WESTFIELD, NJ - We may finally learn what is "within the walls" of the Westfield home targeted by a stalker, or at least the artistic interpretation of it. The streaming company Netflix has purchased the feature rights to the story, according to a report from Deadline.

According to the Deadline report, Netflix won the feature rights to the deal after a ferocious bidding battle that involved six studios that included Universal for Jason Blum, Warner Bros for Roy Lee, Paramount for JJ Abrams' Bad Robot, Amazon for producer Michael Sugar and Fox for Peter Chernin.

The report said that Henry Joost and Ariel Schulman are attached to direct and Eric Newman and Bryan Unkeless will produce. Joost and Schulman directed genre features "Paranormal Experience 3" and "Paranormal Experience 4," according to IMDB.com. Newman was a producer on the Netflix series Narcos and Unkeless produced the Tonya Harding biopic, "I, Tonya" starring Margot Robbie.

Fans of thrillers, mystery and suspense will find plenty of material in the tale of the Westfield Watcher. The story made international headlines in 2014 when Derek and Maria Broaddus purchased their dream home on the highly-coveted Boulevard in Westfield. But before they were even able to move in, an anonymous letter writer began sending menacing letters with disturbing references to their three children. And so began the mystery of The Watcher. It remains unsolved to this day.

The family said they were too scared to move in to the six-bedroom house due to the alleged threats the letters contained such as "allow me to watch you and track you as you move through the house." The letters also referred to "secrets in the walls" of the home and that the house needed "young blood."

The tale takes multiple cinematic twists as Derek Broaddus told New York Magazine in a story published online by the website The Cut that last Christmas Eve he stuffed the stockings of former neighbors with notes of his own.