Summary
This sensational, extremely influential, 1974 low-budget horror movie directed by Tobe Hooper ("Poltergeist", "Lifeforce", "Salem's Lot"), may be notorious for its title, but it's also a damn fine piece of moviemaking. And it's blood-curdling scary, too. Loosely based on the true crimes of Ed Gein (also a partial inspiration for "Psycho"), the original Jeffrey Dahmer, "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" follows a group of teenagers who pick up a hitchhiker and wind up in a backwoods horror chamber where they're held captive, tortured, chopped up, and impaled on meat hooks by a demented cannibalistic family, including a character known as Leatherface who maniacally wields one helluva chainsaw. The movie's powerful sense of dread is heightened by its grainy, semi-documentary style--but it also has a wicked sense of humor (and not that camp, self-referential variety that became so tiresome in subsequent horror films of the '70s, '80s, and '90s). OK, in case you couldn't tell, it's "not for everyone." But as a landmark in the development of the horror/slasher genre, it ranks with "Psycho", "Halloween", and "A Nightmare on Elm Street". "--Jim Emerson"