Saw Review

Saw
A surgeon (Cary Elwes) and a nobody (Leigh Whannell) wake up in a derelict bathroom, ankle-chained to pipes, with a corpse between them. They are the latest victims of 'Jigsaw', a tricky serial killer who plays gruesome games with his victims.

by Kim Newman |
Published on
Release Date:

01 Oct 2004

Running Time:

102 minutes

Certificate:

18

Original Title:

Saw

A surgeon (Cary Elwes) and a nobody (Leigh Whannell) wake up in a derelict bathroom, ankle-chained to pipes, with a corpse between them. They are the latest victims of 'Jigsaw', a tricky serial killer who plays games with victims, teaching them life lessons through torture. The doctor is ordered to find a way to kill the stranger within hours, or his wife and daughter will be executed.

'Saw', ingeniously co-scripted by Whannell and debuting director James Wan, is styled like early David Fincher and boasts an intricate structure - complex flashbacks-within-flashbacks explain how the characters have come to this crisis - and a satisfying mystery to go with its ghastly claustrophobia.

It's a series of squirm-inducing moments, with a creepy puppeteer villain, and strong performances.

As good an all-out, non-camp horror movie as we've had lately.
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