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The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

 
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The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

  • Director: Marcus Nispel
  • AMG Rating: starstar
  • Genre: Horror
  • Movie Type: Sadistic Horror, Slasher Film
  • Themes: Nightmare Vacations, Cannibals
  • Main Cast: Jessica Biel, Jonathan Tucker, Erica Leerhsen, Mike Vogel, Eric Balfour
  • Release Year: 2003
  • Country: US
  • Run Time: 95 minutes
  • MPAA Rating: R

Plot

One of the most infamous horror films of the 1970s is revisited in this remake produced by action-spectacle maven Michael Bay. In the summer of 1973, four teenagers -- Erin (Jessica Biel), Morgan (Jonathan Tucker), Kemper (Eric Balfour), and Andy (Mike Vogel) -- are driving through Texas on a road trip when they pick up a hitchhiker, Pepper (Erica Leerhsen), who is on her way to Mexico to score some dope. With Pepper adding to the party atmosphere, the other four decide to join her, but as they're passing through a small town in Travis County, they see a bloody and distraught girl (Lauren German) wandering by the side of the road, and after stopping to help her, they realize she's been involved in something horribly traumatic. As the kids try to help the girl piece together the story of what happened, they find themselves drawn into the web of a murderous family of subnormal cannibals. Inspired -- like the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre, Psycho, The Silence of the Lambs, and Deranged -- by the crimes of Wisconsin multiple murderer Ed Gein, this remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre also features narration by John Larroquette, who narrated the original film (it was his first screen credit), as well as supporting performances by R. Lee Ermey, Andrew Prine, and Andrew Bryniarski. ~ Mark Deming, All Movie Guide

Review

Marcus Nispel's remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a valiant effort to bring Hollywood horror back to its grisly roots, though for all its brilliant photography and brutal intensity, the remake ultimately crumbles under its pandering to the new audience to which it's obviously catering. Where there were once disturbing, unsettling images juxtaposed with sly social relevance, the story is now reinterpreted into a nasty tale of ugliness that, while still chock-full of scares, is void of the shocking, under-your-skin feel that Tobe Hooper's original continues to instill decades after it dug into society's subconscious and changed horror films forever. That said, it's unfair to compare the two films too much, as even the last two dismal Chainsaw flicks were basically remakes of their archetypical ancestor, though the fact remains that producer Michael Bay and company refused to fully grasp why the first film still manages to resonate years later. If their idea was that the original was scary because it had elements stemming from real life weirdo Ed Gein, then why throw in the puritanical slasher ideals in the early moments, immediately separating the viewer from fact to popcorn-loving movie fiction? The answer undoubtedly goes back to the post-Scream youth culture which the filmmakers are nurturing, resulting in an annoying ploy that immediately singles out the perfect-bellied and curvaceous Jessica Biel to be the final survivor in a situation in which not one character should be safe. Thankfully, the rest of the film doesn't fall into too many more stereotypical pitfalls, but it's exactly that sort of thing that makes this mean fright flick far less gonzo and more a by-the-numbers slasher.

That said, there are some high points to the flick -- the first being the original cinematographer Daniel Pearl's return behind the camera for this Leatherface epic. His painterly eye does wonders with the budget and lends this horror film an unbelievable look, thanks to his 30-plus years of experience in the field (even if it'd been over ten years since his last feature). It's the feel he brings to the piece mixed with the truly gnarly imagery of the picture that gives the film the uniqueness by which it can live up to the high standard under which it's labeling itself. Another class act with the film is the cast, namely Andrew Bryniarski as Leatherface. Hitting a near home-run as the unstoppable killing machine, the newest chainsaw chopper surprisingly shines in a few subtle moments sure to remind you of the crazed, multi-dimensional work of his earliest predecessor, Gunnar Hansen. Another relief is the young cast members themselves, who tend to not fall into the atypically horrible modern genre acting, with Biel handling her own as the film's newest scream queen and the rest of her crew pulling their weight with the all-too-real mayhem erupting around them. R. Lee Emry also shows up for more of his hilarious foul-mouthed schtick, this time turning in a much more macabre role that is more akin to the outrageous performances known in the series. It's too bad, then, that things just aren't pointed in the right direction. The film works as a modern gore-fest, but loses sight of the original's integral pieces, such as incredibly unnerving sound design, non-music-video-style editing, and frankly, a madman like Hooper at the helm. Better thought of as just another revisionist sequel than a direct remake, Nispel's Texas Chainsaw is better than the jaded horror fan would think, scary-as-hell to any newbie looking for a nasty time, but ice ages away from the original. ~ Jeremy Wheeler, All Movie Guide

Cast

Andrew Bryniarski - Leatherface; R. Lee Ermey - Sheriff Hoyt; David Dorfman - Jedidiah Sawyer; Lauren German - Teenage Girl; Terrence Evans - Old Monty; Marietta Marich - Luda May; Heather Kafka - Henrietta Sawyer; Kathy Lamkin - The Tea Lady; Brad Leland - Big Rig Bob; Mamie Meek - Clerk; John Larroquette - Narrator; Andrew Prine - The Old Man

Credit

Scott Gallagher - Art Director, Pat Sandston - Associate Producer, Matthew Cohan - Associate Producer, Lisa Fields - Casting, Tobe Hooper - Co-producer, Kim Henkel - Co-producer, Bobbie Mannix - Costume Designer, Randy Fletcher - First Assistant Director, Marcus Nispel - Director, Glen Scantlebury - Editor, Ted Field - Executive Producer, Brad Fuller - Executive Producer, Andrew Form - Executive Producer, Guy Stodel - Executive Producer, Jeffrey Allard - Executive Producer, Joe Dishner - Line Producer, Steve Jablonsky - Composer (Music Score), Gregory Nicotero - Makeup Special Effects, Scott Stoddard - Makeup Special Effects, Greg Blair - Production Designer, Daniel Pearl - Cinematographer, Michael Bay - Producer, Mike Fleiss - Producer, Stacy Brownrigg - Sound/Sound Designer, Scott Martin Gershin - Sound/Sound Designer, Scott Kosar - Screenwriter, Nathan McGuinness - Visual Effects Supervisor, Jason Schugardt - Visual Effects Supervisor, Tobe Hooper - From Screenplay by, Kim Henkel - From Screenplay by

Similar Movies

Deranged; The Hills Have Eyes; Just Before Dawn; Ed Gein; S.I.C.K.; House of Wax; The Fog; Final Cut; The Hills Have Eyes; Chaos; Halloween; Hatchet; The Last House on the Left
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Wikipedia: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (film)
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The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

Theatrical Poster
Directed by Marcus Nispel
Produced by Michael Bay
Mike Fleiss
Written by Scott Kosar
Starring Jessica Biel
Jonathan Tucker
Erica Leerhsen
Mike Vogel
Eric Balfour
David Dorfman
R. Lee Ermey
Music by Steve Jablonsky
Cinematography Daniel Pearl
Distributed by New Line Cinema
Focus Features
Release date(s) United States October 17, 2003 (2003-10-17)
Running time 98 minutes
Country  United States
Language English
Budget $9,500,000
Gross revenue $107,071,655
Preceded by Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation
Followed by The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a remake of the 1974 horror film of the same name. The film was directed by Marcus Nispel and produced by Michael Bay in 2003. It was also co-produced by Kim Henkel and Tobe Hooper, co-creators of the original 1974 film. It is rated R for strong horror violence/gore, language, and some drug content.

Contents

Plot

In 1973, five college students, Erin (Jessica Biel), Kemper (Eric Balfour), Morgan (Jonathan Tucker), Andy (Mike Vogel), and Pepper (Erica Leerhsen), are on their way to a Lynyrd Skynyrd concert after coming back from Mexico. As they drive through Texas, they see a distraught hitchhiker, who eventually gets in their van. After trying to speak to the hitchhiker, who speaks incoherently about a "bad man," she shoots and kills herself with a .357 Magnum. The group tries to contact the police, then go to a store where a woman tells them the sheriff is at the mill. Instead of the sheriff, they find a little boy named Jedediah (David Dorfman) who tells them that the sheriff is drinking at home. Erin and Kemper go through the woods to find his house, leaving the other three at the mill with the boy. They come to a farm house where Erin is allowed inside by the owner, Monty, to phone for help. When Erin finishes, the old man asks her for help. Kemper goes inside to look for Erin and is killed with a sledgehammer by Thomas Hewitt AKA Leatherface (Andrew Bryniarski).

Meanwhile, Sheriff Hoyt (R. Lee Ermey) arrives at the mill and disposes of the hitchhiker's body, wrapping her in cellophane and putting her in his trunk. Erin arrives and finds that Kemper is still missing. Andy and Erin go back to the Monty's house, where Erin distracts him while Andy searches for Kemper. Monty realizes Andy is inside and summons Leatherface, who attacks him with his chainsaw. Erin escapes and heads towards the woods, but Leatherface cuts Andy's leg off. Leatherface carries him to the basement and hangs him on a meat hook, where he rubs salt on Andy's stump of a leg before wrapping it in butcher paper. Erin makes it to the mill and tries to escape in the van, but the sheriff shows up and, after finding marijuana, orders Erin, Morgan, and Pepper out of the van. The sheriff gives Morgan the gun he took from the hitchhiker and tells Morgan to reenact how she killed herself. Morgan, scared and disturbed by the sheriff's demeanor, attempts to shoot the sheriff only to find the gun is unloaded. Sheriff Hoyt handcuffs Morgan and takes him to the farmhouse, leaving the girls in the van where they are attacked by Leatherface. Pepper runs, but is cut in half by Leatherface's chainsaw. Erin also sees that Leatherface is wearing Kemper's face over his own. Erin manages to escape and hide in a trailer with two women inside, who offer her tea and try to soothe her. Erin discovers they have kidnapped a child. However, the tea is drugged and she passes out when she tries to leave.

Erin wakes up at the Hewitt house surrounded by the Hewitt family: Leatherface, his mother Luda May (Marietta Marich), Sheriff Hoyt (Charlie Hewitt), Monty, and Jedidiah. Luda May reveals that they used to work in a slaughterhouse but turned to capturing people, killing them, and selling their meat. Erin is taken to the basement, where she finds Andy. She tries to help him off of the meat hook but he begs her to kill him, which she does. She finds Morgan, still handcuffed, and Jedidiah leads them out of the house. Jedediah rejects Erin's plea to come with them and distracts Leatherface long enough for them to escape. Erin and Morgan find an abandoned house in the woods and barricade themselves inside. Leatherface breaks in and discovers Erin, but Morgan attacks Leatherface, causing him to drop his chainsaw. Leatherface hangs Morgan on the chandelier by his handcuffs and kills him. Erin runs out of the shack and escapes through the woods. Leatherface trips and cuts his leg while pursuing her. Erin finds a slaughterhouse and hides in a locker; Leatherface opens the locker next to hers and she attacks him with a meat cleaver, and chops off his right arm. Erin runs outside and flags down a trucker, whom she tries to convince to go away from the Hewitt's house, but he stops to find help at the eatery. Erin sees Luda May and watches as Sheriff Hoyt arrives and talks to the trucker. Erin sees the Hewitt family with the kidnapped baby in a highchair. Erin sneaks the baby out of the eatery and hotwires the sheriff's car before running him over repeatedly until he is dead. Leatherface appears in the road and tries to stop her, but Erin and the baby escape unharmed. Later on in the present footage, there's only one known footage photo of Leatherface. The case is still open.

Cast

Actor Character
Jessica Biel Erin
Jonathan Tucker Morgan
Erica Leerhsen Pepper
Mike Vogel Andy
Eric Balfour Kemper
Andrew Bryniarski Thomas Hewitt/Leatherface
R. Lee Ermey Charlie Hewitt/Sheriff Hoyt
Marietta Marich Luda Mae Hewitt
Terrence Evans Monty Hewitt
Kathy Lamkin Tea Lady
David Dorfman Jedidiah Hewitt
Heather Kafka Henrietta
Lauren German Hitchhiker

Connection to actual events

This film, like the 1974 original, as well as Psycho, was inspired by Wisconsin serial killer Ed Gein.[1] Gein skinned human bodies and made up furniture out of it, but he acted alone and did not use a chainsaw. The film's opening claims the events are factual, a use of the false document technique (filming of the first movie was from July 15, 1973 to August 14, 1973, while the opening narrative claims that the events took place on August 18, 1973).

Reception

Critical reception

The film received a "rotten" critical consensus from Rotten Tomatoes with a rating of 34% (with 100 negative reviews and 52 positive).[2] A common criticism about the film was that it tried to scare the audience with on-screen deaths and gore[2], whilst the original film had used little blood and a documentary-like atmosphere. For this reason, the film was nominated for a 2004 Golden Raspberry Award for 'Worst Remake/Sequel'. Roger Ebert gave the film a rare zero stars out of four, commenting "A contemptible film: Vile,ugly and brutal." [3] However, the art direction and acting were praised. Jessica Biel and R. Lee Ermey were particularly praised.

Box office

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre was released in North America on October 17, 2003 in 3, theaters. [4] It grossed $10,620,000 on its opening day and concluded its North America opening weekend with $28,094,014. It ranked number one at the box office.[5] The film opened in various other foreign countries and grossed $26,500,000, while the North American gross stands at $80,571,655, bringing the worldwide gross to $107,071,655.[6]

The film's box-office success was notable for starting a long line of remakes of 70s/80s horror films that continue to the present day; examples include The Hills Have Eyes, The Amityville Horror, Halloween and Dawn of the Dead.

DVD release

The region 1 DVD was released on March 30, 2004 through New Line Home Entertainment.[7] Special features include audio commentaries, documentaries, deleted scenes, and an alternate ending and opening. Also included is the theatrical trailer, image galleries, tv spots, and an evidence file with crime scene photos. The music video to "Suffocate" by Motograter was featured on the special features of the DVD.

Deleted scenes

Five scenes had to be edited to avoid an "NC-17" rating and achieve an "R" rating[citation needed]:

  • More graphic shots of Morgan's death, featuring the chainsaw slicing into his crotch, and having blood and guts falling from him.
  • The hitchhiker's suicide having her ear flying off of her head and blood, and brain matter being more dark in color and more in amount flying out of her head.
  • A slightly more graphic death of Kemper: after getting hit with a sledge hammer, he drops to the floor gasping and convulsing with blood pouring out of his head.
  • Pepper's death originally showed the chainsaw cutting into her stomach.
  • Jedidiah was going to be killed by Leatherface via chainsaw impalement after he let Erin and Morgan go.

Soundtrack

There were two soundtrack albums released by Bulletproof Records/La-La Land Records for the film; the first was meant for regular audiences featuring popular rock music and was released on November 4, 2003. The second was the film's original score as composed by Steve Jablonsky. This was released on October 21, 2003 and has a run time of 50:25.

In the beginning of the 2003 remake, the protagonists are listening to "Sweet Home Alabama", a song which was released in 1974, while the film takes place in 1973.

Track Listings

References

External links



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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 "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (film)" Read more