Details

Movie Description In this sequel, Hopper plays a man determined to avenge his murdered family by hunting down Leatherface and his brethren. His trail leads him to caverns of death where victims are the ingredients in a nightmarish enterprise. After ten years of silence, the buzz is back. Sequel: "Leatherface: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 3."
Synopsis A tongue-in-cheek sequel to the 1975 splatter classic. Dennis Hopper stars as a Texas Ranger seeking revenge on the murderous, chainsaw-wielding clan who dismembered several members of his family in the first flick. Body parts and self-referential jokes fly, as the crazed lawman (he's almost as wacked as the villians he's stalking) heads toward the final, blood-soaked showdown.
Film Notes DVD Features:
Region 1 Keep Case Pan & Scan - 1.33 Letterboxed - 1.85 Audio: Dolby Digital Stereo - English Additional Release Material: Trailers - 1. Original Theatrical Trailer
Locations included the Cut-Rite Chainsaw Store and Austin American Statesman Newspaper building in downtown Austin, Texas, and the Prairie Dell Amusement Park north of Austin, Texas. Shot in TVC color and Todd-AO.
Began shooting May 5, 1986; completed shooting prior to July 4, 1986. Released in the USA August 22, 1986.
Additional credits: modelmaker, Tobe Hooper; special effects technical adviser, Eddie Surkin.
The Elite Entertainment CLV laserdisc (Cat. #EE-8622) contains a digital transfer of the film struck from a 35mm intermediate positive, a brief column of copy, a short credit stack on the jacket, and 10 minutes of raw sound-effects-less deleted scenes at the end of Side 2.
Industry Reviews "...A vision at once ghastly and hilarious....Director Tobe Hooper is back on the Texas turf he knows best and proves there are still a few thrills and chills left to be found.." Variety - Jagr. (08/20/1986)
"...Caroline Williams as Stretch is a winning heroine..." Sight and Sound - Kim Newman (11/01/2001)
"...This is one horror movie that delivers the goods -- and then some....It's done with such style and energy, such bursts of red-hot invention and anarchic, madly irreverent satire that sometimes it almost scorches you out of your seat..." Los Angeles Times - Michael Wilmington (08/23/1986)
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