Welcome toThanks,Hollywood Archives I Love It, our series highlighting something onscreen we're obsessed with this week.
At the risk of pissing off every gore-loving Sawfranchise fanatic or Human Centipededevotee (if you sick freaks even exist), we need to state an undeniable truth: After all these decades, the original Texas Chainsaw Massacrestill reigns supreme as the ultimate masterclass in gross body horror.
Back in 1974, the beloved slasher was unlike anything audiences had ever seen before. Receiving an X rating in America, it was flat-out banned from several countries, including the UK. Yet despite featuring literal cannibals hungry for innocent teen flesh, the first Texas Chainsaw Massacre was surprisingly devoid of any truly graphic gore. In fact, director Tobe Hooper purposefully shot his first feature film with a PG rating in mind, only for an obviously shook MPAA to slap him with its most explicit label available at the time (later replaced by today's NC-17).
After the first film's unmitigated success, Hooper got a free license to amp up the bloodiness as many notches as he wanted in the sequels. But that only resulted in movies with 100% more camp and about 15% of its predecessor's masterfully immersive rancidness. Every subsequent reboot, like the 2003 series (and, in all likelihood, the upcoming 2022 remake) equally fails to capture the original's iconically understated grisliness.
I don't know if we'll ever get another horror movie where you can so viscerally smell the blood, sweat, and decay wafting off the silver screen.
I don't know if we'll ever get another horror movie where you can so viscerally smell the blood, sweat, and decay wafting off the silver screen. Much like the happy accident that forced Steven Spielberg to barely show the titular shark in Jaws, 1974's Texas Chainsaw Massacre's PG-restrictiveness inadvertently revealed how less can be so much more when it comes to body horror. Over-the-top torture porn certainly makes one squeamish. But The Texas Chainsaw Massacregrounds viewers in a body horror that's closer to home — and far more disturbing for it.
In one of Hooper's most famous quotes on horror, the director insists, "You've got to send a physical sensation through and not let [the audience] off the hook." And let us off the hook he does not! Hooper's Leatherface instead casuallyhangs us on a meat hook by our flesh, only to ignore our screams and meander off to deal with something more pressing.
In essence, The Texas Chainsaw Massacrereveals the stark difference between horror that prioritizes grossness over goriness. In the modern age of gore horror, popularized by franchises like Saw, the fantastically over-the-top torture of a character scooping out their own eyeball has an almost disassociative effect, numbing the viewer with shock value. In contrast, Texas Chainsaw Massacrekeeps you trapped in a mundane, existential disgust over just how fragile the human body you're living in really is.
Despite the bombastic flashiness of Leatherface's iconic weapon, his most horrific kills are carried out with the quick and quiet precision of a club. A single crack to the skull of Pam's boyfriend, Kirk, sends the poor hunk into a silent seizure reminiscent of a floundering fish out of water. It's the kind of body horror that shows how brutally easy it is to turn us all into lifeless meat sacks, rather than reveling in how much drawn-out mutilation a person can handle before expiring.
The terror of The Texas Chainsaw Massacrelies in each character being so unceremoniously dealt with — like they're just livestock at a slaughterhouse. There’s no particular cruelty or belabored torment to Leatherface's matter-of-fact executions. Each death is over in the span of about a five-second shot, each kill performed with the practiced professionalism of a man who's been doing this so long he barely notices when the last gasps for air leave your body so he can finally just be done with the job already. In his longer standoffs with Sally, the physical altercations are almost comically awkward. Her panicked desperation is met with little more than mild annoyance that this little lamb won't accept her inevitable fate of winding up skewered on his family's dinner table.
"Texas Chainsaw Massacre" keeps you trapped in a mundane, existential disgust over just how fragile the human body you're living in really is.
Modern horror can take a lot of lessons from the cinematic choices of this undisputed classic. Yet, at the same time, as we learn more about real-life horror stories the cast had to go through to get that realism, it raises some important ethical questions. According to many cast and crew members, shoots often lasted as many as 16 hours and took place during an awful heatwave in Texas. Allegedly, during the shooting of the iconic dinner scene, real animal corpses were used as props. They filled the unventilated set with such a putrid stench of rot that people had to go outside to puke, only to jump right back into the scene.
I love the pungent, embodied fear that permeates every showing of this movie. But if we're going to re-evaluate Stanley Kubrick's abusive workplace behavior during The Shining, then we should certainly afford Tobe Hooper the same scrutiny. We likely won't get another horror masterpiece quite like 1974's Texas Chainsaw Massacre ever again.And honestly, maybe we shouldn't.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1979) is now streaming on Prime Video.
Topics Film Reviews
Cybersecurity group sues DOGE over data access'Yellowjackets' deaths: A total recap of Seasons 1 and 2Smarter Siri is coming very soon, new report claimsMemphis Grizzlies vs. Phoenix Suns 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineTikTok’s latest trend is having coffee with your past selfBest Echo Dot deal: Save $10 at AmazonPhoenix Suns vs. Houston Rockets 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineWordle today: The answer and hints for February 10, 2025Amazon February devices event: When is it, what to expectBest game deal: Get up to 60% off Jackbox GamesSan Antonio Spurs vs. Boston Celtics 2025 livestream: Watch NBA online'Yellowjackets' deaths: A total recap of Seasons 1 and 2Miami Heat vs. Oklahoma City Thunder 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineApple is launching several new products soon, report claimsNYT Connections hints and answers for February 11: Tips to solve 'Connections' #611.NYT mini crossword answers for February 10, 2025NYT Connections Sports Edition hints and answers for February 12: Tips to solve Connections #142Memphis Grizzlies vs. LA Clippers 2025 livestream: Watch NBA onlineNYT mini crossword answers for February 10, 2025Webb telescope has a new mission. It's watching a hazardous asteroid. Elon Musk reschedules Tesla 'Battery Day' for later this year Apple makes watchOS 7 official, with handwashing, sleep tracking, and dancing Apple's iOS 14 lets you tap the back of your iPhone to perform actions Extreme fires erupt in the Arctic Circle Wikileaks just put a bounty on a reporter's job Apple gives health updates and watchOS news at WWDC Elon Musk's weird Ambien tweets are back John Legend and Chrissy Teigen's 1 North Face, Patagonia, and REI boycott Facebook ads to #StopHateForProfit Louisiana Congressman on 'radicalized Islamic' suspects: 'kill them all' The best 2020 games so far to fill your summer lockdown hours Tina Fey, NBC ask to have 30 Rock episodes featuring Blackface pulled Elderly man calmly eats his food while everyone else runs from a snake Everything coming to HBO Max in July 2020 Stephen Colbert calls John Bolton 'naive' during no Digital companies gear up for 'day of action' against proposed net neutrality rollbacks Donald Trump is a defense lawyer's worst nightmare Uber is refunding passengers who used the service after the London terror attack Toyota and Tesla's unravelling relationship has finally ended Boston bans most city use of facial
2.2547s , 10132.671875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Hollywood Archives】,Evergreen Information Network