[Saw. 2004]Directed & Produced by James Wan and Gregg Hoffman
Saw is an American horror franchise that currently consists of five films, the first distributed in 2004 is the first installment of the Saw film series. The film's story revolves around two men who are kidnapped, trapped and locked in an industrial bathroom with a dead body between them and given instructions related to escaping. Police detectives investigate and attempt to apprehend the criminal responsible, the "Jigsaw Killer".
Saw begins with two male characters trapped and chained in a unknown room, or to what looks like a bathroom. An establishing shot is used to give an insight in to what the room is like while at the same time familarising the audience with the current location. The films often uses flashbacks to tell the story during the duration in which the characters are trapped. This helps to introduce other characters as they have a significance for the main part of the film later on.
URL for the Saw trailer:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2oNhcNxnhJ0
[SOUNDTRACK.]
The film’s soundtracks have worked to build on the films’ already grim but entertaining stylizations. This album opens quickly with some hard-hitting electronic score that laws some impressive groundwork for an album that turns out to be much more listenable than non-metal fans might think at first glance. This isn’t the type of hard rock that strives for screaming vocals and overly heavy guitar. Instead, there’s a general sense of anger and struggle running through these tracks that plays nicely under the surface of the music rather than straight up front. The music in the more electronic tracks even come across as borderline video game style, though the haunting vocals on both change that perception. The last track is a lot quieter and contemplative at first, though, before building into a pounding crescendo that ends the album. Saw's album is a solid mix of score and soundtrack.
[Internet Research.]
Site Description: With a dead body laying between them, two men (Whannell and Elwes) wake up in the secure lair of a serial killer who's been nicknamed "Jigsaw" by the police because of his unusual calling card.
[Synopsis of Film.]
Two men wake up at opposite sides of a dirty, disused bathroom, chained by their ankles to pipes. Between them lies a dead man loosely clutching a hand-held tape player and a handgun. Each finds a tape the perfect fit for the player in their back pocket. They play the tapes. One is threatened, the other isn't. But they have a task: One must kill the other by 6:00, or his wife and daughter will die. They find hacksaws in a toilet, and try to cut the chains, but it doesn't work. They are the two newest victims of the Jigsaw Killer. In a flashback, we learn of Amanda, a girl who falls victim to the Jigsaw Killer. On her head is a mask, which is hooked into her lower jaw. There is a timer on it. Only one key will unlock it, and that key is in the digestive tract of her cell mate who lies paralyzed on the opposite side of the room. If she doesn't unlock the mask in time, her lower jaw will be ripped wide open. She survives, but her cell mate doesn't. Through a series of flashbacks, we learn of more victims, and of the nearly-successful capture of the Jigsaw Killer, who doesn't actually kill his victims. Instead, he finds ways to make them kill either themselves, or each other, and he thinks the entire 'game' out perfectly, with no other ways out. Or so it would seem.
[Evaluation.]
"Saw", like our film, is a psychological thriller. We used and developed the ideas from saw and implanted them into our own media production. From the first "Saw" movie we used the short, mysterious name for our title. Likewise the title is a mystery until its true meaning is revealed near the end of the film. From the second "Saw" movie (Saw2, however, we used the 'numbers on body parts' idea. In the movie they all have numbers on the back of their necks which form a code to unlock the door to their survival. We used this idea but we changed the relevance of the numbers. The dead body has number 23 written on the forearm and the character who is captured has number 24 written on her thigh. These numbers are significant as in to show the order of which the bodies are captured and killed.
The music and atmosphere for this film has inpired the editing of our clip. The eerie, trademark "Saw" music keeps an audience locked on to their screens in anticipation of something happening. We tried to use and challenge this by using music in build up to action, keeping people on the edge of their seats, but we also challenged this by only using ONE sountrack throughout the scenes.
So we have used the film "Saw" (and Saw2) to our advantage in means of storylines and editing.