False Connection Saw: 13 Mistakes in the Horror Saga Trap

False Connection Saw: 13 Mistakes in the Horror Saga Trap

This week, the indestructible Jigsaw is back in theaters, thanks to a minor plot twist that allows Tobin Bell to return to torment a new victim. In celebration of the release of Saw ‘Them!

So what did the technical specialists at AlloCiné discover in Saw (2004), Saw II (2005) and Saw III (2006)? Not-so-clever characters, a padlock that turns into a chain, a chain that actually changes legs (!), a stopwatch that works above, a self-cleaning shirt, magic pliers, or a nice technician’s reflection. In short, hard, very hard, as always with our two friends. And you can see it in the video above!

These mistakes, errors and mistakes will allow you to (re)see these first three opuses with different eyes for your next Halloween. Note that the Saw movies are meant to be reserved for an informed audience: 16 and up for most episodes, and an 18-year-old ban for one of them!

Inspired by the short film Saw, it launched the career of James Wan (future director of Insidious, Conjuring, Fast and Furious 7, and Aquaman) in 2004 and introduced the torture porn subgenre, which was relaunched with the Hostel franchise, to a wider audience. With exceptional profitability (1 million dollar budget, over 100 million dollars worldwide), the feature film begins a fruitful and very profitable saga, collecting almost 900 million GEL for limited investments.

Source: Allocine

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