I'm a late comer to Saw movies as always thought they are just about gore but I was wrong. I love the puzzles and games played and have enjoyed everyone of them. This was a great one to watch.
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Fantastic films better to watch one after the other, totally captivated really enjoyed every one of the saw collection, magnificent films as scary as, would highly recommend brilliant watch if you like to be terrified
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Great part of the Saw series. Keeps u guessing till the end
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
1 of the best of the time
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: New
Very happy thank you
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
very good value in excellent condition
Verified purchase: Yes | Condition: Pre-owned
Love this dvd and all the colection. A must for all Saw fans. The story continues by keeping you glued to the screen in horror.
The fourth SAW film takes fans into uncharted waters. Now that John/Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) is dead, screenwriters Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan (writers of the Project Greenlight-produced FEAST) give us Jigsaw's origin story--finally showing us why he does what he does. Along they way, they still find time to work in the usual dose of elaborate Rube Goldberg-like torture devices and heaps of censor-defying gore in what plays like an extreme version of CSI. During his (extremely graphic) autopsy, Jigsaw's final tape (swallowed in SAW III) is found in his stomach. Promising that his work will continue despite his passing, his message sets off a series of grisly tasks for anxious SWAT team leader Rigg (Lyriq Bent), who is given 90 minutes to rescue detectives Matthews (Donnie Wahlberg) and Hoffman (Costas Mandylor), who are to be dispatched via blocks of ice and high voltage wires. Trailing Rigg are FBI agents Strahm (Scott Patterson of GILMORE GIRLS) and Perez (Athena Karkanis), who get some unexpected blood on their hands along the way. A series of flashbacks details a pivotal event between Jigsaw and his girlfriend, Jill (1980s beauty Betsy Russell, PRIVATE SCHOOL), which inspired him to devote the remainder of his life to the creation of his signature puzzles.Read full review
Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) may be dead but the game isn't over in Saw IV, a slick sequel that gets the floundering series back on track. After a tape recorded message is found in Jig's stomach, Detective Hoffman (Carlos Mandylor) and SWAT Commander Riggs (Lyriq Bent) are thrown into yet another fiendishly complex morality play. With restless flashbacks fleshing out the late Jigsaw's origins and a collection of infernal torture implements shredding the flesh of the living, it's a cut above the rest of Saw's sequels. Killing off its serial killer villain, Saw III left the franchise with a major headache; how to make a Saw movie without Jigsaw? The answer: don't. Instead, flashbacks show us the making of Bell's monster, a lost family, cancer and car wreck turning him into Jigsaw, the twenty-first century's first bona fide horror icon. Bell plays him as pallid and chillingly still as always; meanwhile, the rest of the cast wade through blood and severed limbs as the sadist's inventively nasty machines do all the hard work. One poor gal is scalped, a rapist is quartered and a survivor from Saw III spends ninety minutes dancing on a melting block of ice; if he falls off, the noose around his neck will ensure he doesn't make it to Saw V. "A TRULY MISERABLE WORLD" With two sequels already on his resume, helmer Darren Lynn Housman nails the series' dank, yellowing aesthetic once again. He sticks us in a truly miserable world so lacking in human kindness it could be set in '80s, pre-Giuliani, New York. It's deeply unsettling; just like a horror movie should be. True, the labyrinthine plot makes little sense (is making it impossible to follow a deliberate ploy to ensure DVD sales?) - but then Saw's always been about sensation: an assault on the the stomach, not the brain.Read full review
i like many others bought the first saw film on dvd and could not wait to see the next part!.this fourth film does not start like the other three ie exactly where you were at the end of the previous one.it's good and explains more but as far as gore goes saw 3 i think has more gore.it's a shame jigsaw and amanda were killed off in saw3 but he lives on via tv screens and memo recorders.and of course you get to work out in the end who continues his gruesome work from now on.considering i bought the extreme version i was expecting more gore from it.A good film none the less and roll on saw 5.
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Best-selling in DVDs & Blu-rays
Current slide {CURRENT_SLIDE} of {TOTAL_SLIDES}- Save on DVDs & Blu-rays