Wednesday, February 14, 2018
Texas Chainsaw Massacre 1974
Texas Chainsaw Massacre 1974
So, weve all seen this horror classic hundreds of times. What can you possibly say about it at this point? Thanks to the cool dementoids at London, Ontarios Vagrancy Films, I got to see it again on the big screen recently in all its celluloid glory.
Out for a stroll |
Its also a bit like a fairy tale. The children shouldnt have wandered into that old house in the woods where the witches live and eat children. The girl has to fight to escape from them after they have her over for dinner and try to eat her.
Texas Chainsaw Assacre |
Nope. Its from "Hour of the Wolf" |
Everything about TCM is expert though. For Tobe Hooper, this movie must have been a mixed blessing because it was his first hit and wound up being an iconic horror classic. Its a damn near perfect film too. Even the crippled brother Francis, who is annoying as hell, works in this movie because hes just another element in gradually ramping up the tension throughout the film. Theres nothing reassuring or comforting in TCM; its like a vice that slowly tightens on the viewer. You can watch the movie several times without catching its skewed sense of humor.
The hills are aliiiive... |
For Tobe Hooper, though, the problem is you can only go down from Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Hes made some surprisingly great movies, with my second favorite probably being Eaten Alive, and theres a sort of visual continuity to all of them- he has plenty of shots of people running through the underbrush and disorientingly bright lights, for example. Many of his movies play like demented fairy tales. Hes also particularly adept at filming madness and mania. Yet, he doesnt really seem to get the accolades that other genre filmmakers have. Maybe its time for a serious reexamination of his body of work.
But end with Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Its as self-assured a film as youre ever going to see, and if you see it on the big screen with a hushed audience, one of the scariest.