DVD - Wide Screen Learn more
| More Formats | Online Price |
|---|---|
| DVD - Remastered / Wide Screen | $19.99 |
| Blu-ray - Wide Screen / DTS | $29.99 |
A new widescreen digital superscan transfer supervised by director Tobe Hooper; New stereo surround soundtrack re-mix supervised by director Tobe Hooper; Original mono soundtrack; Audio commentary featuring director Tobe Hooper, director of photography Daniel Pearl, and star Gunnar Hansen(Leatherface); Deleted scenes and alternate footage; Blooper reel; Original theatrical trailers and television spots for other films in the "Chainsaw" series; Posters and collectibles; Still photos
Full Product DetailsSide #1 --
1. Logos [:22]
2. Titles/Grave Robbing [4:49]
3. Visiting the Cemetery [5:20]
4. The Hitchhiker [7:36]
5. Out of Gas at the Service Station [6:15]
6. The Old Franklin Place [6:16]
7. Going for a Swim/The First Victim [5:20]
8. Getting Hooked [4:37]
9. Searching for the Others [6:41]
10. Night Falls [5:05]
11. Franklin Is Attacked/Sally Runs for Her Life [5:46]
12. Refuge in the Service Station [7:53]
13. Bringing Sally Home [5:42]
14. Dinner Party [4:17]
15. "Grandpa, We're Gonna Let You Have This One" [2:55]
16. Escape From Hell [2:25]
17. Tantrum / Credits [2:13]
The granddaddy of "splatter" movies, this 1974 shocker transcended its low-budget, drive-in origins to become a milestone in horror-movie history. Even today, 30 years later, Texas Chainsaw Massacre retains the visceral force that gripped Watergate-era moviegoers and left them quaking in their seats. While not the first film directed by Tobe Hooper, it was far and away his best up to that time; he followed it with such worthwhile genre entries as Eaten Alive, The Funhouse, and Poltergeist (that last with assistance from Steven Spielberg), but even the director's most fervent acolytes agree that Massacre remains his magnum opus. Based loosely on the case of real-life serial killer Ed Gein (which also inspired Psycho and, for that matter, Ed Gein), this gritty chiller pits a group of young revelers against a deranged, rural Texas family practicing cannibalism in their remote, ramshackle home. Hooper's perverse vision suffuses every frame, and his "Leatherface," played by Gunnar Hansen, is the epitome of the American hunter gone insane. Of the other cast members -- all unknowns -- only leading lady Marilyn Burns stands out, but she is unforgettable as the lone survivor of this bloody rampage, brutalized almost beyond belief and propelled only by her will to live. Although Massacre isn't nearly as gory as many of the subsequent films it helped spawn, it has a surfeit of graphic, disturbing images that remain indelibly etched on the American pop-culture psyche: who can forget the suit-and-tie-clad "Leatherface," wearing a mask stitched quilt-like from the skinned flesh of his victims, racing through the house and yard with chainsaw in hand? Macabre and unrelenting, but not without memorable moments of black humor, The Texas Chainsaw Massacre habitually places high on lists of the Top Ten Horror Movies, and once you've seen it you'll know why! Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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