The twists are the end aren't particularly good, but they have spectacular execution. Every time I heard that theme at the end, I can't help but to utter "kino"
Because they're brilliant in that even after all that, the cops couldn't charge Jigsaw with anything. I've discussed the series with my lawyer buddies and his defense is ironclad.
From experience with other series it depends. Release order isn't necessarily the best way to watch certain series, that's why I specified. It may be for SAW, like I said I have no experience with it.
>Saw >Saw x >Saw 2
Stop here if you care about a cohesive storyline, saw 3 will get retconned anyways. If not, then proceed through the movies in numerical order, then jigsaw, then spiral
yeah do this, i watched them do 9 in order and it's like the later movies are just montages of the first couple, some scenes must have been flashed back to in their entirety almost a dozen times
Watch >1 >2 >3 >4 >5 >6
In that order. Disagree with that other anon, you should at least watch Saw 3 if you want to fully understand what's going on in Saw X. There's also references to stuff you learn in later Saw movies.
They're also not going to retcon 3, it's one of the most important Saws.
Saw x happens before saw 3, that alone should be reason enough >but he won't fully understand
Understand what? I haven't seen saw 3 in like 10 years and i understood saw x perfectly. All i remember is that john dies and that's why it will get retconned,
The same reason why "would you rather" games never go stale, mind numbing entertainment for the masses inside mystery boxes over and over again. Seriously though, whats the appeal of a fricking Mr. Beast video? You exactly know what's going to happen even after his first viral video but people still watch, same thing
its a sort of body horror, a subgenre of horror that focuses on the mutilation of the human body and the feeling that generates in the watcher (as human emotions for other humans are mainly controlled by mirror neurons that means you are basically suffering through a reflected version of the same thing the person you are watching does)
I wouldn't quite call it body horror. Body horror focuses on the terror of the human form being corrupted in some way, that disturbing visceral feeling you get at the thought of your body being fricked up and having no control over it. There are elements of this in Saw but I'd say it leans equally towards torture porn where the focus is on the pain and suffering as opposed to the mutilation itself. The needle trap in Saw 2 is a good example of this, the victim isn't significantly mutilated in a permanent way but the pain they're experiencing is what is disturbing. Body horror on the other hand can encompass things like The Fly where physical suffering is secondary to the psychological torment of losing part of your humanity.
The twists are the end aren't particularly good, but they have spectacular execution. Every time I heard that theme at the end, I can't help but to utter "kino"
They're fun. Fun to follow the crazy plot.
same as black metal
Because they're brilliant in that even after all that, the cops couldn't charge Jigsaw with anything. I've discussed the series with my lawyer buddies and his defense is ironclad.
getting caught was part of his plan
They're le whacky and goofy movies, but in the horror genre
If I've never seen a saw movie and enjoy kino which ones should I watch and in what order?
Why do morons always ask for "watch order"? It's literally numbered 1-10 in release order.
From experience with other series it depends. Release order isn't necessarily the best way to watch certain series, that's why I specified. It may be for SAW, like I said I have no experience with it.
>Watching movies in release over
Good cattle.
>Saw
>Saw x
>Saw 2
Stop here if you care about a cohesive storyline, saw 3 will get retconned anyways. If not, then proceed through the movies in numerical order, then jigsaw, then spiral
Thanks anon.
yeah do this, i watched them do 9 in order and it's like the later movies are just montages of the first couple, some scenes must have been flashed back to in their entirety almost a dozen times
Watch
>1
>2
>3
>4
>5
>6
In that order. Disagree with that other anon, you should at least watch Saw 3 if you want to fully understand what's going on in Saw X. There's also references to stuff you learn in later Saw movies.
They're also not going to retcon 3, it's one of the most important Saws.
Saw x happens before saw 3, that alone should be reason enough
>but he won't fully understand
Understand what? I haven't seen saw 3 in like 10 years and i understood saw x perfectly. All i remember is that john dies and that's why it will get retconned,
Saw X heavily features Amanda who you don't learn much about until 3.
It's impossible to retcon without also retconning the new one because Hoffman's in it.
you watch 1 and that's it the rest you just watch youtube clips if you want
the guerilla marketing here that prompts discussion
The same reason why "would you rather" games never go stale, mind numbing entertainment for the masses inside mystery boxes over and over again. Seriously though, whats the appeal of a fricking Mr. Beast video? You exactly know what's going to happen even after his first viral video but people still watch, same thing
Appeal? I've won them all
just to say that you Saw them
Exploitation trash is like a car crash
Teen's first horror movies.
First one is good since it has a unique, cogent story, but the rest are just cashgrabs trying to make money off the original
its a sort of body horror, a subgenre of horror that focuses on the mutilation of the human body and the feeling that generates in the watcher (as human emotions for other humans are mainly controlled by mirror neurons that means you are basically suffering through a reflected version of the same thing the person you are watching does)
I wouldn't quite call it body horror. Body horror focuses on the terror of the human form being corrupted in some way, that disturbing visceral feeling you get at the thought of your body being fricked up and having no control over it. There are elements of this in Saw but I'd say it leans equally towards torture porn where the focus is on the pain and suffering as opposed to the mutilation itself. The needle trap in Saw 2 is a good example of this, the victim isn't significantly mutilated in a permanent way but the pain they're experiencing is what is disturbing. Body horror on the other hand can encompass things like The Fly where physical suffering is secondary to the psychological torment of losing part of your humanity.
hoffman
How do the saw movies compare to cartel movies or the classics from isis?
Not at all similar.
Because we want bad people to be in pain. The series wouldn’t work if Jigsaw was just going ham on whoever he could catch