
Top Letterboxd reviews
cait (5★) · 29748 likes
name a scarier line in a movie than “mr graysmith, i do the posters myself” and “not many people have basements in california”
andie (4.5★) · 13665 likes
"Hair was digitally added to the close-ups of Jake Gyllenhaal's knuckles as he draws or holds letters. David Fincher felt that Gyllenhaal's hands were too hairless and pretty."
Happy 10th anniversary to this movie and Jake Gyllenhaal's pretty hands
issy 🥝 (5★) · 13268 likes
Jake: Oh it’s fine I’ve only been waiting for (looks at watch) 2 hours, wow...
Me: Oh, 2 hours? You think that’s a long time do you? 2 hours? 2 HOURS? Try 2 hours and 42 minutes Jake. Try waiting 2 hours and 42 minutes for the most promising suspect to fucking die before he can be arrested. But you know what makes it even harder, Jake? Try being ANGRY at this 2 hour 42 minute long movie that leaves… more
˗ˏˋ suspirliam ˊˎ˗ (4.5★) · 11065 likes
my favourite mcu movie 💖
dani✨ (5★) · 11034 likes
- mr. graysmith, i do the posters myself
me: 😳😶🙅🚫❌