: It features Ronald Flowers, a survivor who escaped Dahmer, and Nicole Childress, a witness who attempted to save one of Dahmer’s victims.

This film, directed and written by Pete Jacelone, provides a historically grounded but uniquely stylized account of Dahmer's life.

: This production relies heavily on primary sources, including hundreds of pages of police and FBI transcripts, audio recordings of Dahmer's confessions, and interviews with his father, Lionel Dahmer.

It is common for the 2020 projects to be confused with the massive hit , which was greenlit by Netflix in late 2020 but did not premiere until September 2022. That series starred Evan Peters and became one of the most-watched shows in Netflix history, focusing heavily on the systemic failures and institutional racism that allowed Dahmer's crimes to continue.

In 2020, two distinct projects explored the life of Jeffrey Dahmer, offering vastly different approaches to the true-crime genre. While one was a stylized indie film blending fact and fiction, the other was a deep-dive documentary using original investigative transcripts.

: Reviewers on IMDb have called it a "weird, gory shock-fest" that illuminates the psychodynamics of Dahmer's relationship with his victims. Jeffrey Dahmer: Mind of a Monster (2020)

: The film is noted for mixing grim reality with moments described as "morbidly hilarious" and "absurd". It features Randy Jones (the original Cowboy from the Village People) as Officer G and includes indie veteran Edward X. Young as a flamboyant bartender.

: The narrative is framed through the perspective of Jeffrey Dahmer (portrayed by Giancarlo Herrera), using many of his actual quotes. It covers his troubled childhood, his first teenage murder, and his later attempts to create "living zombies".