Login
 
 
Google+ Youtube

 

Film Reviews, News, Trailers & Gossip

 
 
Random Article


 
Don't Miss
 

 

Chained (2012)

 
Chained 2012
Chained 2012
Chained 2012

 
Film Info
 

Director(s): Jennifer Chambers Lynch
 
Writer(s): Damian O'Donnell, Jennifer Chambers Lynch
 
Starring: Vincent D'Onofrio, Eamon Farren, Evan Bird
 
Genre: Horror | Thriller
 
Synopsis: Tim and his mother get kidnapped by Bob. He kills her but lets him live, to work as his slave. A strange father/son relationship forms, with unexpected results.
 
UK DVD Release: 4 February 2013
 
Acting
 
 
 
 
 


 
Direction
 
 
 
 
 


 
Enjoyment
 
 
 
 
 


 
Soundtrack
 
 
 
 
 


 
Story
 
 
 
 
 


 
Total Score
 
 
 
 
 
3/ 5


User Rating
no ratings yet

 

Peaks


The intensity of the first half.

Troughs


The ending feels rushed.


The Quote

Chained rises above the usual crop of awful horror to offer something more intellectually stimulating and heartfelt.

0
Posted January 28, 2013 by

 
Content
 
 

Our Film Review:

The exact moment when Chained – originally known as Rabbit (a title vetoed by the producers) after the name that Bob gives Tim – becomes something more than the usual grisly slasher fare is difficult to pinpoint. It doesn’t start out that impressively, with the hoary old “taxi driver’s missed his turning – oh no he’s going to kill us” cliché, but it could be when Bob is running through Tim’s new life timetable – his new cleaning duties, the rules on eating, etc. – that Chained really draws you in and makes you realise that this is actually going to be quite interesting.

Bob (Vincent d’Onofrio) is revealed in that moment to be more than a one dimensional Leatherface character; he might be a completely remorseless killer, but he is a human being. That is, he is an extremely damaged human being, the roots of which we are shown in the course of the film’s running time, but he is a human being nonetheless.

To what extent is Bob responsible for his crimes? And to what extent is Tim (Eamon Farren), kidnapped at the age of nine and subject to immense psychological and physical assault, culpable? The film explores these questions in depth and, apart from a completely underwhelming and disappointingly bog-standard ending, mostly succeeds in offering something a little more than just “ugly guy kills hot girls” story-wise.

The murders are mostly performed off-screen. There’s a lot of on-screen brutality (slashed throat and a rape, amongst others) but for most of the time director Jennifer Lynch doesn’t dwell much on the reality of Bob’s night time activities, more the after effects that they have on both his own and Tim’s psyche.

Tim ages through the movie, from the age of nine to about sixteen or seventeen. That Lynch chose to allow the film to take place over that many years is another aspect that sets the film apart from many of its ilk – it could so easily have been dull and exploitative, but by exploring the mindset of Bob and spending a lot of time with Tim, exposing his frailties in the process, we gain a greater sympathy for the very people performing horrific acts on screen. It’s this that allows Chained to stay with you after the final scenes.

ELSEWHERE ON THE WEB


Rob Batchelor

 
Male, midlands, mid-twenties.