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Saw III

 
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Saw III

  • Director: Darren Lynn Bousman
  • AMG Rating: star
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sadistic Horror, Psychological Drama
  • Themes: Mind Games, Serial Killers, Doctors and Patients
  • Main Cast: Tobin Bell, Tobin Bell, Shawnee Smith, Angus MacFadyen, Bahar Soomekh
  • Release Year: 2006
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 108 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) is back, and this time he's concocted his deadliest set of traps yet in this gore-soaked sequel written by James Wan and Leigh Whannell, and directed by Saw II's Darren Lynn Bousman. Picking up directly where its predecessor left off, Saw III finds Jigsaw near death and fighting to stay alive for one final game. Determined to show his protégé, Amanda (Shawnee Smith), what it truly means to carry out his deadly game, the ailing Jigsaw instructs his apprentice to kidnap unsuspecting doctor Lynn Denlon (Bahar Soomekh) in order to ensure that he survives long enough to see how his latest victim Jeff (Angus MacFadyen) fares when faced with the prospect of imminent death. As Lynn and Jeff both struggle to beat the clock and carry out their tasks before Jigsaw draws his final breath, a much larger plan begins to emerge that shows just how cunning the legendary killer can truly be. ~ Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Cast

Dina Meyer - Kerry; Mpho Koaho - Tim; Barry Flatman - Judge Halden; Lyriq Bent - Rigg; J. Larose - Troy; Debra Lynne McCabe - Danica; Costas Mandylor - Forensic Hoffman; Betsy Russell - Jill; Jane Luk - Nurse (Emergency Room); Stefan Georgiou - Dylan; Niamh Wilson - Corbett; Alan Van Sprang - Chris; Kim Roberts - Deborah; Brian Paul - Doctor #1; Zoe Heath - Female Forensic; Billy Parrott - Male Nurse; Dylan Trowbridge - Paramedic; Franky G. - Xavier (Dead); Kelly Jones - SWAT Member Pete; Vincent Rother - SWAT Member Joe; Nicholas Kaegi - Young Boy; Marc Poyser - Gun Shot Victim; Tim Burd - Obi; Dan Sudek - Aftermath Cop; Bill Vibert - Cop; Sally Kellerman; Shauna Black; Sean Sullivan; Larry Yachimec; Darrell Dennis; Chris Marren; Donnie Wahlberg - Eric Matthews; Leigh Whannell - Adam

Credit

Tony Ianni - Art Director, Troy Begnaud - Associate Producer, Jason Hopfner - Boom Operator, Stephanie Gorin - Casting, Greg Copeland - Co-producer, Alex Kavanagh - Costume Designer, Elizabeth Scherberger - First Assistant Director, Darren Lynn Bousman - Director, David Hackl - Second Unit Director, Kevin Greutert - Editor, Daniel Jason Heffner - Executive Producer, Peter Block - Executive Producer, Jason Constantine - Executive Producer, James Wan - Executive Producer, Leigh Whannell - Executive Producer, Stacey Testro - Executive Producer, Tom Vencelides - Location Manager, Charlie Clouser - Composer (Music Score), Jonathan McHugh - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jonathan Miller - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jonathan Platt - Musical Direction/Supervision, David Spence Perkins - Camera Operator, Brian Gedge - Camera Operator, David Hackl - Production Designer, David Armstrong - Cinematographer, Greg Copeland - Production Manager, Mark Burg - Producer, Oren Koules - Producer, Gregg Hoffman - Producer, Tommy Thompson - Set Designer, Brent McGillivray - Set Designer, Richard Penn - Sound/Sound Designer, Alison Reid - Stunts, Cotton Mather - Stunts, Bryan Renfro - Stunts, C. J. Lusby - Stunts, Alison Reid - Stunts Coordinator, James Wan - Screen Story, Leigh Whannell - Screen Story, Leigh Whannell - Screenwriter, Will Taylor - Production Assistant, Ryan Eldridge - Production Assistant, David Spence Perkins - Second Unit Camera, Jon Campfens - Visual Effects Supervisor, Tom Bjelic - Sound Effects Editor, Ahmad Ismail - Additional Editing, Dave Muscat - Additional Editing, Chris MacKenzie - Additional Editing, Ernest Spiteri - First Assistant Camera, Kevin LeBlanc - First Assistant Camera, Ira Cohen - Gaffer, Joseph Jones - Grip, Rob Lopes - Grip, Christopher Toudy - Key Grip, Paul Intson - Music Editor, Charlie Clouser - Musical Performer, Danny Lohner - Musical Performer, Wes Borland - Musical Performer, Peter Freeman - Musical Performer, Chas Smith - Musical Performer, W. Michael Beard - Post Production Supervisor, Cristy L. Becker - Production Coordinator, Jim Murray - Properties Master, Francois Dagenais - Prosthetic Makeup Effects, Andrew Tay - Re-Recording Mixer, Mark Zsifkovits - Re-Recording Mixer, Keith Elliott - Re-Recording Mixer, Lisa Burling - Script Supervisor, Tim Good - Special Effects Coordinator, Steve Wilkie - Still Photographer, Mark Gingras - Supervising Sound Editor, John Douglas Smith - Supervising Sound Editor, Pete Denomme - Visual Effects Producer, Matthew McKenzie - ADR Recordist, Dwight Hendrikson - Assistant Art Director, Brent McGillivray - Assistant Art Director, Stephanie Lees - Assistant Costumer Designer, Pamela Mills - Assistant Hair, Roger Lumyoung - Assistant Location Manager, Rachel Affolter - Assistant Makeup, Lisa Gyorfi - Assistant Production Coordinator, Jimmy Robb - Assistant Sound Editor, John Docouto - Best Boy Electric, Paolo Perin - Best Boy Grip, Robert "Sarge" Hepburn - Buyer, Matthew Howlett - Buyer, Rosalee Board - Buyer, Ron Lightfoot - Construction Coordinator, John Laing - Dialogue Editor, Allan Fung - Dialogue Editor, Craig Stewart - Dolly Grip, Paul Dias - Electrician, Roberto Dias - Electrician, Yogendran Ramesh - Electrician, Jane Rogers - Extra Casting, Carla Spizziri - First Assistant Accountant, Diane Brunjes - First Assistant Editor, Steve Baine - Foley Artist, Gina Wark - Foley Artist, Stephanie Ingram - Key Hairstylist, Sarah Fairbairn - Key Make-up, Matthew Howlett - Leadman, Janet Kim - Personal Assistant, Chad Cole - Personal Assistant, Kaleigh Kavanagh - Personal Assistant, Kym Crepin - Production Accountant, Dean A. Avedon - Production Accountant, Eric Beaulieu - Second Assistant Camera, Darren Spriet - Second Assistant Camera, Mike Williams - Second Assistant Camera, Yolanda Graci - Second Unit Assistant Director, Jason Lunn - Set Dresser, Sam Agro - Storyboard Artist, Stephen Carr - Transportation Captain, Eddie "Shady" Bowman - Transportation Coordinator, Switch VFX - Visual Effects, Liesel Deslauriers - Set Decorator, David Mintz - Craft Service/Catering, John Doyle - Craft Service/Catering, Star Grazing - Craft Service/Catering, David Kinnersly - Craft Service/Catering, Ashleigh Millar - Craft Service/Catering, Darren Martin - Craft Service/Catering, Catering By David's - Craft Service/Catering, Dave Murray - Driver, Mike Bowman - Driver, Gibby Lacasse - Driver, Peter Persaud - Foley Recordist, Exact Cut - Negative Cutter, Tom Mayclim - Negative Cutter, Kelly Lee - Set Medic/First Aid, Joe Zelney - Swing Gang, Steven Ciancamerla - Swing Gang, David Malcolm - Third Assistant Director, Dominika Jurek - Third Assistant Director, Jan Brunton - Video Assist, Stephen Crone - Video Assist, Kristina Wood - Video Playback, Tellavision - Video Playback, Daniel Hugh Kelly - Title Design, Chris Kahn - Carpenter, Jeff Burden - Carpenter, Geoff Flint - Carpenter, Takashi Komai - Carpenter, Grant Kilroy - Carpenter, Bruce Graydon - Carpenter, Jeff Graydon - Carpenter, Mark Taylor - Carpenter, Brian Fowler - Head Carpenter, Ryan O'Connell - Assistant Carpenter, Jef Lonn - Compositor, Louis Kim - Compositor, Amir Eftekhari - Compositor, Geoff Wigmore - Compositor

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Wikipedia: Saw III
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Saw III

Saw III Promotional Poster
Directed by Darren Lynn Bousman
Produced by James Wan
Leigh Whannell
Mark Burg
Gregg Hoffman
Written by James Wan
Leigh Whannell
Starring Tobin Bell
Shawnee Smith
Angus Macfadyen
Bahar Soomekh
Donnie Wahlberg
Dina Meyer
Leigh Whannell
Costas Mandylor
Music by Charlie Clouser
Cinematography David A. Armstrong
Editing by Kevin Greutert
Studio Twisted Pictures
Distributed by LIONSGATE
Release date(s) October 27, 2006
Running time Theatrical cut
107 min.
Unrated cut
112 min.
Director's Cut
120 min.
Country United States
Language English
Budget $10,000,000
Gross revenue $164,874,275[1]
Preceded by Saw II (2005)
Followed by Saw IV (2007)

Saw III is a 2006 horror film and sequel to the 2005 film Saw II and written by the first film's writers/directors, James Wan and Leigh Whannell and directed by Saw II's writer/director, Darren Lynn Bousman. It was released on October 27, 2006.

The film ends the first trilogy of the series that focuses on a bed-ridden John Kramer, and his new apprentice Amanda final tests before he dies. The film contains additional back-story about the two antagonists.

The film was dedicated to Gregg Hoffman, producer of the first two movies. Hoffman died on December 4, 2005, shortly after the official Lions Gate Entertainment announcement of Saw III.

Contents

Plot

Amanda setting Lynn's "Shotgun Collar" trap for her game.

Minutes after the room is sealed, Detective Eric Matthews (Donnie Wahlberg) escapes the underground bathroom by breaking his foot with a toilet lid and slipping it out of the ankle chain. Six months later, another Jigsaw victim is discovered by Lieutenant Rigg (Lyriq Bent) and Detectives Kerry (Dina Meyer) and Hoffman (Costas Mandylor). In his test, Troy (J. Larose) was to rip chains from his body in order to flee from a bomb; however, the door to the room was sealed, making the trap inescapable and thus going against Jigsaw's methods. Kerry, who feels guilty over Matthews' disappearance, later awakens in a trap of her own. A key to unlock the device against her ribcage is within a beaker of acid; though she retrieves it, the device destroys her ribcage anyway, making her trap inescapable as well.

Jeff Reinhart (Angus Macfadyen), a man who seeks vengeance for the death of his son, and Lynn Denlon (Bahar Soomekh), a depressed doctor, are also kidnapped under John Kramer's (Tobin Bell) orders. Lynn is brought before John, now bedridden from cancer, by Amanda Young (Shawnee Smith), his apprentice. She is given a straightforward game: keep John alive for the duration of Jeff's game. Should John die, or should she try to escape, the collar around her neck will fire five shotgun shells at her head. Meanwhile, Jeff awakens in the middle of an abandoned meatpacking plant and is informed that he must go through several tests, which will lead him to "the man responsible for the loss of his child."

In his first test, Jeff enters a freezer and finds Danica Scott (Debra Lynne McCabe), the only other witness to his son's death. By refusing to testify in court, she became an object in Jeff's vengeance. Danica is stripped naked and bound between two bars spraying ice-cold water at random intervals. She eventually convinces Jeff to help her, though she freezes solid before he can retrieve the key from behind frozen metal bars. In his second test, he successfully frees Judge Halden (Barry Flatman) from the bottom of a pit being filled with liquefied pig corpses, by incinerating his late son's toys to retrieve a key. Halden had only sentenced Dylan Reinhart's killer to six months in prison, further fueling his vengeful side. The third test brings Jeff face-to-face with Timothy Young (Mpho Koaho), his son's killer, who is strapped to a machine that will twist his limbs and neck one by one until they break. Jeff retrieves a key attached to the trigger of a shotgun, but Halden is killed when the shotgun accidentally discharges, and Jeff is too late to save Timothy before his neck is fatally broken. With his tests nonetheless complete, Jeff moves on to the final area.

Meanwhile, Lynn and Amanda work together to keep John alive. During an improvised brain surgery intended to relieve tension on John's brain, he semi-consciously professes his love for another woman, who Amanda mistakes for Lynn. Distressed from witnessing this, Amanda leaves the sickroom to continue watching Jeff's progress, in the process finding a letter addressed to her, its contents causing her more distress. Following the surgery, Lynn and John talk privately; Lynn reveals that her ordeal has given her a new appreciation for her family. Amanda returns with the news that Jeff's tests are complete, but she refuses to release Lynn, not believing she has learned anything. She doesn't believe anybody changes after being tested, and designed her tests to be inescapable accordingly, including Troy's and Kerry's. She also reveals that she and Eric Matthews fought after he escaped the bathroom, and that she managed to overpower him and leave him for dead. Additionally, she returned to the bathroom and gave Adam Stanheight (Leigh Whannell) a mercy killing.

Jeff arrives in the makeshift sickroom just as Amanda shoots Lynn in the back; he retaliates by shooting Amanda in the neck. A saddened John reveals to Amanda that Lynn's test was actually hers; she had not known that Jeff and Lynn were married. Amanda dies from her wound, and John gives Jeff one last test, where he can choose to either kill John or forgive him. If Jeff forgives him, John will call an ambulance to save Lynn. Jeff takes a circular saw, tells John he forgives him, and slashes his throat. The door to the room seals as the dying John pulls out a tape recorder, which tells Jeff that he has failed the test by killing John, who was the only person to know the whereabouts of Corbett Reinhart (Niamh Wilson), Jeff's daughter; Jeff would have to play another game to find her before she runs out of air. As the message ends, John goes into cardiac arrest and dies; the shotgun collar simultaneously destroys Lynn's head, leaving Jeff sealed in the room with the three corpses.

Cast

Production

According to the director's audio track on the DVD release, almost all the transitions from one place to another (such as from Kerry's trap to Chris' place, and Jigsaw's lair to Jeff's crate) were not made using digital effects. The transitions were shot on the spot. For example, when the camera moves from Troy's crime scene to Kerry being in the bathtub, Dina Meyer had to run, take off all her clothes, and jump into the tub. If you look closely, you can still see the water moving from when she got in.

According to Leigh Whannell, Adam had many more scenes in the original film, one of which was the scene between Adam and Amanda, included on the Saw III DVD bonus features.

According to producer Daniel J. Heffner, the film was toned down seven times to obtain the "R" rating. According to director Darren Lynn Bousman, the MPAA ratings board was less concerned with the film's graphic violence because television shows like CSI have expanded the scope of what is acceptable viewing with their graphic depictions of crime scenes and autopsies. Bousman says the MPAA is more concerned with emotional torture that disturbs the audience.[2]

Promotion

From left to right: Tobin Bell, Darren Lynn Bousman and Shawnee Smith at Spike TV's Scream Awards.

A scene from Saw III was planned to be shown when the action/thriller film Crank opened in theaters on September 1. However, the MPAA did not allow it, due to the scene's large amount of graphic violence. For similar reasons, an early teaser trailer for the movie was removed from the official Saw III site. The next trailer released featured flashbacks of Jigsaw attaching the "reverse bear trap" to Amanda and applying his makeup for posing as the corpse in the bathroom from Saw. The ads played up Saw's yearly release dates with the tagline, "If it's Halloween, it must be 'Saw'"

About 1,000 special posters were made and sold for $20 each in support of Saw III. The posters were made with a small amount of Tobin Bell's blood (mixed with the printing ink). One such poster was also signed by the entire cast and crew of the film, and was auctioned off. All the proceeds from the auctioned poster were donated to the Red Cross.

At Spike TV's Scream Awards on October 10, 2006, Tobin Bell and Shawnee Smith appeared on stage with director Darren Lynn Bousman. Smith pinned Bousman to a chair, saying "Payback's a bitch," while Bell staged sawing off the top of Bousman's head. Smith then found a blood-saturated piece of film on his brain. This led to a "World Premiere" trailer featuring the plight of Troy in the body chains trap.

In a promotional video featured on MySpace (with similar versions made for YouTube and Break.com), Billy, Jigsaw's puppet, addresses the viewer in the same fashion as in the videos in the film. He states, "Hello. Are you watching me on MySpace? Good. I'd like to play a game with you. Up until now you've...just sat there as a voyeur, watching other people in their videos without care about who that person is. Well, what do voyeurs see when they look into the mirror? Let's find out. Right now you are being watched. If you forget for one second that you're being watched, you will lose. Your only way out is to understand these numbers: 1, 0, 2, 7, 0, 6. Find the meaning and you will live. Just remember; knowledge changes everything."[3] The numbers represent the film's release date, October 27, 2006.

The original cut of the movie ran for slightly over two hours, and several scenes have been confirmed to have been cut out, including a scene shown being filmed on... depicted an extended scene of Kerry and Rigg examining Troy's trap, where Kerry reveals to Rigg she has had nightmares about Eric, and she blames herself for what happened to him.

There was also reference in an interview with Bousman of a scene that was not shown, Jigsaw questioning if he was correct in his goal: He begins to question because he's near the very end, maybe this wasn't right. Maybe none of this really worked. Maybe he is a murderer. Maybe he is a killer... For the first time, we actually see him break down and cry. Imagine your entire life's work. You're on your deathbed. You know there's nothing else you can do and here's how you'll be remembered: as a killer, as a murderer. Not as someone who helped people. Not as someone who changed lives. Someone who took away lives. The one thing he didn't want to be and, as he's on his deathbed, he's realizing this.[4] The audio commentary also notes that Leigh Whannell's character of Adam had more screen time, including a scene in which he passes by Amanda at the entrance of his apartment that was also included on the DVD.[5]

Reception

At screenings in the United Kingdom, five people were reported to have fainted at separate cinemas with three at one cinema, resulting in ambulances needing to be called.[6]

The film received mixed to generally negative reviews. Rotten Tomatoes.com gave the film a 26% rating, qualifying it as "Rotten", whereas Metacritic gives Saw III a 48 rating, indicating mixed or average reviews, but still earning the series' best score up to date.

Box office

Playing in 3,167 theaters Saw III grossed a total of $33,610,391 on its opening weekend.[1] With a production budget of $9.98 million,[1] the film was already considered a box office success. Saw III ended up grossing $80,238,724 domestically and $150,907,724 worldwide. As of May 2008, the film has made $164,874,275, making Saw III the most successful film in the series worldwide thus far.[1]

Soundtrack

DVD releases

The DVD was released on January 23, 2007 in two versions, both of which have the same bonus features:

  • R-rated (108 min.) fullscreen
  • Unrated (113 min.) Anamorphic widescreen and fullscreen
  • Dolby Digital 5.1 & 2.0 tracks
  • 3 commentary tracks:
  1. Director Darren Lynn Bousman, writer Leigh Whannell, and executive producers Peter Block and Jason Constantine.
  2. Producers Oren Koules and Mark Burg.
  3. Director Darren Lynn Bousman, editor Kevin Greutert, and director of photography David A. Armstrong.
  • Deleted scenes including the fight scene between Amanda and Lynn and the extra scene with Adam and Amanda.
  • "The Traps of Saw III"
  • "The Details of Death: The Props of Saw III"
  • "Darren's Diary: Anatomy of a Director"
  • Trailers

Also confirmed are two exclusive featurettes to the Blu-ray Disc release of Saw III, which includes a feature on the writing of Saw III, and an "Amanda: Evolution of a Killer" featurette. These featurettes were also included on an exclusive 2-disc edition, sold at Target stores in the US and Future Shop stores in Canada. They contain the Unrated Widescreen Edition on Disc 1.

Unrated Edition

The unrated DVD, released on January 23, 2007, features a 113-minute cut of the film that includes more gore. On the commentary track, Bousman notes that this is not his original, two-hour-plus cut of the film, and that is why he released the Director's Cut in October 2007.

The unrated version of Saw III differs from the theatrical in many ways. The first noticeable difference is that the opening scene is more violent. The shots of Eric's heel being broken are much closer, and more detail is shown. When Kerry is discussing Eric with Rigg, the scene is slightly extended, showing her commenting on how she can't sleep because of his disappearance. When Kerry's trap triggers, a frontal shot is shown of her ribs being torn from her torso, leaving her organs exposed. Flashes showcase her innards dropping to the floor. The next noticeable difference is during Danica's Freezer Trap. A few extra shots show Jeff slamming the door, trying to get out. During the Rack, Tim's limbs are shown much more, showcasing his skin tearing as the bone shatters out of his skin. The flashback fight scene between Amanda and Eric is also extended. Amanda is shown hearing Eric's cries for his son, and seems distressed. While maneuvering in the corridor, Eric sneaks up on her and the fight resumes from there. The last and most major difference is the film's ending. In the theatrical, once the montage of the victims passes by, Lynn's corpse is shown quickly, before cutting to Jeff screaming, then on Jigsaw's corpse, and finally cutting to black. In the unrated, during the montage the music slightly overlaps, skipping a couple of seconds forward, and then showing Lynn's mutilated head, zooming in on the gory details, and then slowly fading out to white.[7]

The original theatrical version was also missing a soundtrack that was meant to play during the scene with Timothy Young in the Rack.

Director's Cut

A Director's Cut of Saw III was released on October 23, 2007 to coincide with the theatrical release of Saw IV on October 26. Extras on the 2-disc set include:

  • Three new audio commentaries:
  1. Writer Leigh Whannell
  2. Director Darren Lynn Bousman and actor J. Larose (who portrayed "Troy")
  3. Actors Tobin Bell and Shawnee Smith (who portrayed "Jigsaw" and "Amanda" respectively)
  • "Jigsaw's Plan" - A trivia game.
  • "Filmmaker Favs" - Texts about the favorite scenes/lines/details as chosen by the production crew and certain cast members.
  • "Looking Tortured" - Featurette explaining how to replicate certain make-up effects from the three movies.
  • "Choose the Death" - Commentary on 10 different traps (Primarily from Saw II and Saw III)
  • Music video: "Killer Inside- Messed Up World Remix" (Hydrovibe featuring Shawnee Smith)
  • A clip of the first trap in Saw IV

This version of Saw III is the definitive one that Darren Lynn Bousman had originally intended (prior to being forced to edit the film by the MPAA for the theatrical release), with a total running time of 121 minutes. A deleted scene reincorporated into this version of the film depicts a brutal catfight between Amanda and Lynn. In another added scene, Amanda appears to be having nightmares about kidnapping Adam before she finally decides to give him a mercy killing. This scene also reveals Jigsaw knew Amanda killed Adam. Also included is the original ending, which shows Jeff stumbling over to Lynn's corpse, playing Jigsaw's tape, then screaming before the credits begin.[8]

References

External links


 
 

 

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