Genre: Horror/Thriller
Director: Kevin Greutert
Cast: Tobin Bell, Cary Elwes, Costas Mandylor, Betsy Russell, Sean Patrick Flanery, Gina Holden
RunTime: 1 hr 33 mins
Released By: Shaw
Rating: R21 (Strong Gore and Violence)
Official Website: http://www.saw3dmovie.com/
Opening Day: 6 January 2011
Synopsis:
As a deadly battle rages over Jigsaw’s brutal legacy, a group of Jigsaw survivors gathers to seek the support of self-help guru and fellow survivor Bobby Dagen, a man whose own dark secrets unleash a new wave of terror...
Movie Review:
What can one attribute to another entry into
the "Saw" franchise? Number 7 comes right on the
heels of the 3D craze and purports to be its final chapter.
So Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) is still dead and but his legacy still
goes on in flashbacks. And in a protege, Hoffman (Costas Mandylor).
And in his widow, Jill (Betsy Russell). The entire soap opera
of Jigsaw's family and professional life carries a narrative
that attempts to reconcile the final film with the beginning
of the franchise, and it definitely does seem to have recapitulated
rather well for both hardcore fans as well as fairweather
ones. But it has to be said that the films have been on a
downward spiral since its fantastic first installment. It
delivers the gore in more elaborate ways than the past few
films have -- considering how quickly they were rushed out
-- but loses that sense of cleverness and more importantly,
that sense of menace that the franchise has always attempted
to retain.
After the previous six films, the franchise
does not so much look through the eye of the victims anymore
as it does its villains who have an entire mythology unto
themselves. And "Saw 3D" almost solely focuses on
Hoffman, who it really has to be said, is a sad substitute
for Jigsaw. He carries on his messiah's waning moralistic
philosophy by continuing to find victims in need of a baptism
by blood but finds himself hindered by Jill who is now cooperating
with the police and giving them everything she knows to spite
her husband's latest protege. Add to this one Bobby Dagen
(an actually funny Sean Patrick Flanery), who has written
a best-selling book and sold DVDs about being a Jigsaw survivor
and profiting from Hoffman's hallowed gift of life. Suffice
to say, he (and his wife) quickly becomes the main plaything
of this film's grand guignol torture play with 60 minutes
set on the clock.
Now,
even with the requisite twists and better-than-expected inventiveness
of its traps, "Saw 3D" does not deliver in the least
with its titular promise -- it's 3D sets yet another low standard
for the technology. If the onus on watching this film is to
attempt a different perspective, then it never quite reaches
the mark. But who are we really kidding here? It's just one
more excuse to milk this cash cow. The franchise has truly
run its course. If you watched and enjoyed all seven of its
films, at least you can be proud of that. Right? Anyone?
Movie
Rating:
(A better-expected end to a franchise with its hey-day far
behind it; still never hits its best heights)
Review by Justin Deimen
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