99 Cent Video FLASHBACK: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A Family Portrait


© Paul Armentano

The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A Family Portrait (1988)

Directed: Brad Shellady

"The Texas Chainsaw Massacre is a vile piece of sick crap. It is a film with literally nothing to recommend it: nothing but a hysterically paced slapdash , imbecile concoctions of cannibalism, voodoo, astrology, sundry hippie-esque cults, and unrelenting sadistic violence as extreme and hideous as a complete lack of imagination can possibly make it."               -Harper's Magazine, November 1976

The cinematic trailer to 1999's The Blair Witch Project promised a film "Scary as Hell." More than 25 years earlier, another film capitalized on a similar declaration: movie critic Rex Reed's pronouncement that it was, "The most horrifying motion picture I have ever seen."

Tobe Hooper's legendary 1974 film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre raised the ante in horror cinema. From start to finish, Hooper's unnerving depiction of modern day cannibalism delivers what others only tease: a motion picture so frightening that you will find yourself repeating: "It's only a movie. It's only a movie."

Hooper cast actors John Dugan (Grandpa), Gunnar Hansen (Leatherface), Edwin Neal (The Hitchhiker), and Jim Siedow (The Cook) to personify his vision of the ultimate evil: a redneck, flesh-eating "family" intent on devouring (literally) anyone who crosses their path. Today, the four comprise arguably the most legendary family in horror cinema. Twenty-four years after the film's debut, director Brad Shellady sat down with each cast member to probe their thoughts on the making of one of the most notorious motion pictures in history.

Individually, the four actors bear little resemblance to the psychopathic characters that they made household names nearly three decades ago. "I'm really a lover," kids Siedow, who appears almost fragile in old age. Hansen, probably the most well known of the four, addresses the stereotypes with a more somber tone.

"People think that I am the personality of Leatherface," says the soft-spoken actor. "I'll probably be remembered for The Texas Chainsaw Massacre before I'll be remembered for anything else, and that's unfortunate."

When asked to comment on the atmosphere that surrounded the making of the film, all agree that much of Chainsaw's intensity came from a combination of long hours and oppressive Texas heat. Edwin Neal - who was attending The University of Texas at the time he landed the role of the Hitchhiker - notes that the film's infamous dinner sequence required more than 26 hours to shoot. "It just got crazier and crazier" on the set, he says, noting that several cast members vomited between takes because there was so much rotting food present. "It became easier as we took on the environmental aspects of the family to become the family," he affirms.

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Here's the follow-up discussion on this article: View all related messages

2.   Feb 11, 2005 5:55 PM
In response to Gulp! posted by humorous_sage:

You know, today this family would have its own reality show on FOX. ...


-- posted by Zanzi


1.   Mar 17, 2004 12:47 PM
Gulp! I'll make a point of skipping this one. Thanks for the warning.

Hank


-- posted by humorous_sage





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