The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A Family Portrait

1988
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A Family Portrait
5.9| 1h0m| en| More Info
Released: 01 January 1988 Released
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Country: United States of America
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Revenue: 0
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Synopsis

A documentary about the classic 'Texas Chainsaw Massacre' film, including interviews with Gunnar Hansen, Edwin Neal, John Dugan and Jim Seidow.

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Platypuschow Despite not liking much of the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise I went into this looking forward to some background on the film, some behind the scenes factoids and a further look into the movie.After this hour long documentary had finished I wasn't really much wiser.Essentially the same couple of stories are repeated, the titbits provided are really quite petty and the cast do not come across well.What I mean by that is they aren't exactly good interviews, most of the cast come across as pretentious and make out that TCM was the greatest movie ever made.I would say this is for huge fans only, the likelihood of learning anything new however is pretty remote.The Good: Gunnar Hansen The Bad: Hugely repetitious Some poor audio recording quality Shoddily made Rather dull Things I Learnt From This Documentary: For appearance sake it's probably best you don't admit to enjoying hitting a woman on set Admitting you wrote a topless scene just because you wanted to see an actresses boobs isn't much better
skybrick736 About fifteen years after the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre film came out, Brad Shellady filmed a simplistic documentary of actors accounts, looking back to their horror hit. Shellady could have spent some more resources interviewing the entire cast but purposely only wanted to talk to the family. This consisted of Gunnar Hansen as Leatherface, Jim Siedow as the Old Man, Edwin Neal as Hitchhiker and John Dugan as Grandpa. Shellady's filmmaking was unbearable trying to set a tough Texas tone set in random places. It's cool that the audience only hears the actors speak throughout but there is a disconnection and repetitiveness to some of the stories. Edwin Neal was the true bright spot of the documentary, having a Jim Carry type A personality, while Siedow was rather dull and Hansen seemed almost bitter about the role. It's a neat little documentary to search out, the doc has aged in a good way and something the fans would really love.
Michael_Elliott Texas Chainsaw Massacre: A Family Portrait (1988) *** 1/2 (out of 4)John Dugan (Grandpa), Jim Siedow (The Cook), Edwin Neal (The Hitchhiker) and Gunner Hansen (Leatherface) are interviewed for this rather interesting documentary that takes a look at the making of THE Texas CHAIN SAW MASSACRE and gives us the stories from the actual cannibal family seen in the movie.This documentary was quite popular when it was first released and it's even better today since two of the members have sadly passed away. Getting to hear these stories is certainly something special and I especially like the fact that all of the attention is given to the family. Each man talks about how they ended up getting their roles and then we get into the production of the film. A lot of discussion goes towards how brutal the shooting was and this includes the horrid smells during the dinner scene as well as the abuse that they had to put on the actress.At just a hour there are plenty of great stories told here so fans of the film will certainly enjoy this.
megansman This is sort of a hard one to find now but well worth the trouble. Here are interviews with the actors that portrayed the maniacal family in the original Texas Chainsaw Massacre. I was amazed at how the disturbing character of the hitchiker is now a comedian! He's actually quite funny as he goes into detail about the rigors of filming. Gunnar also recounts scenes such as the dinner scene and how horrible it was to shoot. See it.