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Saw III

Saw IIICast
Tobin Bell as John Kramer / Jigsaw
Shawnee Smith as Amanda
Angus MacFadyen as Jeff
Dina Meyer as Kerry
Kim Roberts as Deborah
Bahar Soomekh as Lynn

Crew
Director: Darren Lynn Bousman
Screenwriter: Leigh Wannell
Story: James Wan
Producer: Gregg Hoffman, Oren Koules, Mark Burg
Executive Producer: Daniel Jason Heffner, Stacey Testro
Director of Photography: David A. Armstrong
Composer: Charlie Clouser


Saw IIITerminally ill serial killer Jigsaw continues ensnaring sad sacks in lethal games, this time from his deathbed, in Saw III, though to its credit, director Darren Lynn Bousman's second contribution to the Halloween-timed franchise has slightly more kick than his prior effort. Without any differentiation in color palette, editorial structure, tone, or quantity of blood from its predecessors, this latest gory go-round picks up where last year's film ended, following Jigsaw and apprentice Amanda as they kidnap a doctor and force her to keep Jigsaw alive—via an explosive collar that'll detonate if the fiend's heart-rate falls—just long enough to watch another captive, Jeff, perform a succession of horrific tests. As before, salvation is achievable through bodily sacrifice, yet series creators James Wan and Leigh Whannell bring a bit more heft to their decaying conceit by having Jeff's ordeal be crafted by Jigsaw not only as a lesson in the perils of vengeance, but also in the necessity of letting go of past misfortunes, the tragedy in question being the death of Jeff's young son. Faced with the choice of saving those responsible for his kid's demise (as well as the culprit's light punishment) by suffering pain, or being condemned by Jigsaw to a worse, unspecified fate, Jeff is compelled to confront both his anger and his grief, a more nuanced predicament that, during a sequence in which Jeff is aske to save a judge from drowning in slaughtered pig goo by burning the physical reminders of his son's life (photographs, stuffed animals, etc.), even flirts with emotional gravity. In general, however, Saw III simply peddles gruesomeness of a disgusting rather than frightening order, its intricate deathtrap set pieces only barely complemented by the tense rapport between Jigsaw and Amanda, and eventually impaired by the filmmakers' desire, through furious flashbacks, to link all three Saw movies together into a grand Jigsaw-masterminded plot that's elaborate to the point of absurdity.

via SlantMagazine



For DVD, grab it here
Saw III DVDGenre: Horror
Condition: New
Package Type: DVD
Display Type: Fullscreen



For Blu-Ray, grab it here
Saw III Blu-RaySaw III - Unrated
Genre: Horror
Condition: New
Package Type: DVD
Display Type: Widescreen

2 comments:

Don Garcia said...

I already saw this one and it was great because of the puzzles that jigsaw had made..Some of the scenes were massively gore...actually I did not understand some of the conversations in the movie and thanks for posting it..

Anonymous said...

i didn't enjoyed this one that much.. somehow predictable. SAW II is much better than the third.