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The Texas Chain Saw Massacre

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The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974)

October. 11,1974
|
7.4
|
R
| Horror
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A group of five young friends face a nightmare of torment at the hands of a depraved Texas clan.

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Ceticultsot
1974/10/11

Beautiful, moving film.

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Helllins
1974/10/12

It is both painfully honest and laugh-out-loud funny at the same time.

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Paynbob
1974/10/13

It’s fine. It's literally the definition of a fine movie. You’ve seen it before, you know every beat and outcome before the characters even do. Only question is how much escapism you’re looking for.

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Yazmin
1974/10/14

Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.

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agentgundyr
1974/10/15

This is definitely the best of the slasher films that I've seen. While other slashers often rely on gore or jump scares to terrify, this film uses more atmosphere than its competitors. It's slasher villain doesn't talk or make jokes like Freddy, he isn't this impossible murderer like Michael Myers or Jason, Leatherface and his family seem more real and that is what makes this movie scary. In conclusion, this film is much more than just a gore-filled slasher, and if your squeamish for the chainsaw massacre, watch the film and see, it's not terrifying because of the chainsaw....

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Jared_Andrews
1974/10/16

'The Texas Chainsaw Massacre' is one of the most famous and influential horror films of all time. Its minimal budget and direction can be seen in some way in nearly all horror movies that followed it for decades. The plot is exceptionally simple, a smart choice and another influential one. Five young adults take a trip to a desolate Texas town to honor the death of a friend's grandfather. On what should have been a wonderful, cathartic adventure, they encounter a family of cannibals who slaughter humans with hammers, and yes, chainsaws. All the actors were unknowns at the time, and they worked little in movies afterwards. I must admit I didn't notice that these were amateurs. After all, they really only needed to scream and run, so hiring no-name actors was a smart cost-saving decision.My initial reaction is that the film is not nearly as gory as people think it is-virtually all the blood and violence is shown off screen or is blocked by some clever camera work. If you dare to keep your eyes fixed to the screen during the killing scenes, you'll be surprised to find how little you actually see.The camera work used throughout the film is inspired and clearly inspiring. Countless horror movies that have come after have copied techniques seen here, not only to save money on necessary prosthetics and makeup, but also to let viewers visualize the gore for themselves. In most cases, what we imagine is far worse than anything a movie could actually show us.For the most part, the movie contains very little score. Sound effects and occasional dialogue make up virtually all the sound we here. During the scariest moments, screams replace the music. Another replacement for the creepy music we would normally hear is the sound of maniacal laughter. The cannibal family's incessant laughter is creepy as hell. 'Halloween' has the famous piano music, and 'Texas Chainsaw' has creepy laughter. The chase scene at the end is incredibly terrifying and brilliantly filmed. Making use of wide shots, we see the girl and the cannibals sprinting towards the camera, as carefully selected angles manipulate the viewers' depth perception, causing the chasing cannibals to appear closer than they really are. Also, there's a giant psychopath wielding a roaring chainsaw as he chases a helpless, shrieking girl. Fancy camerawork isn't exactly required to make this scene terrifying. Nevertheless, the chase sequences in this film are some the best and most inventive ever in horror cinema.When all hope seems lost, the girl with the iron will survives, the only one of her group to do so. This popularized the trope of the lone surviving girl. Watch any horror film-there's almost always at least one girl who fights and survives. That's just one more example of this film's influence.

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adam_pittavino
1974/10/17

Terrifying. Disturbing. Violent. Those three words symbolize Tobe Hoopers 1974's Texas Chainsaw Massacre, his fearsome horror entry setting the tone for what the 1980's became familiar with, the slasher. Hell awaits a group of young sightseer's as they venture into a remote texan township, the barebones plot revealing a primal, grotesque nature thats instantly identifiable and unsettling. Little is known about the chainsaw weilding maniac that awaits them, and thats what makes the film more alluring. Horror movies have a knack of making the heroes dull and less interesting than their attackers, and Hooper has produced a crude enigma surrounding Leatherface and his hick family of murderous cannibals. The nervous disposition that this movie puts you in isnt to dissimiliar to how the road trippers feel when first enter the fateful house of horrors. From the outside, the homestead looks like any other in the area, but its whats inside thats truly terrifying as we see rooms resembeling an abbotoir. The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a film that thrives from experimentation and voyeurism, delivering a style of movie with villians completely devoid from human civilisation. As the victims are slaughtered or tortured one by one, Hooper creates an isolation rarely seen in any horror film before or since. A horror film where the eerie silences are scarier than the inevitable voilence.

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saramgia
1974/10/18

When I was young, I thought this was a good, scary movie. Now, I see it as campy and poorly directed/acted/produced/edited. No visual, sound, or special effects. Not creative, just mean. I watched it twice, because my own reaction surprised me. It's bad. Other horror films are incomparably superior. Even bad horror films are better than this.

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