I. Overview
Following the cultural shockwaves of Dahmer and the chilling courtroom labyrinth of The Menéndez Brothers, Ryan Murphy steers the MONSTER anthology into its darkest, most psychologically complex chapter yet: the life, crimes, and tragic spiral of Aileen Wuornos — one of America’s most infamous female serial killers.
With Sarah Paulson in final talks to portray Aileen, Season 4 promises not merely a retelling, but a devastating character study: a portrait of a woman shaped by generational abuse, homelessness, survival sex work, mental instability, and a lifetime of being unseen. Murphy reimagines Wuornos not as a monster born, but as one forged in violence — a product of a world that failed her long before she failed anyone else.
But in true MONSTER fashion, the season refuses to remain confined to one legend. As the narrative deepens, it opens a chilling parallel thread — the mythic, blood-soaked tale of Lizzie Borden, creating an unsettling dialogue between historical infamy, media obsession, and the fragile boundaries between fact, folklore, and fear.
II. Story Summary
The Making of a Monster — Or Something Else Entirely
The season traces Aileen Wuornos from her shattered childhood in Michigan to the desolate highways of Florida, where survival becomes an act of war. Abandoned, abused, and forced into violence from an early age, Aileen’s life becomes a downward spiral of rage and desperation — punctuated by fleeting moments of hope, tenderness, and the longing to belong.

Her relationship with her girlfriend Tyria Moore becomes the emotional anchor of the story: toxic, tender, co-dependent, and ultimately catastrophic. Through this bond, viewers witness not just the crimes, but the emotional fractures that led to them.
The Killings
The murders unfold through shifting perspectives — Aileen’s version, the investigators’ version, and the public’s distorted, sensationalized version. Each account shines light on different truths, lies, and motivations, forcing the audience to confront uncomfortable questions:
Was Aileen killing in cold blood?
Or killing in fear?
Or killing because the world had given her no other language?
The Trial & The Spiral
As the case explodes into national headlines, Murphy explores the circus-like media frenzy that transformed Aileen into a spectacle. Legal battles, psychological evaluations, betrayals, and the crushing isolation of death row propel the season toward an explosive emotional climax — where Sarah Paulson’s raw, unfiltered performance brings Aileen’s unraveling into painful clarity.

The Lizzie Borden Thread
Interwoven with Wuornos’s decline is a separate, atmospheric storyline chronicling the rise of Lizzie Borden — a young woman emerging from a different century, but shaped by eerily similar forces:
• patriarchal violence
• societal pressure
• repression, trauma, and rage boiled to silence
As the narratives echo across time, the show asks:
Do we create monsters?
Or do we inherit them?

III. Tone & Style
Ryan Murphy returns to his signature blend of:
• neo-Gothic atmosphere
• psychological realism
• true-crime precision
• stylized dread that feels both operatic and intimate
Expect:
• muted, melancholic palettes reflecting Aileen’s internal decay
• needle-drop moments that land like emotional knives
• courtroom tension, motel room claustrophobia, and highway desolation
• shifting timelines that mirror fragmented memory
• haunting parallels between two infamous women separated by a century
This is MONSTER at its most cerebral and emotional — where terror comes not from jump scares, but from the suffocating weight of lived trauma.

IV. Themes
Trauma as Origin
The show digs deep into how violence produces violence — not to excuse, but to understand.
Media & Mythmaking
Aileen and Lizzie become symbols, caricatures, monsters — shaped as much by the public as by themselves.
Female Rage
A season unafraid to explore the taboo: the fury of women cornered, dismissed, and broken by systems meant to protect them.
Loneliness
Perhaps the most painful theme — the kind of loneliness that warps a soul beyond return.
America’s Love Affair with Infamy
The season interrogates why America is obsessed with monsters — especially female ones.
V. Final Thoughts
Monster: The Aileen Wuornos Story is poised to be the anthology’s most emotionally charged and psychologically devastating chapter yet. Sarah Paulson promises a performance that is equal parts brutal, heartbreaking, and unshakeable — a portrayal that reframes Wuornos not as a headline, but as a tragedy centuries in the making.
By pairing Aileen’s story with the spectral echo of Lizzie Borden, Ryan Murphy delivers an anthology season that is not just about crime…
but about the myths we build, the truths we bury, and the women America loves to fear.