Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning with Jordana Brewster: DVD Cover
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Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning Director: Jonathan Liebesman Cast: Jordana Brewster, Taylor Handley, Diora Baird, Matthew Bomer

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  • DVD Release Date: 01/16/2007
  • Original Release: 2006
  • Rating: Not Rated
  • Sales Rank: 24,916

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  • Overview
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Scenes

Scene Index

Disc #1 -- Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning [Unrated]
1. August 1939/Main Titles [6:41]
2. July 1969 [1:49]
3. Off to War [3:45]
4. Out of Business [1:38]
5. On the Road [2:12]
6. New Sheriff in Town [6:03]
7. Pit Stop [3:25]
8. Highway Robbery [10:09]
9. Momma's House [5:15]
10. Livestock [4:22]
11. Rules of War [6:43]
12. The Big Break [4:08]
13. Playing With Tommy [4:12]
14. Uninvited Guests [7:10]
15. A New Look [4:05]
16. Surgery [1:43]
17. Dinner Guests [4:34]
18. Back to the Slaughterhouse [6:12]
19. End Credits [6:34]

Scene Index

Editorial Reviews

Bear witness to the birth of the most horrifying legend in the history of cinema as director Jonathan Liebesman explores the nightmarish origins of the psychotic Hewitt family in this sequel to director Marcus Nispel's 2003 hit The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. The year is 1969, and despite the fact that the Vietnam War is raging halfway across the globe, all is ominously quiet on the back roads of America. Eighteen-year-old Dean Hill (Taylor Handley) has just received his draft notice, and his older brother, Eric (Matthew Bomer), is determined to watch out for his younger sibling by ensuring that Dean enroll in the Marine Corps rather than risking his luck at the local induction center. Dean has other plans, though, and as soon as the pair and their girlfriends, Bailey (Diora Baird) and Chrissie (Jordana Brewster), return from their final fling in sunny Texas, he plans to confront his brother with the prospect of dodging the draft. When an unsettling encounter with malevolent bikers Holden (Lee Tergesen) and Alex (Cyia Batten) results in a serious car accident in which Chrissie is thrown from the vehicle, the arrival of Sheriff Hoyt (R. Lee Ermey) at first appears to be a moment of divine intervention. However, when Sheriff Hoyt murders thieving Alex in cold blood and then shepherds her friends into the back of his police cruiser as Chrissie watches from the brush, their momentary reprieve soon gives way to an unimaginable terror. As Hoyt transports her ailing friends to the Hewitt home, where a childlike man named Thomas is currently undergoing the transformation into cannibalistic madman Leatherface (Andrew Bryniarski), a desperate Chrissie attempts to enlist the aid of Holden in rescuing her friends from a fate worse than death. Jason Buchanan, All Movie Guide

Customer Reviews

Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginningby Anonymous

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August 21, 2008: Are you serious? this is Texas Chainsaw Massacare your watching... were you expecting a romantic comedy? i thought it was great how the BF was sawed apart while she was under him hiding... i wouldnt be scared of these movies A. i live in NJ B. i dont wonder around woods or the south. so unless a canibal family lives in Jersey then i wont worry too much about it... and this movie is a HUGE exageration on the life of Ed Gein. he did have a house of horror, but not as intense... but sick enough to make him into a celebrity. gore-tastic movies like these are great... more blood the better....

Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginningby Anonymous

Reader Rating:
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July 22, 2007: This movie surprised me. I didn't expect so much blood and gore. It is just disgusting. Some scenes made me sick to my stomach. Literally! The other Texas Chainsaw Massacre installments weren't as gory as this one. I used to be a fan of slasher horror films when I was a teenager, but come on. Do horror movies really need to show so much gore? I have gotten to a point where I'm afraid to watch these new slasher horror flicks now. I still like to watch classic 80s horror flicks, because they are scary enough without so much blood and gore. Whenever I go to the movie store now, I read the back of the boxes to see what the content is. If the fine print says that the film contains scenes of gore or graphic violence, I won't rent it. This movie should not have even been rated R. It should have been rated NC-17 or higher. I don't recommend this film for anyone under the age of 18.


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