The Texas Chainsaw Massacre backdrop
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre poster

THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE

2003 US HMDB
May 21, 2003

After picking up a traumatized young hitchhiker, five friends find themselves stalked and hunted by a chainsaw-wielding killer and his family of equally psychopathic killers.

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Crew

Production: Jeffrey Allard (Executive Producer)Brad Fuller (Executive Producer)Andrew Form (Executive Producer)Ted Field (Executive Producer)Mike Fleiss (Producer)Michael Bay (Producer)
Screenplay: Scott Kosar (Screenplay)
Music: Steve Jablonsky (Original Music Composer)
Cinematography: Daniel Pearl (Director of Photography)

REVIEWS (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
August 1973. Five young people, returning from a trip to Mexico, pick up a strange hitchhiker they find wandering the road, but the girl, after uttering words without apparent meaning, takes her own life. The five, in a panic, go to the nearest service station, where they telephone the sheriff about the incident. From that moment, the young people, who have taken refuge near an old mill, will begin to fall under the blows of a brutal masked man, armed with a chainsaw, and his lethal family. We are probably looking at the most successful example of cinematic revival in recent years, as well as the most deserving heir to Tobe Hooper's masterpiece. One thing must be clarified immediately: this new "Don't Open That Door" was released as a remake of the 1974 film, but upon viewing the film, it can be seen that it is not a true remake, but, as happened with the third and fourth episodes of the saga, a variation on the theme. In fact, in broad strokes, we find ourselves in the territories of the legendary chainsaw massacre, and, unlike the previous chapters, this new film is set in the same year as the first film, but there are too many variations to proclaim it a full-fledged remake. (The same director has stated: "If a film called 'Don't Open That Door' already exists and is perfect, you can't remake it the same way, it wouldn't make sense!"). This film deserves two credits: on the one hand, a deepening of the character of Leatherface, now entered into the imagination of psycho-killers, a symbol of post-modern horror, and on the other, a particular aesthetic care and a nod to all gore lovers. Let's start with the good old Faccia di cuoio: in this film, for the first time, he is given a real name, Thomas Hewitt, and a face under the mask, corroded by a series of tumors that have eaten away his skin since childhood (hence the reason why he desires the faces of others, of those who have an intact one). Furthermore, in this film, Leatherface becomes the most important member of the family again, and all the sequences of terror and violence are entrusted to him (with some concessions to the equally ruthless character of R. Lee Ermey): he is the true monster of the film while the other members of the family are like an alter ego, a different fragment of his personality. From an aesthetic point of view, the film manages to create a notable blend between two opposing characters: the elegance of the photography (cared for by Daniel Pearl, director of photography also in the 1974 film), which immerses the viewer in the sunny landscape of Texas (yet wrapped in dark and opaque tones), is contrasted by a series of macabre, morbid, and disturbing situations, which go far beyond the limit of the horror we were used to in recent years, and which bring us back to the sickest moments of the 1974 prototype film. In short, on the one hand, beauty and aesthetic research, on the other, the most brutal and animal horror. The director Marcus Niespel, who had previously worked in the advertising and music video fields, is making his first cinematic experience, while the actors are almost all veterans of successful American TV series, from the beautiful protagonist Jessica Biel ("Seventh Heaven") to Eric Balfour ("Six feet under"), but among the cast also figure Erica Leerhsden, already seen in the sequel of "The Blair witch project", and R. Lee Ermey, famous for his performance in "Full metal jacket", in the role of the wicked sheriff. Curiosity: The film is introduced by a narrator's voice belonging to the actor John Larroquette, the same who lent his voice for the introduction of Tobe Hooper's film. "Don't Open That Door" was initially to be directed by Micheal Bay ("Armageddon", "Pearl Harbor") who is instead listed as a producer along with the director of Tobe Hooper's first film. We point out an error: Among the initial sequences of the film, there is one in which the young people listen on the radio to the song "Sweet home Alabama", but the film is set in 1973 while the song is from 1974!
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COMMUNITY REVIEWS (1)

tmdb76622195

4 /10

Producer Michael Bay steered this remake of the infamous 1970's horror flick, without bringing in anything new. When I first saw the trailer for this version of the story, I thought it looked a lot like a hurried sequel to the contemporary silly release "Wrong Turn." Five youths on their way to a Lynyrd Skynyrd concert pick up a young hitchhiker who commits suicide in the back of their van. Looking for help, and a little common sense, they stumble upon a weird family and their chainsaw wielding offspring. Much violence and such ensues.

While the first TCM was not perfect, I eventually learned to love the shaky camera, lousy sound, and cheap look. One reason that film worked for me was the fact that much of the horror took place in blinding daylight, the cast was hot and uncomfortable, and it showed. In this version, even with the original's director of photography, most of the shots are too calculated. The horrors in the dark are not all that horrifying. This might be the rantings of a jaded horror film fan, but I never got the same feeling of unease as I did in the first film. Much of the original's story has been changed as film makers tried to keep the audience guessing by not doing a shot by shot remake, like Gus Van Sant's "Psycho." The absolute lunacy of the first film's family was strange enough, here the members are more dimwitted than scary. This lessens the impact of Leatherface's scenes. You know he is the worst it can get, you don't have an equally sick family to fall back on. One disappointing scene involves the heroine Erin (Jessica Biel) running to a trailer and meeting two women who will obviously not help her. Instead of being a tense moment, where mind games involving drinking a seemingly harmless cup of tea could be played out, the women are there for nothing more than exposition, blaming Leatherface's penchant to kill on being teased when he was younger for a degenerative skin disease. The five victims all meld together, Nispel's direction is okay, but the cinematography is too nice for this type of horror film. The black and white scratchy scenes recall TV's "Millennium" or "The Blair Witch Project." If I would compare "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" to anything, it would be the terrible sequels that came out after the original "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" to that point. Just one was watchable, "Leatherface," but with the exception of Part 2, they were all simply remakes of the original film. Most direct to video sequels do that now, and while this film tries to be something different, it is simply a remake that cannot match the original. As Leatherface and the clan enter a new millennium, their wrinkles were showing.

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