REVIEW: “Saw X” (2023)

Full disclosure: I have no vested interest in the Saw franchise. I haven’t seen all the movies so I can’t tell you how the tenth installment, “Saw X” stacks up against the previous films. But I’ve seen enough of them to know what’s going on. And despite not liking the 2021 spin-off “Spiral”, the trailer for “Saw X” was enough to convince me to give it a shot. Color me surprised.

Regardless of my own personal history with it, the Saw series clearly has a following. It has grossed over $1 billion at the box office and usually against relatively modest production budgets. It’s no wonder Lionsgate has kept the franchise going.

Image Courtesy of Lionsgate

Director Kevin Greutert (“Saw VI” and “Saw 3D”) returns to helm the latest which is said to be a direct sequel to the original 2004 “Saw” and a prequel to 2005’s “Saw II”. Tobin Bell (now 81-years-old) is back as John Kramer, the ruthlessly principled killer known as “Jigsaw”. I’m not well versed enough to fully understand how this fits in the Saw timeline, but the movie opens with John Kramer finding out he has terminal brain cancer. John struggles with his grim prognosis and even joins a cancer support group to help him cope.

John learns about The Pederson Project, a radical experimental cancer treatment in Norway developed by Dr. Finn Pederson. It touts a success rate of over 90% but the doctor has been forced into hiding by the big drug companies. John reaches out and is contacted big the doctor’s daughter Cecilia (Synnøve Macody Lund). She’s taking her father’s treatment on the road for trials and schedules John for a procedure in Mexico City for a small fee of $250,000.

Unexpectedly, a large chunk of the film plays like a thoughtful drama, following John as he’s forced to reckon with his fate and later as he finds hope after thinking all was lost. Not only does this add some interesting layers to the John Kramer character, but it offers Tobin Bell a chance to extend himself as an actor. He gives a subtly rich performance with some surprising emotional depth.

But don’t worry Saw fans, Greutert and co-writers Peter Goldfinger and Josh Stolberg know what you come to a Saw movie for. I won’t spoil how, but John’s new lease on life is shattered after he finds himself the victim of a heartless con (boy did they pick the wrong guy). With the help of his young apprentice Amanda Young (Shawnee Smith), John begins rounding up everyone involved and forcing them to play a new round of cleverly designed and gruesomely gory games.

Image Courtesy of Lionsgate

“Saw X” runs a little long and it has a few slow patches. But Greutert and company tell a tight and well-structured story built firmly around a riveting Tobin Bell performance. He’s grizzled and pitiless; still driven by his warped moral code. Yet he also brings a human pulse to both John Kramer and the movie as a whole. Bell is crucial to the film’s success.

But again, franchise die-hards need not worry. Greutert still delivers the gag-worthy gore they demand including what might be the craziest scene involving a pile of intestines you’ll ever see on screen (sorry, I couldn’t resist mentioning it). It’s still very much a Saw movie although one that makes a little more sense of the bloody carnage and chaos the franchise is known for. And that makes “Saw X” a welcomed surprise. “Saw X” is in theaters now.

VERDICT – 3.5 STARS

9 thoughts on “REVIEW: “Saw X” (2023)

  1. I’ve heard good things about this as I also need to add the score music that Charlie Clouser has created for the entire franchise. He’s underrated as I was glad to hear recently that he got inducted into the Rock N’ Roll Hall of Fame for his work with NIN.

  2. That’s interesting, I didn’t realize it fit between the first two Saw films, which I really enjoyed. I hated Saw 3D and gave up after that, but I’m more intrigued now. Maybe once it hits streaming.

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