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Saw

 
Movies:

Saw

  • Director: James Wan
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sadistic Horror
  • Themes: Serial Killers, Trapped or Confined, Mind Games
  • Main Cast: Leigh Whannell, Cary Elwes, Danny Glover, Ken Leung, Dina Meyer
  • Release Year: 2004
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 100 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

The directorial debut from filmmaker James Wan, this psychological thriller comes from the first screenplay by actor Leigh Whannell, who also stars. Whannell plays Adam, one of two men chained up in a mysterious chamber. The other, Dr. Gordon (Cary Elwes), like Adam, has no idea how either of them got there. Neither of them are led to feel optimistic by the man lying between them dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. Together, Adam and Dr. Gordon attempt to piece together what has happened to them and who the sadistic madman behind their imprisonment is. Also starring Danny Glover and Monica Potter, Saw premiered at the 2004 Sundance Film Festival. ~ Matthew Tobey, All Movie Guide

Cast

Tobin Bell - John; Ned Bellamy - Jeff; Shawnee Smith - Amanda; Monica Potter - Alison Gordon; Michael Emerson - Zep Hindle; Avner Garbi - Father; Paul Gutrecht - Mark; Makenzie Vega - Diana Gordon; Benito Martinez - Brett; Mike Butters - Paul; Alexandra Chun - Carla

Credit

Nanet Harty - Art Director, Lark Bernini - Associate Producer, Speed Ratliff - Boom Operator, Amy Lippens - Casting, Richard H. Prince - Co-producer, Daniel Jason Heffner - Co-producer, Jennifer Soulages - Costume Designer, Daniel Jason Heffner - First Assistant Director, James Wan - Director, Kevin Greutert - Editor, Peter Block - Executive Producer, Jason Constantine - Executive Producer, Stacey Testro - Executive Producer, Michelle Elam Torres - Hair Styles, Kashka Banjoko - Hair Styles, Charlie Clouser - Composer (Music Score), Jonathan Miller - Musical Direction/Supervision, Jonathan Platt - Musical Direction/Supervision, Stewsong - Musical Direction/Supervision, Scott Eddo - Makeup, Julie Berghoff - Production Designer, David Armstrong - Cinematographer, Richard H. Prince - Production Manager, Mark Burg - Producer, Oren Koules - Producer, Gregg Hoffman - Producer, Scott Hinkley - Recording, Jon Taylor - Sound Mixer, Keith Adams - Stunts Coordinator, Thomas L. Bellissimo - Special Effects Supervisor, James Wan - Screen Story, Leigh Whannell - Screen Story, Leigh Whannell - Screenwriter, Andy Steinman - Second Unit Director Of Photography, Marlo Pabon - Visual Effects Supervisor, Randy Babajtis - Sound Effects Editor, Title House - Digital Effects, Josh Harrison - First Assistant Camera, Yron Levy - Gaffer, Chris Gordon - Grip, Bill Persaud - Grip, Jeremy Quinlan - Grip, Vinny Walsh - Grip, Oscar Garcia - Key Grip, Cameron Allan - Music Editor, Jonathan Miller - Music Producer, Page Hamilton - Musical Performer, Danny Lohner - Musical Performer, Section Quartet - Musical Performer, Vicky Choy - Production Coordinator, Bill Davis - Properties Master, Rocky Faulkner - Prosthetic Makeup Effects, Jonathan Wales - Re-Recording Mixer, Jerry Gilbert - Re-Recording Mixer, Jillian Giacomini - Script Supervisor, Alexa "Squirrel" Motley - Second Assistant Director, Charles Belardinelli - Special Effects Assistant, Greg Gayne - Still Photographer, Jonathan Miller - Supervising Sound Editor, Andrew Midgley - Visual Effects Producer, Christina Demasi - Costume/Wardrobe, Alan Freedman - ADR Recordist, Eric Gorfain - ADR Recordist, Amy Frederik - Buyer, Lisa Villaire - Camera Loader, Jennifer Levy - Casting Assistant, Kathy Russo - Costumes Supervisor, Andrew Patterson - Dialogue Editor, Michael Steffen - Dolly Grip, Tom Kuo - Electrician, L. Ray Skinner - Electrician, James "Pat" Whelan - Electrician, Lisa S. Beasley - Extra Casting, Cast of Thousands - Extra Casting, Michael Cook - First Assistant Editor, Mike Brownsher - First Assistant Editor, John Coniglio - First Assistant Editor, Shelley Roden - Foley Artist, Eleanor Sabaduquia - Key Make-up, Karen Bolt - Personal Assistant, Chad Cole - Personal Assistant, Joni Lefkowitz - Personal Assistant, Summer Ramsey - Scenic Artist, Amy Sanders - Scenic Artist, Scott Wheately - Scenic Artist, Todd Baldi - Second Assistant Camera, Aaron Schuh - Second Assistant Camera, Brooke Shafer - Set Dresser, Tory Mell - Set Production Assistant, Dan Muscarella - Color Timing, Jeremy Balko - Foley Recordist, Jake Blecha - Swing Gang, Luis Arevalos - Swing Gang, Miguel Angelo Burris - Swing Gang, Jose Martinez - Swing Gang, Raul Muniz Jr. - Swing Gang, Christopher Skeels - Swing Gang, Joshua Towers - Swing Gang, Nohl Wormser - Swing Gang, Ron Wormser - Swing Gang, Martin Glover - Video Assist, Dean Tapia - Video Assist, Dave Katz - Video Playback, Title House - Title Design, Damien Seckinger - Assistant Foley Editor

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Wikipedia: Saw (film)
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Saw

Saw Promotional Poster
Directed by James Wan
Produced by Gregg Hoffman
Oren Koules
Mark Burg
Written by Screenplay:
Leigh Whannell
Story:
James Wan
Leigh Whannell
Starring Leigh Whannell
Cary Elwes
Danny Glover
Monica Potter
Michael Emerson
Shawnee Smith
Tobin Bell
Dina Meyer
Music by Charlie Clouser
Cinematography David A. Armstrong
Editing by Kevin Greutert
Studio Twisted Pictures
Evolution Entertainment
Saw Productions
Distributed by Lions Gate
Release date(s) October 29, 2004
Running time 103 minutes
Country United States
Language English
Budget $1,200,000 (est.)
Gross revenue $103,096,345[1]
Preceded by Saw (Original short) (2003)
Followed by Saw II (2005)

Saw is a 2004 horror film directed by James Wan and starring The Legge's, Leigh Whannell, and Danny Glover. The screenplay, written by Leigh Whannel and James Wan, is based on the short film of the same name. It is the first installment of the Saw film series. The film's story revolves around two men who awaken kidnapped and chained in a dilapidated industrial bathroom. They are given instructions via a microcassette recorder on how to escape by following the "rules" of their "game". Meanwhile, police detectives investigate and attempt to apprehend the criminal responsible - "Jigsaw".

The film was first shown in 2004 at the Sundance Film Festival to positive reviews and saw international release later that year on October 29. The film was originally rated NC-17 for strong, graphic violence, however the film was slightly edited to achieve a R rating.

Critical responses varied. Some critics denounced the whole movie as nothing more than a "sadist gore fest" and a "low quality" and "cheap snuff film", while others commended its stylish visual tricks designed to camouflage cheap effects and called it a true "chilling" and "terrifying" horror film. Despite mixed reviews, Saw was a financial success at the box office.

Contents

Plot

Saw fictional chronology

Saw: Rebirth
Saw (short film)
Saw: The Video Game
Saw II
Saw IIISaw IV
Saw V
Saw VI

Adam Stanheight (Leigh Whannell), a photographer, and Lawrence Gordon (Cary Elwes), a doctor, awaken at opposite ends of a grimy, disused bathroom, Adam in a water-filled bathtub. Both men are chained at the ankle to the pipes. Between them lies a corpse holding a revolver and a microcassette recorder. Adam and Lawrence discover tapes in their pockets; the men learn from both tapes that Adam must escape the bathroom, while Lawrence must kill Adam before six o'clock, or he'll lose his wife and daughter and be left to die. They find a bag containing two hacksaws, though neither is able to cut through the chains. Adam breaks his and throws it at a mirror in frustration; Lawrence realizes that they are meant to be used on their feet.

Lawrence tells Adam that their captor is the Jigsaw Killer, whose name is a misnomer; he never directly kills anyone, instead putting victims in situations where they must go through physical and/or psychological torture to survive and escape with better appreciation of life. Flashbacks show that while Lawrence was talking with some students and an orderly named Zep Hindle (Michael Emerson) about the terminal brain cancer of a man named John Kramer (Tobin Bell), he was approached by Detectives David Tapp (Danny Glover) and Steven Sing (Ken Leung) about his penlight being found at the scene of a Jigsaw "game." He viewed the testimony of Amanda Young (Shawnee Smith), a heroin addict, who is the only known survivor of Jigsaw's games; she risked having her jaws ripped open during her game by a "reverse bear trap" and believes that her experience made her a better person.

Meanwhile, Lawrence's wife and daughter, Alison (Monica Potter) and Diana (Makenzie Vega), are being held captive in their home by a man who is watching Adam and Lawrence through a camera behind the bathroom's mirror, while tormenting Alison and Diana. Their house is simultaneously being watched by Tapp, who was discharged from the force. Flashbacks show that he became obsessed with the Jigsaw case after viewing Amanda's testimony, and that he and Sing illegally entered a warehouse they knew to be Jigsaw's lair and saved a man from being killed by drills aimed at his neck. Jigsaw managed to make a run for it after slashing Tapp's throat, and Sing was killed by a shotgun booby trap while pursuing him. After being discharged, Tapp began stalking Lawrence.

In the bathroom, Lawrence finds a mobile phone that can only receive calls and a cigarette and lighter; he and Adam use the latter two to try and stage Adam's death, but an electric shock through Adam's ankle chain foils this plan. Following these events, Adam and Lawrence recall their abductions; they were both ambushed and knocked unconscious by a stranger wearing a gruesome pig mask. Lawrence receives a call from Alison, who warns him that Adam knows more than he is telling. Adam explains that he was paid to take pictures of Lawrence for the past few days by Tapp, and shows Lawrence a pile of pictures of him from the bag containing the hacksaws. Lawrence berates Adam for invading his privacy, while Adam shows Lawrence evidence that he was cheating on Alison. Adam then notices a picture of a man in Lawrence's house; Lawrence identifies the man as Zep the orderly, and the two deduce that Zep is their abductor. Adam then points out that it is six o'clock, the deadline. Zep moves to kill Alison, but she frees herself and manages to overpower Zep, gaining Tapp's attention in the process. He arrives in time to save Alison and Diana from Zep, allowing them to escape, and chases Zep to the sewers.

Lawrence, who is only aware of gunshots and screaming, is zapped by the ankle chain as well and loses reach of the phone; in desperation, he saws off his foot and shoots Adam with the revolver. Zep, who shot Tapp during the chase, enters the bathroom intent on killing Lawrence, only to be blindsided by Adam and beaten to death with a toilet tank cover; Adam had only suffered a shoulder wound. As Lawrence crawls away with the promise that he'll return with help, Adam searches Zep's body for a key and finds another microcassette recorder. He learns that Zep was another victim of the game, following rules to obtain an antidote for the slow poison within his body. The corpse rises to its feet and reveals itself as John Kramer, the real Jigsaw Killer. He tells Adam that the chain's key is in the bathtub, which was drained when Adam accidentally kicked the plug out. Adam tries to grab Zep's pistol and is zapped by Jigsaw's hidden remote control. Jigsaw then turns off the lights and leaves the bathroom, sealing Adam inside.

Cast

Reception

Box Office

The film made $18,276,468 on its opening weekend which averaged $7,894 per theater from 2,467 theaters, and ranked #3 for the weekend behind The Grudge and Ray. Saw went on to gross $103 million in 9 weeks of being in theaters.[2]

Reviews

Critical responses were mixed. Rotten Tomatoes reports that 47 percent critics gave the film a positive review, based upon a sample of 158, with an average score of 5.4 out of 10.[3] On Metacritic, the film has an average score of 46 out of 100, based on 32 reviews.[4] Roger Ebert called Saw "an efficiently made thriller" but "finally not quite worth the ordeal it puts us through.[5] Carla Meyer of The San Francisco Chronicle wrote that the film "[combined] B-movie acting with a twisted mind-set and visual tricks designed to camouflage cheap effects" and that it was "terrifying at some moments and insinuatingly creepy at many others".[6] Despite the mixed critical response, the movie has attracted a strong following and have spawned five lucrative sequels to date. On Empire magazine's list of the 500 greatest films of all time, it is ranked 499th.[7]

Home media

Soundtrack

Megadeth's song "Die Dead Enough" was originally set to be featured in the movie, but was not used for undisclosed reasons.[8][9]

DVD Uncut Edition

The uncut edition of the film is approximately eight seconds longer than the theatrical version.[10] The additional footage includes:

  • An extra closeup shot of the body on the floor, which shows the extent of the "gunshot wound" on the back of the head.
  • A few extra seconds of Paul crawling through the razor wire.
  • A few extra shots of Amanda sifting through the intestines and stomach of the unnamed man she kills.
  • An extra shot of Lawrence sawing into his foot, which shows more blood.

However, in addition to the new footage, the dialogue between Lawrence and Adam in the end, just before Lawrence leaves, has been shortened in the Region 1 release, but is retained in the Region 2 release. The short film used to promote it, also entitled Saw, is also included on the DVD.

The uncut DVD also contains "See Saw in 60", which consists of three jumpy and humorous one-minute condensed versions of the film. Two are presented using dolls with crude faces drawn on them; sound clips from the movie are used for one, high-pitched squeaky voices for the other. The third is made using actual footage from the movie and the squeaky voices. Similar easter egg was used on later uncut releases of the sequels.

Video game

A video game, also titled Saw, was developed by Zombie Studios and published by Konami. The game serves as a sequel to Saw, and a prequel to Saw II. It was released on October 6 2009 on the PlayStation 3, Xbox 360, and Microsoft Windows platforms.[11][dead link]

See also

References

External links


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Copyrights:

Movies. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Movie Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Saw (film)" Read more