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I still remember the advance buzz surrounding "Saw." Several scenes from the movie were served up as extras on the DVD of the 2004 "Punisher" movie, and everything that was present there looked extremely cool. Apparently, the studio bigwig in charge of the film's release thought so, as well, since this micro-budgeted horror film with no recognizable stars other than Danny Glover - admittedly several years removed from his own A-list run - the primo Halloween 2004 release. Yours truly was in his third year of college at the time, and first year living away from home, and thought it mighty funny to hear several people around campus saying the sentence "Let's go see 'Saw.'" Hey, it was highly amusing at the time.
Unless you've been living under a rock for much of the last decade, you know how the story turned out. Many people came and saw, uh, "Saw," were highly entertained and bedazzled by the movie's inventive premise and surprising plot twists, and made the flick an infinitely profitable piece of modern horror cinema. This being a low-budget movie that made boatloads of cash, however, "Saw" became the "Friday the 13th" of the 21st century. To their credit, Twisted Pictures did their absolute damndest to make each successive sequel necessary, spinning off in direction after direction, delving into various victim characters, and creating ever-more ingenious traps and contraptions for the doomed souls unfortunate enough to catch Jigsaw's wrath to attempt to escape from. Unfortunately, "Saw" also became the most convoluted horror series of all time. What starts off as a series that feels like a naturally satisfying trilogy quickly becomes a muddled mess of a franchise. They become less and less about Jigsaw's original intent and instead become geek shows that critics of '80s slasher films equated all horror movies to be, increasingly ABOUT the goddamn traps and torture devices in much the same fashion that "Family Guy" became a show less about people and more about pop culture references. But I digress.
Today, we look back at the original "Saw" - a very popular, very effective, and very influential (for better or worse) horror movie with several outstanding performances and some very entertaining writing and acting.
THE MOVIE!!
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Spinning off from this main plot cog are several extraneous scenes that introduce the AFOREMENTIONED premise of the "Saw" movies to us. Several previous victims of the Jigsaw killer are shown, but the most fascinating one is easily Amanda Young. Shawnee Smith, a veteran of both TV and horror films, does a fantastic job playing Amanda, a former drug addict and the only survivor of a Jigsaw game. She is still an immense fan favorite with the series' aficianadoes, and for good reason - her character arc in this original movie, a lowly doper who actually finds salvation as a result of her incarceration, gave the flick a powerful emotional kick and was a welcome breath of fresh air in the endless sea of gory/surreal games being played out before the audience members.
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This has been the case with a few of my previous reviews, but I realize that this particular manifesto has been a little scatterbrained. Perhaps it is only appropriate for a film where enjoyment is primarily derived from surprise twists, and attempting not to spoil them for audiences who haven't seen the movie and also knowing that we now have a long series of subsequent films that expand on the whacked-out philosophies and gory surrealism of the original. There's really nothing more to say other than my belief that the original "Saw" is, by far, the best movie in the series - but as one friend on a message board once said, if you had told me then that this movie would spawn SIX (so far, as I refuse to believe that the recently-released "Saw 3D" is the final movie until another October passes without Tobin Bell's gleaming mug on a movie poster) subsequent films, I would have called you crazy. But life is funny like that sometimes. For some great acting, labyrinthine storytelling and more than a few headtrip moments, 2004 O.G. "Saw" is a flick worth checking out.
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