Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) movie review screener!

At first I was completely opposed to the idea of remaking the original Texas Chain Saw Massacre. The film was perfect. How could they make anything better than what they already had? But after a while I thought about my favorite remakes of all time. Invasion of the Body Snatchers with Leonard Nimoy, Willard with Crispin Glover, every damn Hammer film with Christopher Lee. If those films were better than the original, could the Chainsaw remake be as well? Well, I’m here to admit, Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) is actually, hella good. They’ve upped the ante exponentially on everything from gore to scares to suspense. It may not be totally better, but The Texas Chainsaw Massacre will take its place as one of the few remakes that actually rivals the original.

The main storyline involves five kids on a road trip, coming back from Mexico with a whole shit-load of pot. These are a completely different set of kids than the original film.(ie: No Franklin this time.) Everything is going fine until they come across a catatonic girl shuffling down the middle of the road. They pick her up, the girl rants incoherently about something bad that has happened to her, and ultimately shoots herself in the head. The kids want to report the suicide; only the few pounds of pot in the back seat could get them in quite a bit of trouble with Johnny Law. They ditch the pot, report the girl, get redirected to an old abandoned mill and into the family’s trap. Well, you can probably figure out the rest of the story.

While the original film left the gore entirely to the imagination, this film shoves it right in your face. The people are treated just like cattle…only nicer. Limbs get hacked off, meat-hooks get shoved deep into struggling backs, Leatherface’s sledge goes smash, fingernails get ripped off, Harry Knowles decapitated head is displayed on a platter. It’s a real fun time at the movies. The whole family is far more disturbing than they ever were in the original. Leatherface is more frightening and believable, though R. Lee Ermy’s twisted cop steals the show as the most disturbing monster.

The shot compositions are amazing. Daniel Pearl, the cinematographer for the original Texas Chain Saw Massacre, really shows off his gained expertise. 20 years of experience have done this man good. Every shot could be used as a promo for the film. He expertly plays with shafts of light, shadows, and the completely desaturated color scheme of his shots works wonderfully. And don’t go thinking he just shot all his old angles and left it at that. Old trademark shots are in there, only tweaked. You have the tracking ass shot, the tracking-running through the trees shot, and the shot of Leatherface “dancing” with his chainsaw at the end of the film, but they’ve all been updated and twisted just a bit.

As a bonus there are many pure cheesecake shots of Biels’ (real) breasts bouncing Baywatchlike for the fans out there. But don’t think she’s just eye-candy. She’s a real trooper. Biel has rats crawl over her, gets completely bathed in blood, has to hide in a carcass in a meat locker, gets groped by old parapalegics, and many, many other things Actresses these days would NOT put up with. She’s the absolute best horror heroine I’ve seen in years. Eat your heart out Dushku.

But the main stars of the film are the locations. Every single building, the farmhouse, the mill, the slaughterhouse, exists in Texas today. The director made sure to find actual creepy buildings instead of building ones specifically for the film. I’ve been down south in the past few months and I can tell you, just go out to the countryside and throw a rock. It’s bound to hit something abandoned. Set dressing wasn’t really needed in these locations, as they are so damn creepy.

So, in closing, Texas Chainsaw Massacre is definitely worth seeing. It’s far more intense than Wrong Turn, and skyrockets past the mess that was House of 1000 Corpses. I’d have to admit, I think The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is the closest we’ll get to old school horror all year. You can quote me on that.

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre opens on October 17th.

About the Author:

Chris Nelson has been an avid film fan since the age of six. His all-time splatter favorites include Lady Snowblood, Evil Dead 2, Re-Animator and Razorback.

 

  1. hay i love t.t.c.m. its my fav film y did thay mack a remake the orignel was the best and the therd one is he a ril person?

    punk-55 on February 4, 2006
  2. In Oklahoma tissues are not to be found in the back of one’s car

    tibbons on June 17, 2006
  3. French physicist Ampere (1775-1836) had two cats, one big and a one small, and he loved them very much. But when the door was closed cats couldn’t enter or exit the room. So Ampere ordered two holes to be made in his door: one big for the big cat, and one small for the small cat.

    calculator on June 28, 2006
  4. It was crazy! Don’t go to Texas! EVER! It scared the crap out of me.

    baleigh on June 28, 2006
  5. hey omg i luv that movie & its just the gretest yey my sn is xomuddgurl94 by guys luv ya lol

    heather on July 4, 2006
  6. This was actually a good remake. I thought it had its heart in the right place. It did scare me.

    Joel on July 19, 2006
  7. Hells Yeah!!! Balls to the wall Horror flick remake. So was The Hills Have Eyes remake! Cant wait for TCM The Beginning comming in oct 06 aim sn eapraven69 hit me up if ya want to talk horror flicks OUTA

    Wayne on July 19, 2006
  8. LOL. Wayne, I saw your comment in the recent comments and all that was displayed was “Hells Yeah!!! Balls…”

    Chris Nelson on July 20, 2006

Post a comment