Saw IV
(2007)
directed
by Darren Lynn-Bousman
reviewed by Jonathan Rocks
02.05.2008
Another year, another couple gross-out set pieces,
ho hum. At the rate of degradation these sequels are
going at, we're about two steps removed from a direct-to-cable quality film.
Director Darren Lynn Bousman
does a serviceable job, inasmuch as the film isn't embarrassingly bad. But the
logic and the real hook of the film leave much to be desired. Even hardcore
fans of the series would have to admit, the same old shtick is getting just a
bit tired.
This installment opens with the uber-bad guy
"Jigsaw" dead as a doornail. And just in case the gaping wound in his
neck isn't proof enough, we're treated to a very realistic (or not, according
to my wife), and equally unnecessary autopsy. But, ah, that is where it gets
interesting, because "the game is not over yet." Of
course not. Jigsaw has left one more tape for the film's detectives to
figure out-- it was inside of his stomach. The police scramble to figure out
who the tape is meant to endanger, while in the meantime a few peripheral
characters meet a grisly, bloody demise in true Saw fashion.
I couldn't help but notice that the traps of this film are somewhat
anticlimactic. They just didn't have the ingenuity that I've come to expect
from these films. In fact, I didn't even understand how a few of them worked.
This may be due largely to the fact that much of this film is devoted to a
fleshed out back story for Jigsaw, or John Kramer. This was the part of the
film that I found most interesting. This was also the first time that any real
amount of screen time was devoted to the man behind the contraptions, and how
he came to be the creepy serial killer we all know him as.
I understand that the Saw films make money-- lots of it-- and that's why the
films keep getting made. However, in terms of quality, I have to imagine that
the films are suffering by rushing to meet the self-imposed requirement of one
Saw film per year, every single year. I've enjoyed the series, but I would be
lying if I said that they were maintaining any real level of quality. Since Saw
5 has already been green lit, let's just hope that they are devising a clever
way to end the series, or more accurately, put it out of its misery.
Score: 2.5 out of 5
Purchase this DVD at Amazon.com: Saw
4