Leatherface (2017) - 4.3/10. A disappointingly dull attempt to reinvigorate the Texas Chainsaw franchise, Leatherface is yet more proof that Inside was probably a fluke for directors Julien Maury and Alexandre Bustillo.
The premise is half-way intriguing and the visuals aren't too bad, but interest quickly evaporates when it becomes clear the whodunnit aspect is just a cheap hook on which to hang the usual horror fancies.
Stephen Dorff and Lili Taylor are trying, bless 'em, but they're so far above this material, and their characters are mere cardboard cutouts (like everyone else's).
Gore is basically fine but the kills themselves aren't particularly memorable or inventive, and there's barely any chainsaw action to speak of.
As for the "big reveal" as to Leatherface's identity, it's immensely underwhelming and caps off a film that really doesn't have much reason to exist.
The premise is half-way intriguing and the visuals aren't too bad, but interest quickly evaporates when it becomes clear the whodunnit aspect is just a cheap hook on which to hang the usual horror fancies.
Stephen Dorff and Lili Taylor are trying, bless 'em, but they're so far above this material, and their characters are mere cardboard cutouts (like everyone else's).
Gore is basically fine but the kills themselves aren't particularly memorable or inventive, and there's barely any chainsaw action to speak of.
As for the "big reveal" as to Leatherface's identity, it's immensely underwhelming and caps off a film that really doesn't have much reason to exist.