Entertainment Weekly, 11/05/2004, p.58-9, "SAW is a gristle-cut B psycho thriller that would like to tap the sickest corners of your imagination."
New York Times, 10/29/2004, p.E24, "[SAW] does a better-than-average job of conveying the panic and helplessness of men terrorized by a sadist in a degrading environment..."
Rolling Stone, 02/24/2005, p.77, "Utterly nihilistic and relentlessly tense, SAW is a must for horror freaks."
Sight and Sound, 12/01/2004, p.62-3, "SAW is gripping exploitation, laughing off claims to seriousness while giving its audience a more pungent ride than recent mainstream offerings."
Rolling Stone, 12/01/2005, p.98, Ranked #9 in Rolling Stone's "Top 25 DVDs Of 2005' -- "First-time director James Wan and screenwriter Whannell have a way with splatter. Better duck."
DVD Features:
Region 1
Keep Case
Widescreen - 1.85
Audio:
DTS 6.1 - English
Closed Captioned - English
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentaries - 1. James Wan - Director, Leigh Whannell - Writer/Star, Cary Elwes - Star
2. Behind the Scenes
Featurettes - 1. Jigsaw's Workshop
2. Investigating Jigsaw
3. The Making of SAW
Bonus Short - Head Cage
Making of
Deleted Scenes
Production Interviews -
Original Theatrical Trailer
Bonus Trailers
Interactive Features:
Interactive Menus
Scene Access
Trivia Game
Text/Photo Galleries:
Photo Stills
Filmography
Biography
Discography
Director's Notes
Be prepared to be scared. James Wan's directorial debut, written by and starring Leigh Whannell, is a violent, bloody, psychologically exhausting and exhilarating exercise in terror. Adam (Whannell) and Dr. Gordon (Cary Elwes) are chained in a vile, disgusting bathroom, separated by a bloody corpse holding a gun and a tape recorder. They are each given a saw--the only obvious way out is to cut one of their feet off. A serial killer who specializes in torturing morally bereft strangers is playing a game with them: Gordon has less than eight hours to kill Adam or else the doctor's wife (Monica Potter) and daughter (Mackenzie Vega) will be murdered. As the two men engage in a battle of wits, alternately trying to help each other and secretly attempting to win the game, a series of flashbacks reveals the history of the madman and the pair of detectives (Danny Glover and Ken Leung) handling the case. Some of the torture scenes are excruciatingly horrible and hard to watch, a real treat for fans of the genre. Inspired by the work of David Lynch (BLUE VELVET, TWIN PEAKS) and Dario Argento (SUSPIRIA, INFERNO), Wan has created a scintillating suspense thriller that will have audiences continually shocked, repelled, frightened, and surprised, right up to the very last second (which Whannell has said was influenced by the endings of such films as THE USUAL SUSPECTS and THE SIXTH SENSE). The accompanying heavy metal soundtrack is appropriately scary as well.