Charlie Hunnam worried Ed Gein role was 'a horrible mistake': 'There might be no coming back from...

New Photo - Charlie Hunnam worried Ed Gein role was 'a horrible mistake': 'There might be no coming back from...

The English actor admits that he doesn't &34;like the horror genre&34; so the &34;Monster&34; role was initially a &34;strange choice&34; for him. Charlie Hunna

The English actor admits that he doesn't "like the horror genre" so the "Monster" role was initially a "strange choice" for him.

Charlie Hunnam worried Ed Gein role was 'a horrible mistake': 'There might be no coming back from this'

The English actor admits that he doesn't "like the horror genre" so the "Monster" role was initially a "strange choice" for him.

By Lauren Huff

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Lauren Huff

Lauren Huff is an award-winning journalist and staff writer at ** with over 12 years of experience covering all facets of the entertainment industry.

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October 6, 2025 5:12 p.m. ET

Charlie Hunnam as Ed Gein in episode 302 of Monster: The Ed Gein Story.

Charlie Hunnam as Ed Gein in episode 302 of Monster: The Ed Gein Story. Credit:

Courtesy Of Netflix

Charlie Hunnam was not initially too gung ho about playing serial killer and grave robber Ed Gein in the latest season of Netflix's *Monster* — in fact, he worried he'd made a terrible misstep taking on the shocking role.

"Once I said yes to this, I thought I'd made a horrible mistake," the English actor tells **. "I started researching it, reading all the books about Ed Gein, and I fell into a full panic. I just thought there might be no coming back from this. This is so dark, to inhabit this character."

The season, the third in the horror anthology series, picks up in 1950s rural Wisconsin, and follows the titular monster – known as the Butcher of Plainfield or the Plainfield Ghoul – and tells the tale of his perverse crimes, which would go on to inspire the onscreen horrors seen in *Psycho*, *The Texas Chain Saw Massacre*, and *The Silence of the Lambs*.

Hunnam says he calmed down a bit when he actually read the scripts for the season, written by co-creator Ian Brennan. "There was sort of a breakthrough when I started reading the scripts and realizing that we were not going to be focusing on what he did and doing a deep dive on that, we're really gonna be focusing on why he did what he did and trying to find the human being behind the monster," he says.

'Monster' director says he can't believe what Charlie Hunnam put himself through for Ed Gein role: 'What the f---'

Charlie Hunnam as Ed Gein in episode 303 of Monster: The Ed Gein Story

See the 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story' cast vs. the real-life people who inspired their characters

Ed Gein is escorted from the Wisconsin State Crime Laboratory to the county jail after confessing to two murders; Charlie Hunnam attends Netflix's 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story' premiere at The Plaza Hotel on Sept. 30, 2025 in New York City.

To do so, the *Sons of Anarchy* star says he tried to "find the truth" of Gein, even though he couldn't relate to the heinous things he did. "There's like a human thread that connects all of this that you go like, right, that was a really bad avenue that you went down as a consequence or reaction to this thing that you experienced, but I understand what it was that you experienced and how that feels," he says. "And so it was sort of building on from that and just trying to make it human and honestly trying not to judge him, but being careful not to have too much empathy for him — it was a real tightrope to walk."

Hunnam, who admits he doesn't "really like the horror genre" or "impossibly dark, bleak stories," says the role was always "kind of a strange choice" for him. So much so that he was "truly gobsmacked" when series co-creator Ryan Murphy asked him to play Gein during a two-hour dinner conversation. "I just found myself saying yes," Hunnam admits. "Based, I would say like 99 percent of it, on just how much I liked Ryan."

Charlie Hunnam as Ed Gein and Suzanna Son as Adelina in episode 302 of Monster: The Ed Gein Story.

Charlie Hunnam as Ed Gein and Suzanna Son as Adeline in episode 302 of 'Monster: The Ed Gein Story'.

Courtesy Of Netflix

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And, now that it's all said and done (all eight episodes are now streaming on Netflix), Hunnam says that the process of playing Ed Gein taught him something about himself. "I think I learned the truth of like, that which you most need to find is where you least wish to look — you know, the greater the challenge, the greater the reward," he says.

And the challenge of inhabiting such a dark, gruesome world in a weird roundabout way brought a lot of joy and levity to the set. "We were challenging ourselves so much — we were really trying to do something good with this, it wasn't just like some superficial, gory, like whatever," he says. "We were really trying to apply ourselves in everything we knew about the human condition and everything we knew about filmmaking, and we managed on several occasions to rise to the level of our ambition. And as somebody who really cares about what they do, that feels amazing. So there was like a joy that came with challenging ourselves and occasionally reaching the star that we were grasping for.**

"So it was good," Hunnam concludes. "It was a really beautiful experience. But, you know, definitely dark at times too, and there was times when we thought, 'How are we gonna get through the day?'"

*Monster: The Ed Gein* story is on Netflix now.**

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