
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2
(1986)
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This article is
used here for educational use and as an archive only. The original article
(where available) is
linked to.All text/images are copyrigh t©2008
their original owners and no other copyright is implied or claimed.
©2008 Richard Scheib
Original article www.moria.co.nz/horror/texas2.htm
THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE 2
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USA. 1986.
Director – Tobe Hooper, Screenplay
– L.M. Kit Carson, Producers – Yoram Globus & Menahem Golan, Photography –
Richard Kooris, Music – Tobe Hooper & Jerry Lambert, Makeup – Tom Savini,
Production Design – Cary White. Production Company – Cannon.
Cast:
Caroline Williams (Vanita ‘Stretch’
Brock), Dennis Hopper (Lefty Enright), Bill Johnson (Leatherface), Jim Siedow
(Drayton Sawyer, The Cook), Bill Moseley (Chop-Top), Lou Perry (L.G. McPeters)
Plot: It is thirteen years after
Sally Hardesty and her friends were attacked in the Texas Chainsaw incident,
but while Sally has been committed to an asylum no trace has ever been found of
the killer family. On a backwater Texas road two drunken rich kids challenge a
pickup truck to a game of chicken, while at the same time calling in to radio
dj Vanita ‘Stretch’ Brock on their car-phone. But the driver of the pickup is
Leatherface who turns and hacks them and their vehicle up with a chainsaw.
Stretch is then approached by Texas Ranger Lefty Enright, Sally Hardesty’s
cousin, who is obsessed with finding the cannibal family. Lefty gets her to
replay the tape of the killing on the air in the hope of drawing the killers
out. But this provokes Leatherface and his brother Chop-Top, a crazed
ex-Vietnam vet, to abduct Stretch. They make her prisoner in their lair under a
war games amusement park. But there Stretch finds a strange ally in Leatherface,
who develops a crush on her.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre
(1974) was one of the most notorious horror film of the 1970s. It caused a censorship
outrage and was banned in several countries. It made the name of Tobe Hooper
who went onto direct various mainstream films, most notably the
Spielberg-produced Poltergeist
(1982). After some eleven years in litigation, Tobe Hooper managed to get the
rights to Texas Chain Saw Massacre back and set about making this
sequel. Now backed by a major company (Cannon) and with a considerably larger
budget, he was able to draw on names like Dennis Hopper, makeup effects supremo
Tom Savini and scripter L.M. ‘Kit’ Carson, author of Wim Wenders’ Paris,
Texas (1982). (The only actual returnees from the original production were
Tobe Hooper and Jim Siedow in the role of the Cook). The Texas Chainsaw Massacre
2 was part of a three-film package deal that Tobe Hooper made with
producers Menahem Golan and Yoram Globus at their Cannon production company,
along with the alien space vampires film Lifeforce (1985) and the Invaders from Mars remake
(1986), all of which had budget problems, were intensely disliked by audiences
and ended up being box-office flops.
The
Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 doesn’t seem to have attracted the notoriety of the original – in fact
most fans of the original detested it. Contrarily I actually rather enjoyed it.
The Texas Chain Saw Massacre went as far as it is really possible to go
in terms of brutalizing an audience, which leaves about the only place left for
Tobe Hooper and Kit Carson to go to be over the top and into outrageously sick
black humour. “That got the haemorrhoids, at least it’ll save a trip to the
hospital,” yells the Cook after being chainsawed in the buttocks. Hooper and
Carson keep pushing the black humour into the hysterically sick, milking the
gore with a truly outré sense of taboo-defiance. By the time one has reached
the scene where Bill Moseley sits bashing Lou Perry’s head in with a hammer
while yelling “Incoming mail,” the film becomes genuinely menacing in its sense
of black humour. The scene with the family trying to get the Grandfather to
bash Caroline Williams’s head in, where she is held with her head over a bucket
while he keeps dropping the hammer, has a hysterical kind of nightmarish
quality. Although the most outrageous of all scenes is surely the moment where
Leatherface stands over Caroline Williams and tries to thrust a chainsaw up
into her crotch, mutely grunting with impotent frustration.
Tobe
Hooper delivers up a number of scenes of horrific impact, none more than the
startling opening where the game of chicken ends up with a pickup truck driving
backwards alongside a Mercedes, with Leatherface on top wildly waving the
chainsaw, cutting down into the car’s bodywork, leaving the driver with the top
of his head cut off. There is a very weird blend of pathos and sickness that
Hooper and Tom Savini manage to create in the scene where Leatherface places
L.G.’s sliced-off face over Stretch’s as a gesture of affection, followed by a
quite incredible scene where the hacked-up L.G. staggers back to life, only to
find Stretch wearing his own face. On the other hand the labyrinth sequence
never succeeds in having the all-out bad-acid-trip-without-any-acid quality of
the similar sequence in the original.
The
characters are delineated with much more substance here – Leatherface is even
given pathos in Bill Johnson’s powerful portrayal – mutely quivering and
shaking the chainsaw above his head, his little pink tongue obscenely licking
his lips from behind the sliced-off human face he wears. Chop-Top, the new
addition to the family, as portrayed by Bill Moseley is a great creation – a
bombed-out Vietnam vet with an exposed steel plate in the head, introduced as
some kind of zombiefied hippy, feverishly muttering and heating up the tip of a
coat-hanger with a cigarette lighter to stroke the side of his head with and
then picking off and eating the bits of charred flesh. Even the nominal good
guys are utterly whacko – Dennis Hopper is in full OTT regard, charging around
the amusement park with chainsaws strapped to his belt like a Western
gunslinger, chainsawing everything in sight while singing hymns and
incoherently ranting about the Devil. Even the heroine goes berserk, standing
on the top of a tower waving a chainsaw above her head as the camera fades out
in a disturbing final image.
Blood is
certainly not only suggested this time, Tom Savini gets to deliver some of his
most brilliant work. Particularly standout is the superb makeup job on the 100
year-old grandfather. Mention also must be made of the superb production design
job on the underground labyrinth, which looks like the ruins of a 1920s Grand
Hotel turned into a slaughterhouse with bizarre tableaux of corpses sitting
under sunlamps, at dinner tables, wearing Walkmans, suspended on wires, amid a
bewildering maze of chandeliers and Christmas lights, all set beneath a
playground specializing in the reconstruction of America’s warmongering past.
It is something that becomes a bizarrely appropriate metaphor for the film’s
social milieu – the suggestion of contemporary Reaganite America tripping on
its defence image and war hero past while sitting beneath, rotting in its
underbelly, lies an insane cannibal slaughterhouse chewing people up and
spitting them back as fast-food in the name of the free-enterprise consumer
product.
The
subsequent Texas Chain Saw Massacre sequels were:– the dull Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre
III (1990) and Kim Henkel’s occasionally interesting Return of
the Texas Chainsaw Massacre/The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A New Generation
(1995). Continuity-wise all three sequels operate independent of and frequently
contrradict each other. The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre (2003) was an unnecessary but surprisingly reasonable
remake of the original, and was followed by the fine The Texas Chainsaw
Massacre: The Beginning (2006).
This article is
used here for educational use and as an archive only. The original article
(where available) is
linked to.All text/images are copyrigh t©2008
their original owners and no other copyright is implied or claimed.
©2008 Richard Scheib
Original article www.moria.co.nz/horror/texas2.htm
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