Reviews

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

By Garth Franklin
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre

The JFK assassination, large universities where lots of sex happens, the death penalty and Harry Knowles - as a foreigner that's about all I know of Texas, one of those great big states of Southern USA. Yet its also the setting of what was one of the most famous horror classics ever made - the original "Texas Chainsaw Massacre". Having seen the original once so long ago as a kid I couldn't remember a thing about it (I think I actually fell asleep back then) so I rewatched it again recently.

              Today the original 'Texas' is quite dated - from a nostalgic 
              point of view its a fascinating piece of early 70's Americana 
              and I'm sure back in the day it was shocking as hell but by 
              today's standards its pretty tame. Where its strength still 
              lies though is the simple premise, and the "fly on the 
              wall" style shooting. The last half hour although a bit silly, is nevertheless unrelenting and so by the end when 
              our blood-drenched heroinne is insanely screaming in the back 
              of a truck, its still quite brutal and unnerving to watch.

              A big-budget remake though of this is an odd idea, as remakes 
              go we've seen our share of relatively pointless ones in recent 
              years ("Planet of the Apes", "Psycho"). 
              The biggest reason the old one succeeded was because of its 
              documentary low-budget style. That said the modern incarnation 
              of 'Texas' proves to be a surprise. In many ways this is not 
              so much a remake but a 're-imagining' like this year's reduxs 
              of "Willard" & "The Italian Job" - same 
              name and one or two elements are similar to the original, but 
              otherwise a completely separate film in all from the first and 
              yet still surprisingly enjoyable albeit forgettable pap.

              Its no shock that the gritty guerilla documentary feel which 
              gives the original its kick can't be recreated here, but Director 
              Marcus Nispel still manages to convey an effective dark claustrophobic 
              atmosphere for many scenes. The original film's DOP Daniel C. 
              Pearl is back and is responsible for some quite impressive shot 
              work which makes even your average old rotted house hallway 
              drip with foreboding gothic menace. With a much bigger budget 
              to play with, the boys are able to quite beautifully light and 
              shoot certain scenes with rich texture, and yet don't go overboard 
              in many ways by trying to shoot out-of-place action (ala. the 
              last act of both "Jeepers Creepers" movies).

              That's one of the more astonishing things here, especially considering 
              this is a film from Michael Bay (producing this time) whose 
              not a guy known for restraint. At various opportunities the 
              film could've gone off in silly twists or more grandiose Hollywood 
              style set pieces and it never really does - whilst at other 
              moments where it could've restrained the horror as so many do 
              nowadays, it takes the harder more gruesome road. The script 
              is allowed to unfold at a brisk but natural pace and the characters 
              behave quite beliveably for the most part and never delve into 
              post-modern sarcastic dialogue that has become such a bane of 
              these films in recent years.

              The cast is quite solid too with Jessica Biel delivering great 
              work as a smart and assertive young female lead. Sure she screams 
              like the rest of them, but she's not a blubbering mess and both 
              tries to get out of there at every opportunity and fights back 
              only when she has no other choice (and possess no kickboxing 
              skills either thank god). Eric Balfour, Jonathan Tucker, etc. 
              all deliver good support, R. Lee Ermey in particular is cool 
              as a black-humoured and yet menacingly sadistic sheriff.

              This 'Texas' still falls down in a few areas which prevent it 
              from kick starting a new franchise at least on a creative level. 
              A black & white police video tape footage 'wraparound' is 
              a nice idea and homage to the original's opening credits and 
              yet it doesn't really click and fumbles the ball. The idea of 
              setting it in the 70's is a good one and works for the most 
              part, yet the kids still look like they stepped out of a vintage 
              Abercrombie & Fitch catalogue. Scares work well and its 
              quite intense, yet the last act does drag on at times and the 
              fast-cut editing makes some of the later scenes hard to follow.

              Still, they're minor complaints in many ways. As far as modern 
              horror goes, this is a much bigger success at what it does than 
              "Freddy vs. Jason". There's nothing new or original 
              here (go figure), but the new 'Texas' is a film which manages 
              to effectively re-tell the original story for a modern audience, 
              yet doesn't detract at all from the original and in fact prove 
              a far more worthy creepfest than the various sequels the old 
              'Texas' spawned. A little stylised, but still a genuinely creepy 
              tale worth watching.

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