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Yeah, without the rest of the insane family members it just didn't feel the same.Finished watching TCM and didn't think it was too awful. Shelly feels completely unnecessary (and I have to wonder if her ending up in the garbage wasn't meta commentary for something) and it seems more like it's making fun of woke stuff (school shooting survivor ends up saving herself with a gun; "Yeah, that's a cult."), plus lots of good gore. Like Halloween Kills I'd call it slasher porn -- not really a great horror movie but if you like seeing people getting disemboweled and chopped up in different ways then it's entertaining.
But, yeah, the biggest problem is that there's no need for it to be a Texas Chainsaw Massacre film. Without the rest of the family and surreal, weird moments with Leatherface (his whole Pretty Woman getup) they might as well have just made the killer into some new, generic slasher villain. Not much would've lost or needed to be changed, and I'm sure the expectations and comparisons to old TCM films is hurting the film more than helping.
You know? This is the first one that doesn't have any family members except for the woman who was his guardian. But I hesitate to call her a family member because how she came to adopting Leatherface or her relation to him is never explained. So I don't think she counts.Yeah, without the rest of the insane family members it just didn't feel the same.
That plot device was meaningless, the white sister did not shy away from firearms in the slightest and the “I was supposed to die there“ line seems out of character seeing as how the white sister only expressed such a feeling when in the back of the strong independent Texas Ranger final girl from the first movie's car. I assume it was included because of the Oxford shooting.REMEMBER SANDY HOOK?!?!
Even in the original movies Leatherface can and does feel pain. This one made him out to be the fucking Terminator without ever bothering to tell us why.-An extremely minor nitpick I have is that Leatherface in the face of not being established as a superhuman or as supernaturally empowered is able to shrug off Injuries that would Incapacitate normal humans.
And in this one he's stabbed in the abdomen by a buck knife, jabbed with a corkscrew ( only in the arm however, I have seen video footage of a man standing very casually while having deep gouges in his torso from large shards of broken glass so the corkscrew jab would be a very minor injury for a normal human) and shot three or four times (albeit these were the typical “non lethal shoulder hits“ that are oh so typical in media)Even in the original movies Leatherface can and does feel pain.
I watched TC 3D for the first time just before watching the Netflix one. I have to assume that the scene with the cop using a smart phone and the headstone with a 2012 death date came from studio-mandated reshoots or something. For such a talky, heavily-plotted slasher, it sure goes out of its way to make no sense, on multiple fronts.The only positive I can say is that the gore was good. It really made me reevaluate Texas Chainsaw 3D and I think that one was at least "pretty good" even if the logic is completely nonsensical. Plus it's heart was in the right place with the casting.
It's a huge screw-up to me. Leatherface from the original felt almost like a real person, and reworking him into Jason/Michael Myers (with no family) while heavily referencing the original is lame and a huge cheat. None of the other movies got him right, but this one feels particularly off.-An extremely minor nitpick I have is that Leatherface in the face of not being established as a superhuman or as supernaturally empowered is able to shrug off Injuries that would Incapacitate normal humans.
Agreed. If you turn off your brain and just ignore the extremely flawed logic then it's a fun movie. But I guess you could say that about anything. This is how far the bar has been lowered for this franchise.I watched TC 3D for the first time just before watching the Netflix one. I have to assume that the scene with the cop using a smart phone and the headstone with a 2012 death date came from studio-mandated reshoots or something. For such a talky, heavily-plotted slasher, it sure goes out of its way to make no sense, on multiple fronts.
It's like they forgot in the first one that he's incapacitated by accidentally cutting his own leg and screaming in pain, and in the actually decent 2003 remake he loses his arm and freaks out, slumps down to the floor, and wails. There's a scene in the first one especially I like where Leatherface is alone in the kitchen and acting upset and frustrated about the protagonists being there, like there's a part of him who really doesn't want to hurt them, but he knows his family will make him do it. Leatherface was always crazy, but he was also just retarded, a big manchild who didn't really know and maybe didn't even enjoy what he was doing, but thought he had to for his family, the truly sicked and demented ones.Even in the original movies Leatherface can and does feel pain. This one made him out to be the fucking Terminator without ever bothering to tell us why.
In pro wrasslin' terms: LEARN TO FUCKING SELL!
To shut my brain off that much I'd have to stick my head in a microwave. I think I can appreciate the Southern gothic movie they had probably set out to make. The surprise inheritance and identifying birthmark would have been cliched writing even 200 years ago, but maybe that was the point. The movie as it is looks almost as blatantly hacked-up as Jason Goes to Hell. I don't know if any BTS drama has come out but there had to have been something. The timeline glitches had to have been a last-minute change because a lot of the costuming, music etc indicate they were shooting for a 1990s setting.Agreed. If you turn off your brain and just ignore the extremely flawed logic then it's a fun movie. But I guess you could say that about anything. This is how far the bar has been lowered for this franchise.
I always liked that scene too. iirc the actor said he played the scene as if he were frightened, like Leatherface was scared of unexplained strangers barging into his home the way a little kid might be. My sense is that he didn't get out of the house much or go looking for people to kill... he just slaughtered whoever the Cook brought him. He only used a chainsaw for a weapon because that's what he happened to have at the time, and he only went out chasing people because he felt threatened.There's a scene in the first one especially I like where Leatherface is alone in the kitchen and acting upset and frustrated about the protagonists being there, like there's a part of him who really doesn't want to hurt them, but he knows his family will make him do it.
If nothing else, imo the illuminati thing was the best thing in the movie. It makes sense that backwoods cannibals would think TBPT were spying on them, and given the tone of the movie it figures that they'd be right. People single it out as one of the dumb things in the movie, but I dunno, that aspect never really bothered me, nor does the random-as-hell ending.Tcm: next generation is the best tcm. Kim henkels idea of the illuminati using serial killers as a study of trauma and disassociation is so on the money its amazing they made that film.