Driving through the backwoods of Texas, five youths pick up a traumatized hitchhiker, who shoots herself in their van. Shaken by the suicide, the group seeks help from the locals, but their situation becomes even more su...
Driving through the backwoods of Texas, five youths pick up a traumatized hitchhiker, who shoots herself in their van. Shaken by the suicide, the group seeks help from the locals, but their situation becomes even more su...
The film's central conflict of survival against a deranged family is inherently apolitical, and its focus on individual resilience as the sole solution to the immediate threat does not promote any specific left or right-leaning ideology.
The movie features a predominantly white cast without explicit race or gender swaps of traditional roles. Its narrative focuses on survival horror, and it does not incorporate explicit DEI themes or offer a critique of traditional identities.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003) does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters, relationships, or themes. The narrative is solely focused on survival horror, depicting a group of friends terrorized by a cannibalistic family, rendering the LGBTQ+ portrayal N/A.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
The 2003 film is a remake that introduces new protagonists while maintaining the established genders of legacy characters like Leatherface and the family patriarch. No character canonically established as one gender in the original film is portrayed as a different gender in this adaptation.
This film is a remake of the 1974 original. All major characters, including Leatherface and the new victim group, maintain the same racial depiction as their established or implied counterparts from the source material. No character originally established as one race is portrayed as a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources