I
think we shoot a lot of stuff and then 20 years
later, we find out what it meant.
--Tobe Hooper, The American Nightmare (2000)
The
images are indelible: a monster wears a mask made of human faces; an
old man sucks blood from a screaming girl's finger; a girl runs in
circles around the very house she's trying to escape. And of course,
the chainsaw -- roaring, raised high, cutting through limbs, torsos,
doors. In 1974, the release of Texas Chainsaw Massacre
changed the ways viewers thought about horror. Shot for $140,000
with a manifestly amateurish cast, Tobe Hooper's first feature went
on to make over $30 million in the U.S. alone. A favorite of
academics -- who see in it critiques of the Vietnam War, patriarchy,
frontier myths, and consumer capitalism -- Texas Chainsaw
Massacre has inspired frequent homages, descendants, copies,
sequels, and remakes.
The
latest of the last is, like the first, set in sweltering August
1973. It begins, again, with John Larroquette's voiceover attesting
to the film's basis in a "true story" (as well as the
first film, as he also narrated that one). Under this solemn
narration runs "confirmation" of the truth claim, in the
form of a police "crime scene" film (a seeming nod to The
Blair Witch Project). A deputy points out the scratch marks and
blood stains on the stairwell leading to the dank and drippy
basement of the "Hewitt house," offered up in scritchy
sepia footage, handheld and too close. All bad.
The
dated footage gives way to the moment it apparently documents --
circa-'70s blondish color (the new movie is shot, beautifully, by
original TCM cinematographer Daniel Pearl): five kids in a
van, headed from Mexico to Dallas by way of Nowhere, Texas. The
group consists of straight-ahead thinker Andy (Mike Vogel), his
recent lovechild pickup Pepper (Erica Leerhsen), annoying Morgan
(Jonathan Tucker), baseball-capped driver Kemper (Eric Balfour), and
his girlfriend Erin (Jessica Biel who, with this role, can consider
her much-publicized campaign to beat down her goody-girl Seventh
Heaven typecasting done.)
As
before, the kids are smoking dope, sweating, and making out,
ostensibly dooming them, morally, until they meet the Hewitts, that
is, Leatherface (Andrew Bryniarski) and family, who set any standard
morality on its ear. This meeting is orchestrated slightly
differently this time, as the van kids pick up not Leatherface's
whacked-out brother, but a delirious escaped victim (Laura German).
On seeing that the van is headed back in the direction she came
from, the girl promptly shoots herself (granting the film its most
sensationally crowd-pleasing image). Unsure how to handle the body
and trusting the locals -- including the predictably sadistic
Sheriff Hoyt (R. Lee Ermey) -- the vansters are slowly sucked into
one disastrous encounter after another.
The
most dreadful of these, of course, involve Leatherface, notoriously
produced by inbreeding and born into a family of cannibals (the
slaughterhouse reappears, all dark corners and lockers and sides of
beef). The ghastly cretin is incapable of speech and wholly
relentless in his pursuit of fleshly collectibles. His home -- shot
here so that it stands tall and stark, against shadows and clouds --
is the ultimate Terrible Place, adorned with human bones, peepholes,
chickens and pigs, and doll parts. This time, the threat of a next
generation (and a next after that) looms, in the form of the feral
child Jedidiah (David Dorfman): if only he can come to sympathy,
instead of self-satiation. If only he can come to see the victims as
images of himself.
One
by one, the kids wander inside the Terrible Place, and all but one
can't escape. Last Girl Erin becomes, like Sally (the excruciating
and amazing Marilyn Burns) before her, a mirror image of the brutal,
canny fiend she battles throughout. Though she must also endure a
couple of overwrought, big-music moments (such as a superfluous
mercy killing, only underlining what you already know her, that she
is capable of great violence and great courage), Erin is more
overtly tough than Sally, even borrowing a moment from TCM2's
more tomboyish Stretch (Caroline Williams).
The
first feature by music video director Marcus Nispel (George Michael,
Lil' Kim [the fabulous "No Time"], Bryan Adams), the new Texas
Chainsaw Massacre venerates the first film and its fans (going
so far as to include a victim cameo by Harry Knowles), but also,
disturbingly and appropriately, accommodates its own moment. This
even as it's plainly cashing in on a brand name, crassly putting its
$13 million budget (courtesy of Michael Bay producing) onscreen in
makeup and digital effects, and blatantly borrowing from any number
of more inventive films.
Hooper's
movie famously reflected frustrations and fears of the early 1970s,
in its low-budget severity and visual chaos. Scholar Robin Wood has
argued that Hooper's movie took on "the authentic quality of a
nightmare," such that it represented a sense of endless loss
and disorder, inevitable political and moral calamity (Hollywood
From Vietnam to Reagan [1986]). This relation to context made
the movie resonate, linked it to other films doing similar work (Wes
Craven's Last House on the Left [1972] and even earlier,
George Romero's Night of the Living Dead [1969]), and viewers
looking to be creeped out gave it legs, for years.