Sculpt
04-15-2016, 03:52 PM
Discussion: Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2003; Unrealistic Violence
I think there's plenty of folks who liked Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003). It was very successful at the box office (though poorly received by critics).
How did the scenes of Unrealistic violence strike ya?
- While Morgan "male friend #1" was running through the bountiful amount of sheets hungout to dry, Leatherface completely lops off half of Morgan's leg with one swing of a chainsaw. It's just physically impossible...
- Leatherface stands still while Biel takes at least 3 chops at his arm, cutting it off. Leatherface is not restrained, pinned down, drugged, asleep, dazed, blinded, etc... rather he's standing, strong agile and trying to kill her.
I thought unrealistic violence was out of place, removing the suspension of disbelief, evaporating the horror.
Some films are trying to be funny and unrealistic with the action, like Evil Dead II and Dead Alive. But Chainsaw opened with the police film "true story" theme, and seemed to be trying to be realistic. Took me as jarring when it left that.
Did you even notice the violence was unrealistic? Did it bother you? Did you like it? Do you prefer unrealistic?
I think there's plenty of folks who liked Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003). It was very successful at the box office (though poorly received by critics).
How did the scenes of Unrealistic violence strike ya?
- While Morgan "male friend #1" was running through the bountiful amount of sheets hungout to dry, Leatherface completely lops off half of Morgan's leg with one swing of a chainsaw. It's just physically impossible...
- Leatherface stands still while Biel takes at least 3 chops at his arm, cutting it off. Leatherface is not restrained, pinned down, drugged, asleep, dazed, blinded, etc... rather he's standing, strong agile and trying to kill her.
I thought unrealistic violence was out of place, removing the suspension of disbelief, evaporating the horror.
Some films are trying to be funny and unrealistic with the action, like Evil Dead II and Dead Alive. But Chainsaw opened with the police film "true story" theme, and seemed to be trying to be realistic. Took me as jarring when it left that.
Did you even notice the violence was unrealistic? Did it bother you? Did you like it? Do you prefer unrealistic?