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The good news is that Toolbox Murders is an effort where Tobe Hooper has gone back to his roots and tried to reclaim something of the feel of Texas Chain Saw. Toolbox Murders joins a host of revivals of 1970s/1980s horror classics that came out in the mid-00s the likes of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003), Willard (2003), Dawn of the Dead (2004), Exorcist: The Beginning (2004), The Amityville Horror (2005), Assault on Precinct 13 (2005), The Fog (2005), Black Christmas (2006), The Hills Have Eyes (2006), The Omen (2006), Sisters (2006), When a Stranger Calls (2006), The Wicker Man (2006), Halloween (2007), The Hitcher (2007), April Fools Day (2008), Day of the Dead (2008), Its Alive (2008), Prom Night (2008), Friday the 13th (2009), The Last House on the Left (2009), My Bloody Valentine (2009), Night of the Demons (2009), Sorority Row (2009), The Stepfather (2009), And Soon the Darkness (2010), The Crazies (2010), I Spit on Your Grave (2010), Mothers Day (2010), A Nightmare on Elm Street (2010), Piranha (2010), Dont Be Afraid of the Dark (2011), Fright Night (2011), Straw Dogs (2011) and The Thing (2011). I have not seen the original The Toolbox Murders (1979) but it sounds a fascinatingly sordid film one review called it reprehensible a slasher movie with almost no plot, concerning a maniac killing women amidst a great deal of gore (something that had it listed as a video nasty in some countries). It reportedly contained an amazingly torrid performance from B movie veteran Cameron Mitchell as the psycho. Tobe Hoopers Toolbox Murders ditches most of the original, including the villains motivation for killing girls over the death of his daughter. The remake also centralizes the story in a single location one apartment building and adds a confused subplot about the occult construction of the building. Toolbox Murders 2003 is certainly a better-budgeted film than the original, which to all accounts was very cheaply made. Even if in the end Toolbox Murders 2003 is not a particularly standout film, it does show Tobe Hooper returning to his roots and undeniably managing to recapture something of the brutality of Texas Chain Saw. Hooper does not stint when it comes to blood-letting and there are a series of extremely gory and nasty set-pieces throughout Juliet Landau getting a power drill in the back of her head; one victim getting the top of their head cut off in the shower with a power saw; another having acid poured on their face. There is a vicious opening sequence where the maniac pops up in a girls apartment, bashing her head in with a hammer and we then see him wrenching it out of her skull with clumps of hair attached and splattering blood all over the wall. Maybe Tobe Hooper has been suffering from bad scripts, bad luck, a mid-life crisis or a decade-long state of depression since 1986, but Toolbox Murders does go some way toward showing that he can still be a vital force. In many ways, Toolbox Murders 2003 could almost be a better version of Tobe Hoopers earlier The Apartment Complex, a failed black comedy about strange goings-on in an apartment building. Hooper creates a certain effective mood of paranoia and strangeness here Angela Bettis hearing arguments and noisy lovemaking through the walls, calling the police when she thinks she hears violence only for it to turn out to be an actor rehearsing his lines, sinister figures lurking. Angela Bettis, who gave a marvellous performance in the offbeat May (2002), makes for something more intelligent than the standard blonde heroine, even if the writing of the role is by-the-numbers. On the minus side, the film tries to add a subplot about the occult symbols and a secret house within the house. These scenes are initially spooky, particularly during Angela Bettiss entry into the secret area. However, Toolbox Murders, with its talk about occult symbols, an undead killer and Angela Bettis being the destined One, never resolves the occult angle and this element of the film eventually pans out disappointingly. There is an annoyingly clichéd slasher movie twist ending taken from Halloween (1978) where the killer gets back up again after a seemingly fatal fall.
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