Saw V Movie Review
Saw V Review

"Saw V" Overview

Rating: R
2008
Cast and Crew
Director : David HacklProducer : Mark Burg,Oren Koules
Screenwiter : Patrick Melton,Marcus Dunstan
Starring : Tobin Bell,Costas Mandylor,Scott Patterson,Mark Rolston,Betsy Russell
At this point in the Saw series, reviews really don't matter. Frankly, this is
one of the few fright franchises where audiences don't care about character
development, directorial flair, or narrative invention. Instead, they want more
Tobin Bell as Jigsaw, more illogical puzzle kills, and a reverse referencing
that makes unimportant characters major players in later installments. To that
extent, Saw V is definitely no different. Unfortunately, whatever made the
first four films tolerable has been whisked away by unimaginative writing and
even more pedestrian direction.
Since the death of Jigsaw (Tobin Bell), FBI agent Strahm (Scott Patterson) has
been trying to track down his "other" accomplice. With female helper Amanda
(Shawnee Smith) also dead, all leads point to Det. Mark Hoffman (Costas
Mandylor). New agency head Dan Erickson (Mark Rolston) isn't so sure, however,
and becomes suspicious. In the meantime, a new "game" has commenced. Five
people -- a fire inspector, a building permit bureaucrat, a trust fund
baby/drug addict, an investigative journalist, and a property developer -- find
themselves locked in a life or death struggle to see who can survive, and who
will be sacrificed. As well, Jigsaw's ex-wife Jill (Betsy Russell) receives a
mysterious box.
It seems odd to say this, but Saw V deeply misses Darren Lynn Bousman. The
guiding light for three-fifths of this franchise (installments II through IV)
brought a real sense of shock value and a way with plot point intricacy that
new helmer David Hackl just doesn’t have. While lengthy credits as a production
designer should indicate some basic level of cinematic skill, the novice can't
find a way to make his first feature film work. Just as we are enjoying the Saw
mythos backfilling -- by now a standard in the series -- Hackl forces us back
to the weak five-characters-in-search-of-a-clue motif. It's the same trapped
rats story that undermined Saw II.
Screenwriters Patrick Melton and Marcus Dunstan are also no help. Brought on to
take Saw IV into post-trilogy territory, their hit or miss designs derail
anything remotely resembling suspense. And then they foreshadow the necessity
of Saw VI with all their open-ended, unexplained elements (that secret package
our villain's ex walks away with, the "big picture" connection to the five
people in the puzzle). In fact, if you took away all the sideways subplots and
dangling narrative threads, we'd be left with Strahm vs. Hoffman, with one of
them destined to go down -- and that's not a tale worth telling.
The final failure comes from the actors. Mandylor appears to be sleepwalking
through the part, while Patterson's only highlight comes via a self-induced
tracheotomy. The rest of the returning horde -- including snippets from victims
long ago dispensed -- are really nothing special, and Betsy Russell's Jill is
reduced to a red herring. About the only actor getting a chance is Bell, and
though he is limited to playing flashback versions of the fiend, he brings a
brilliant gravitas to the role. Too bad then that Melton and Dunstan give him
God-awful gobbledygook to say. Several of his speeches sound like a failed
philosopher after an all-night beer bash.
For longtime fans of James Wan and Leigh Whannell's original Sundance stunner,
Saw V is the weakest installment so far. It can't claim part two's brutality,
part three's closure, or part four's intriguing reboot. Instead, it's the first
effort that fails to capitalize on all the invention that came before. Instead
of striking out in new or unusual ways, it merely recycles information and
individuals we thought we were already done with. If you like the broadening of
the Jigsaw scenario, you'll end up partially satisfied. Everything else here is
just subpar scares.
Hey, I'm in the TV!
Reviewer: Bill Gibron





