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Saw (DVD)

APPROX. 100 MINS. - PROD. YEAR: 2004 - MPA RATING: R

Michael Emerson and Monica Potter.
" I wanted to like “Saw"... It had the potential to be good, but fell just short.

DVD review

FIRST PUBLISHED Feb 19, 2005
By Justin Cleveland

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In 1995, David Fincher brought one of the most startling visions of sadistic crime ever committed to celluloid. "Se7en" was intense. The acting stellar, the themes painful, and the emotional impact like a kick in the stomach. Having one of the finest casts in modern cinema certainly didn´t hurt its case.

Fast forward nearly a decade and, though the serial killer genre has been oft repeated, never as successfully. I´m sad to report that "Saw" never really overcomes the hump or reaches a pinnacle of greatness. But for all its failures, the majority of the movie is a successful piece that pulls out some interesting emotions and good scares during its runtime.

Adam (Leigh Whannel) and Lawrence (Carry Elwes) wake up in a room. They are chained to the walls with a body lying in the middle of the floor, dead of a self-inflicted gunshot wound. The two have no idea where they are or how they got there. Their only clue comes from a small tape that each has in his pocket... which contains a mandate to perform gruesome acts or die.

That is the role of the Jigsaw killer, a man who sets up situations that will cause one person to take a life or forfeit their own. His purpose is to restore an appreciation for life in those who have none, in his own sick way. The motives behind his sick game are his own, and have a logical dictation therein.

As a movie, "Saw" makes sense. It´s a neat concept that works in its own world. Where it goes astray is in the acting. Carry Elwes overacts the entire film and, more often than not, had me rolling my eyes. His every bit of dialogue was strained through his lips and his actions as the doctor simply didn´t resonate for me. He seemed to want to play action hero rather than an average man trapped in an extraordinary situation. The rest of the cast plays their roles pretty well and I didn´t see anyone extraordinary or too bad.

I felt like Danny Glover´s character was wasted during the film, as a former police officer whose sick obsession with the Jigsaw killer lead him into this tangled web. Remember how sick you felt when Scatman Carothers came back in "The Shining" only to die? Well, that´s pretty much how I feel about Danny Glover´s character. There are other plot lines that simply don´t make sense, and other characters whose motivations are never explored. I need a reason for evil and this movie never fully provides me a resolution for that, something that is essential for the film to work as more than a few cheap thrills and disgusting concepts.

The writing also uses a few easy-out options, like the phrase, "I´ve just remembered…" Listen, I´ve been knocked out a lot in my life, but have never come too and had an exposition-spewing dialogue session. The entire concept seemed unnatural and like it were the easy-way out. It worked for Shakespeare, but this is the 21st century. The movie used some novel editing tricks earlier, but seemed to run out of creative steam toward the middle of the film.

That´s not to say I didn´t appreciate how the movie unwrapped itself. The pace of exposition was fairly even, and I felt satisfied with how the movie was set up. Since the essential concept is two guys trapped in a room, the ways the filmmakers got out of the room were a great tribute to these young men´s potential.

The set design is uneventful, pretty good for a medium-budget horror title. Director James Wan uses a lot of camera tricks and an avant-garde style of editing to maximize the effect of the on-screen gore, and a few cheap gags to pull off the big scares in his movie.

A tangled web of characters in situations far beyond the norm, "Saw" is a decent film through the majority of the runtime. The end follows a rapid decent into idiocy and insanity that defies any sense of logic. Not only does it lack suspense, it seemed kind of silly to me. It´s a shame, because the first bit of the film is pretty good and this ending prevents it from attaining any respect, in my opinion. The so-called "twist ending," the bane of one Yunda Eddie Feng´s existence, does a lot to rectify the ills by the last 20 minutes, but not nearly enough, while raising questions that the movie never satisfies.

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