
I was able to walk into the store alone and rent whatever I wanted.

When I was 16, my mom put me on her account at the local video store. Thankfully, that was the year something finally changed. By the time I was 16-years-old, I was becoming a pretty seasoned horror fan but there was a gaping hole missing from my heart, from which, you could see tiny angels inside, weeping. She’d seen it and said it was too scary for me. My mom refused to let me rent it, despite my repeated begging.
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That movie was The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. Most of the time I watched them in the living room at night while everyone was in bed.īut one movie was forbidden. Halloween, Friday the 13th, Sleepaway Camp, Motel Hell, all the greats. I got my mom to rent all kinds of horror flicks. My mother and my decidedly passive grandmother never really cared what I watched, so trips to the video store were often fruitful. Despite her flaccid protests, she never enforced her desire to change the channel.Īs she predicted, NOES 2 scared the shit out of me, but be that as it may-or perhaps specifically because of that-I became obsessed with horror films going forward. I sat in the living room floor watching this movie while my grandmother sat behind me on her recliner making comments like “Well this is awful, Josh, you can’t watch this,” in her drawn-out southern accent. I can’t remember if it was TNT or TBS but it was one of the two.
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Now, I’ve been a horror fan since I was six years old when I caught A Nightmare on Elm Street Part 2: Freddy’s Revenge on tv during the middle of the day. Rather I’m going to look at my own perception of the film over the years because it has changed. There are perspectives probably more astute than my own, or at best, identical to it available all over the web. But TCM’s status as my all-time favorite almost never came to pass.Īs I said, this movie has been picked apart and analyzed to death, so I’m not going to regurgitate countless articles, books, and documentaries for this article. I have numerous “favorites” and it’s impossible to pick one, but TCM is my honorary favorite. I’m not sure if it’s actually my favorite horror movie but it’s as good an answer as any. Whenever someone finds out that I write about horror films, their go-to response is usually something to the tune of “Really? What’s your favorite horror movie?” My answer is usually TCM. The Texas Chain Saw Massacre is a perfect horror film. It represents something exceedingly rare-not just in horror, but in film as a whole.Īt least, that’s my take. Why? Aside from its decidedly brutal and torturous filming circumstances, there’s another reason The Texas Chain Saw Massacre is so heavily studied and universally regarded as one of the best horror films of all time.

What can I say about The Texas Chain Saw Massacre* that hasn’t been said and reiterated several times over? The film has been studied and analyzed more times than most any horror movie I can think of.
