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This film is a soft reboot albeit sequel to the 1974 film, and is thus perhaps a prequel to the fourth film in the franchise, which is left to interpretation (albeit unlikely)

This article is about the 1990 film and part of the first original (albeit, technically part of the second of three timelines) timeline. For the 2017 film which is a prequel and part of the second timeline, click here.

Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3
Leatherface-the-texas-chainsaw-massacre-3
The terror begins the second it starts
Directed by Jeff Burr
Produced by Robert Engelman
Written by David J. Schow
Starring Kate Hodge

Viggo Mortensen
William Butler
Ken Foree
Joe Unger
Tom Everett
Toni Hudson
Miriam Byrd-Nethery
R.A. Mihailoff

Music by Jim Manzie

Pat Regan

Distributed by New Line Cinema
Release date(s) January 12, 1990
Running time 1 hr. 43 min (86 minutes)
Language English
Budget $2,000,000 (estimated)
Gross revenue $5,765,562 (USA)
Preceded by The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2
Followed by The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation

Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III is the second sequel to the 1974 film The Texas Chain Saw Massacre and was directed by Jeff Burr. It was released by New Line Cinema on January 12, 1990. The film is a sequel to the previous movies (1974 and 1986), as only Leatherface had survived the events of the previous film.

It is the third installment in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise

The film stars Kate HodgeKen ForeeWilliam Butler, and a then-unknown Viggo Mortensen. At first, New Line Cinema intended to produce the film as the first of several sequels in the series. However, the film did not prove a financial success, although Jeff Burr did receive a nomination for the International Fantasy Film Award at the Fantasporto film festival in 1990.

Leatherface; TCM III  gained a certain amount of notoriety prior to release[citation needed] due to a battle between New Line Cinema and the MPAA, which initially rated the film an X because of its graphic violence. It was the final film to receive this rating before the MPAA replaced X with NC-17.

The studio eventually relented, and trimmed the more graphic elements, however, in 2003 it released the uncut version in VHS and DVD formats. The film was rejected by the British Board of Film Classification upon submission for theatrical release in 1990, and the trimmed version gained an 18 certificate when submitted for video in 2004.

Contents[]

Narration[]

"On August 18, 1973, Sally Hardesty, her invalid brother Franklin, and their friends fell afoul of a bizarre, cannibalistic clan of serial predators. Ms. Hardesty was the sole survivor of that night of terror. She died in a private health care facility in 1977. A single member of the murderous "family" lived to see trial. The prosecution recorded his name as W.E. Sawyer. He died in the gas chamber in 1981. The jurors concluded that "Leatherface", presumed to be an unapprehended killer, was in fact an alternate personality of Sawyer's, activated whenever he donned a crude mask made of human flesh. If there was no Leatherface in reality, then Sally Hardesty may at last rest in peace... If there actually was a Leatherface, he remains at large, and the so-called "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" . . . was only the beginning."

Plot[]

The film begins with Leatherface (R.A. Mihailoff) bludgeoning a young woman, Gina, to death with a sledgehammer before beginning the process of cutting off her face in order to make it into a mask. Gina's sister, Sara (Toni Hudson) watches from a nearby window. Leatherface hears Sara outside, and after she flees, he briefly checks outside before going back to work.

Some time later, Michelle (Kate Hodge) and her boyfriend Ryan (William Butler), both traveling through Texas, pass through a security checkpoint near the excavation of a large number of butchered bodies and reach the Last Chance Gas Station. At the station, they meet a hitchhiking cowboy named Tex (Viggo Mortensen) and the station's perverted owner Alfredo (Tom Everett). Tex shows Ryan a route on the map that can get them to a town. A fight soon breaks out between Tex and Alfredo when Tex finds the latter spying on Michelle while she uses the station restroom. As Michelle and Ryan flee from the station in their car, they witness Alfredo apparently killing Tex with a shotgun.

As night falls, Ryan and Michelle, having taken the route Tex recommended, become lost. As they begin to bicker, a large truck appears and the driver attacks them. Ryan pulls over when the unseen driver throws a dead coyote at their windshield. As Ryan changes the car's flat tire, Michelle hears a noise, and Leatherface ambushes the two of them. They climb into the car as Leatherface begins hacking at it with his chainsaw, before bumping Leatherface with the vehicle and driving off.

After their escape from Leatherface, Michelle and Ryan - as well as another driver, a survivalist named Benny (Ken Foree) - crash when a bloodied Tex leaps in front of the car. As Benny tends to Michelle, Ryan explains the situation to him, showing him the damage which Leatherface has caused to their car, before Michelle awakens. They decide to find Tex, and on the way, Benny discovers a hook-handed man named Tinker (Joe Unger), who offers his assistance in setting downroad flares. Benny soon realizes Tinker's real intentions after he finds a damaged chainsaw in the back of his truck. Benny then grabs an automatic rifle from his overturned jeep, retreats, and encounters Leatherface when Tinker attempts to ram him with his truck.

As Benny fights Leatherface, Sara, who had earlier escaped Leatherface, saves Benny from death by luring Leatherface away before re-joining Benny. After questioning Sara, Benny learns that her entire family has been killed. She tells him that she has failed to escape as Leatherface and his family have been watching the roads. Benny hears Michelle and Ryan calling for him and leaves Sara; Leatherface kills her a short time later. After killing Sara, Leatherface stalks Ryan and Michelle, mutilating and capturing Ryan when he gets caught in a bear trap.

After Ryan tells her to run, Michelle locates a house and finds the Little Girl (Jennifer Banko) inside who has a room filled with the remains of various animals. The girl stabs Michelle with a knife before Tex enters the room and restrains her, bringing her into the kitchen and nailing her to a chair, introducing her to Grandpa, a withered corpse to whom the family feeds blood. After Anne (Miriam Byrd-Nethery), an elderly woman appears, Michelle begs her for help, but is ignored. Tinker appears in the doorway, dragging the badly injured Ryan, whom he and Tex proceed to suspend upside-down with a pair of meat-hooks. Michelle begins screaming uncontrollably, forcing Tex to gag her by forcing a ball of leather into her mouth and securing it with a strip of tape. When Leatherface returns home, Tex gives him a large golden chainsaw with the phrase "The Saw Is Family" engraved on it, a present made by Tinker. Outside the family home, Benny finds and attempts to interrogate Alfredo as he disposes of human bodies in a bag, but he is unsuccessful, eventually knocking Alfredo into the bog and leaving him to drown.

As the family prepare for dinner in the kitchen, the little girl kills Ryan with a sledgehammer-swinging device that Tinker has made, and Leatherface prepares to kill Michelle as well. The noise of Leatherface's chainsaw attracts Benny, who opens fire on the house with his rifle, killing Anne, blowing off two fingers on Tinker's hand along with his ear, and partially destroying "Grandpa"'s body. The gunfire knocks Leatherface to the floor, allowing Michelle to tear herself from the chair she is nailed to, and to stab Tex before joining Benny outside.

When Leatherface drives towards them in Tinker's truck, Benny tells Michelle to run to the woods. He tries to shoot Leatherface, but realizes he has run out of ammunition as the truck hits him. Benny is stunned, and Leatherface exits the truck, grabbing his chainsaw before going after Michelle. As Leatherface stalks Michelle, Tex and a recovered Benny begin fighting, a battle which ends with Benny soaking Tex in fuel and burning him with a lighter. Benny rushes to Michelle's aid, stopping Leatherface from murdering her, and knocking the killer into the bog. The pair begin fighting, and Benny appears to die when Leatherface forces his head into the blade of the chainsaw. He then turns his attention to Michelle, who grabbing a nearby rock, beats him over the head with it, leaving him unconscious under the water.

As dawn breaks, Michelle reaches the main road and rests on an abandoned tire, before Alfredo's pickup truck, driven by Benny, stops in front of her. As Benny helps her into the truck, Alfredo appears and attacks him from behind with a sledgehammer. Benny avoids Alfredo's attacks, and Michelle shoots Alfredo in the chest with a shotgun before the pair drive away, unaware that Leatherface is revving his chainsaw some distance away.

In an alternate ending, Leatherface kills Benny in the bog. As Leatherface submerges himself to sneak up on Michelle, Tex is revealed to have survived the flames, albeit terribly charred. Michelle manages to kill Tex by pushing him into a spike trap. Shortly after, Leatherface attacks Michelle again, and she kills him by bashing his head with a large rock. She then sings a prayer before resting for the night. The next day Michelle is seen stumbling onto a dirt road where a police car is driving past. The car stops to reveal that the Little Girl was retrieved from the house. The girl taunts Michelle from the backseat with her skeleton doll before the car drives off, and Michelle is left kneeling on the ground, laughing in hysterics as she realizes that the sadistic Sawyer clan will never really die off.

Cast[]

Main[]

Mentioned[]

  • Sally Hardesty
  • W.E. Sawyer
  • Grandpa Sawyer

Continuity[]

Leatherface, is the second sequel in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre film series. The film was made as a reboot and a sequel to the 1974 film, so it can be taken either as a direct sequel or possibly taking place in its own continuity, though several references are made to the previous two films (1974 and 1986) including;

  • Leatherface having a knee brace from his chainsaw accident at the climax of the first film
  • Brother Alfredo owning a gas station and truck labeled "Last Chance Gas", the name of fellow brother Drayton's station
  • Drayton Sawyer's quote "The saw is family" labeled on Leatherface's new chainsaw
  • Grandpa appears only as a decayed corpse, due to his death from the grenade explosion at the end of the last film that also killed Drayton.
  • The family's last name remaining Sawyer from the previous films
  • Stretch, now a reporter, who escaped from the family from the previous film were included her identity being confirmed in DVD commentary.[1]
    • Actress Caroline Williams mentions on the Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2 audio commentary, that in Leatherface, Stretch has taken up Lefty's job of tracking down the family in revenge for their crimes.
  • The opening crawl to Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Next Generation acknowledges the events of both 2 and III, taking place five years after the events of this film.

Soundtrack[]

  1. "Leatherface" (Lääz Rockit) - 4:10
  2. "Bored" (Death Angel) - 3:27
  3. "When Worlds Collide" (Wrath) - 5:42
  4. "Spark In My Heart" (Hurricane) - 4:56
  5. "Power" (SGM) - 4:05
  6. "One Nation" (Sacred Reich) - 3:20
  7. "Monster Mash" (Utter Lunacy) - 5:31
  8. "The Gift Of Death" (Wasted Youth) - 8:50
  9. "Methods Of Madness" (Obsession) - 3:24
  10. "Psychotic Killing Machine" (MX Machine) - 3:22

The band Utter Lunacy was a one-off project made of musicians Ron Armstrong, C.C. DeVilleMarq TorienDoane Perry,Ron KeelTony PalamucciClaude SchnellRobert SarzoLeah AldridgeTommy Bolan and Steve Ishman.

Release[edit][]

The film was released theatrically in the United States by New Line Cinema on January 12th, 1990. It grossed $5,765,562 at the box office.[2]

The film was released on VHS and laserdisc by RCA/Columbia Pictures Home Video the same year. In September 1996,New Line Home Video re-released the film on VHS in a widescreen, unrated version.

In 2003, New Line Home Entertainment released the film - in both R and unrated versions - on DVD. The DVD's special features include an audio commentary with Jeff Burr, Gregory Nicotero, R.A. Mihailoff, David J. Schow, William Butler, and Mark Odesky, a featurette entitled "The Saw is Family: The Making of Leatherface"; as well as a compilation of unrestored, raw and deleted scenes was included, along with an explanation from Jeff Burr as to why these scenes did not make the final cut; the original ending of the film was also included on the DVD.

Reception[edit][]

Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre III received mostly negative reviews upon it's initial release. It currently holds a 19% on Rotten Tomatoes. Richard Harrington of the Washington Post blamed the failure on the film on the edits that were made to get the film an R-rating, stating "They shot an X film, but edited it down to an R to satisfy the MPAA ratings board. Whether that was just a publicity ploy or not, the lack of hard-core gore in this latest installment is quite noticeable." Chris Parcillian of Film Threat called it "Just another generic slasher flick with nothing beyond the Leatherface connection to recommend it to discerning fans."

David Nusair of Reel Film Reviews was less harsh but still disliked the film: "'Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III' improves slightly as the action moves into the cannibals' oddly well-kept home, as the film is temporarily lifted out of its doldrums with an emphasis on the family's bickering and their mean-spirited mistreatment of their two captives."

Gallery[]

Tcm3collage

Texas Chainsaw III

Merchandise[]

Mezco Toyz planned to release a Leatherface figure from the film in November 2010.[3] Eventually, the release was canceled.

Trivia[]

  • Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3 is the first film (after Next Generation) in the franchise to be technically part of the original timeline and also its own, due to the plot of a secret society and its elements retconned and used somewhat differently (in regards to its film events) in Next Generation.
    • It's placement in the timeline as a reboot and sequel to both the 1974 film and its 1986 sequel, leaves it to be interpreted and placed in the franchise.
    • However, to be more chronological without much regards to inconsistencies and errors, it is the third film in the original timeline, and would be followed by Next Generation, so to speak.
  • It is the first film in the franchise to be named after its primary antagonist, followed by Leatherface (2017) 27 years later.

References[]

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