In her confession, Violet described the murder not with remorse, but with cinematic language. She said she felt like she was "acting in a picture." The line between reality and fantasy had dissolved completely. They weren't murderers; in their minds, they were heroines in their own silent film, eliminating the villain. When the trial began, the public was torn. Half the crowd wanted them hanged. The other half wanted autographs.
Violet and Daisy decided to solve the problem themselves. Violet And Daisy
But what if I told you that in 1920s New York, two real-life teenage sisters—stylish, soft-spoken, and obsessed with silent film stars—became the most unlikely hired killers the world had ever seen? In her confession, Violet described the murder not
When the police finally arrested the sisters, they didn't find hardened criminals. They found a diary. Specifically, a scrapbook filled with newspaper clippings about other famous murder trials. But the strangest detail? Pinned to the pages were locks of hair from their victims. When the trial began, the public was torn
When detectives interrogated them, the sisters didn't weep or beg. They posed . They treated the police station like a movie set. Violet, in particular, had a chilling obsession with silent film star Pearl White (famous for playing "The Perils of Pauline").