nobody really knows except the people tht wuz there
Leatherface in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre wore masks made of human skin to hide his deformed face.
If you are referring to the person, Leather Face, then no. It was not a real person. The story and family was loosely based off of the famous Serial Killer, Ed Gein. He did have some masks made of human flesh, however the story of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre was made up so this chainsaw wielding masked murderer was not in jail...or any jail in all for he is not real.
The movie Texas Chainsaw Massacre is only loosely based on Ed Gein. The main villiain, "Leatherface" wears a mask made from human skin (as did Buffalo Bill in "Silence of the Lambs"), which is one of the items discovered in Ed's Wisconsin farmhouse when he was arrested. Along with several face masks, Ed also made leggings, chest pieces, and had an assortment of female vulvas all from the flesh of corpses and victims. Ed did not use a chainsaw to dismember his victims, just large knives and chains.
The "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" never happened in reality, and is probably one of the most misunderstood films "based on a true story" ever made, at least in the horror genre. The story was mostly inspired by real life murderer, cannibal, alleged necrophiliac, and grave robber Ed Gein, who lived in an isolated house in Plainsfield, Wisconsin. The real story is far less epic than the film, though highly disturbing nevertheless. He is the basis for the characters of Leatherface, Norman Bates from 'Psycho', as well as Buffalo Bill from the film 'Silence of the Lambs'. He was a man who dug up graves, stole body parts, organs, and bones which he then in turn made into grizzly works of art. For example, he had bowls made out of human skulls, a belt made of female nipples, chairs and other various furniture adorned with skulls and bones, and I believe he had even upholstered a chair with human flesh. In addition to this, he had an odd sexual fetish of dissecting and collecting the vaginas of dead women as well as he had severed female heads, organs in the fridge, and many other things that were quite revolting. Throughout his life, Ed was only convicted of killing one local woman, Bernice Worden, which is nowhere near Leatherface's body count. But it was the way in which he did it that made him so infamous on top of having probably the most disturbing house of horrors ever uncovered by law enforcement. He entered her store and bought some antifreeze and then shot her with a rifle which killed her. He was the last customer she had before she went missing, so the police went to his home and looked around and found her headless torso hanging upside down from the rafters of his garage split down the middle like a deer bleeding out. He was doing this with the intention of eating her remains. He is the basis for Leatherface due to the fact that he had several masks made of human flesh and was in the in process of making a female body suit out of stitched together pieces of female flesh (the basis for Buffalo Bill) and he spoke to the ghost of his dead mother whose room he had boarded off so that nothing could get in or out of it (the basis for Norman Bates). There is no indication that he killed Bernice wearing a skinned mask or the suit, so there are no factual killings for the basis of Leatherface and he never used a chainsaw. He died in 1984 in a mental hospital.
http://it.truveo.com/the-masks/id/3591669370
Leatherface in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre wore masks made of human skin to hide his deformed face.
If you are referring to the person, Leather Face, then no. It was not a real person. The story and family was loosely based off of the famous Serial Killer, Ed Gein. He did have some masks made of human flesh, however the story of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre was made up so this chainsaw wielding masked murderer was not in jail...or any jail in all for he is not real.
The Texas chainsaw massacres is a spin off of Ed Gein, a man from northern Wisconsin who would dig up bodies and use their faces and other body parts to make masks and furniture. The only difference is that Ed Gein never actually murdered any body.
The movie Texas Chainsaw Massacre is only loosely based on Ed Gein. The main villiain, "Leatherface" wears a mask made from human skin (as did Buffalo Bill in "Silence of the Lambs"), which is one of the items discovered in Ed's Wisconsin farmhouse when he was arrested. Along with several face masks, Ed also made leggings, chest pieces, and had an assortment of female vulvas all from the flesh of corpses and victims. Ed did not use a chainsaw to dismember his victims, just large knives and chains.
yes they have done an interview without their masks on
Yes, but you will not get the fierce diety mask.
go to google.com and type in SLIPKNOT UNMASKED
Romeo and Benvolio are not immediately recognized at the Capulet's party because they are wearing masks, which conceals their identity. This allows them to move around the party without being easily identified.
"We all wear masks, and the time comes when we cannot remove them without removing some of our own skin." - André Berthiaume "Life is to be lived, not controlled, and humanity is won by continuing to play in face of certain defeat." - Ralph Ellison "We understand how dangerous a mask can be. We all become what we pretend to be." - Patrick Rothfuss
There is no Known cheat that allows you to get the Fierce Deity Mask with out collecting all the Masks.
They were not used to promote enjoyment, they were a disguise which allowed people to have fun in an otherwise oppressive society without risking being found out, apprehended (if they broke either a civil or a religious law) and punished. Masks were worn, for instance, during the towns' carnivals (hence the Venetian masks).
There are some interviews with them without there masks http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mASd-qidLW8&feature=related and deuce has his own side project and theres a bunch a photos of him http://www.myspace.com/deuce the video black dahila is a fan made video