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  1. #1
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    Exclamation The Texas Chainsaw Massacre Story

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    Yes, still ..... bored!

    The 1970s were a time of cinematic endeavors

    and artistic effervescence. It seems like every film produced during this period was a terrific achievement. Witness

    the movies of Francis Ford Coppola (The Godfather, Apocalypse Now) and John Cassavetes (Husbands, Opening

    Night
    ) for instance, which revolutionized American cinema. But during those years, a fringe genre was also

    evolving.


    Although horror movies were already popular, thanks to the Vincent Price flicks of

    the '60s, they were about to mutate into something completely different thanks to Tobe Hooper and his 1974 film

    The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Apparently based on a true story, the movie spawned three sequels and a new

    interpretation of the original that hit theaters in 2003. So was it really based on a true story? Where do the facts

    end and where does the fiction begin?


    In 1974, director Tobe Hooper envisioned the future of

    independent filmmaking as low-budget horror films. He approached a production company for some funds and luckily,

    they were happy to oblige. As it turns out, they were still counting their money from a little porno film they had

    produced in 1972 called Deep Throat.


    Hooper was handed $140,000 US to produce his

    screenplay, and he moved production to his native Texas. The now infamous story is about a group of teenagers who

    embark on a road trip, and wind up in a desolated house, after being spooked by a mysterious hitchhiker. Before

    long, a cannibalistic family, led by the maniacal chainsaw-wielding Leatherface, holds the kids captive. They are

    eventually tortured, sliced, diced, and impaled.


    The film was so horrifying in its day that

    movie-goers actually walked out of the theater. Some countries even delayed the release of the movie for years

    because of the gore factor. But in the end, it raked in revenues in the neighborhood of $30 million.




    But is the story really based on real events, as the promoters of the film claimed, or was this merely

    a marketing ploy? We know one thing for sure, the character of Leatherface is based on legendary serial killer Ed

    Gein.


    Ed Gein

    Edward Theodore Gein was born on August

    27, 1906 in La Crosse, Wisconsin. He grew up on an isolated farm and his mother Augusta was a fiercely religious

    woman. Not only did she teach her two sons that the Bible was the most important thing in life, she also instilled

    in her boys that women were all loose and immoral. All sexual desires were strictly forbidden; the fear of eternal

    damnation kept them in line.


    She also discouraged Ed and his brother Henry from making

    friends. Although Ed was only an average student, he loved to read, especially adventure books and magazines, which

    allowed him to escape momentarily to his own world. He was shy and effeminate, which didn't exactly contribute to

    his social life.


    Read about Ed Gein's transvestism, fetishism, and necrophilia...you'll

    never be the same...


    A disturbed man

    In 1940, Ed and his

    brother were forced to take a series of odd jobs to provide for the family when their father died. It was

    babysitting that Ed enjoyed the most because he felt children were easier to relate to.


    In

    late 1945, his mother Augusta passed away from a stroke. Nothing could have been more shocking for Ed; she was his

    whole universe. As a result, he boarded off her favorite rooms of the house and preserved them as a shrine.



    He spent the majority of his time reading death-cult magazines and adventure stories

    involving Nazis, shipwrecks, and headhunters from the South Seas. This reading material gave him unprecedented

    knowledge of human anatomy, shrinking heads, and about the process of exhuming corpses. He would even repeat these

    stories to children when babysitting.


    Criminal mind



    During the same period, he developed a new hobby. At night, he would visit the cemetery. When he had

    the chance, he stole corpses and body parts from their graves. He was especially interested in females. While he

    wouldn't have sex with them, he enjoyed peeling off their skin and wearing it. The sensation of himself being a

    woman fascinated him.


    He built himself a collection of body parts and took pleasure in

    showing it off to the children he babysat. On one occasion, a little boy told his parents of the preserved heads he

    had been shown, but they did not believe him. During the '40s and '50s, however, an alarming number of people

    began disappearing...


    The real massacre

    In November

    1957, a hardware store was robbed and the owner, Bernice Worden, vanished. Since Ed had been seen loitering around,

    he was suspected of the crime. The police went looking around his farmhouse on November 17. They found garbage

    everywhere; the smell was atrocious.


    Then the officers saw a carcass hanging in the kitchen;

    it had no head. At first, they thought it was a deer but soon realized it was a woman. Upon inspection, the sheriff

    determined it was indeed Bernice Worden, the mother of one of his deputies.


    Soon after, the

    magnitude of what he was looking at sank in. There was a bowl made from a human skull. Human skin had been fashioned

    into an armchair, lampshades, and a wastebasket. There were preserved noses, hearts, heads, and female genitalia.

    There was even a belt made from nipples and a suit completely made from human skin.




    Totally psycho

    While in custody, it took a little over one day

    for Ed to start talking about his crimes. He was cheerful as he talked about his graveyard escapades and the murders

    of Bernice Worden and Mary Hogan, another of his many victims.


    Those were the only murders

    he confessed to. The details of his crimes were rather hazy since he claimed that each time he was in a state of

    confusion. Nevertheless, he never expressed any remorse for these crimes.


    A battery of

    psychiatric and psychological tests proved that he was, to use the technical term, a total nutcase -- a few beers

    shy of a six-pack. Actually, he was deemed emotionally impaired, a schizophrenic, and a sexual psychopath. His

    relationship with his mother was believed to be at the source of his troubles.


    Read on about

    the bizarre legacy Gein left behind...


    Media circus

    As

    soon as Ed Gein was exposed as a serial killer, journalists from all across the globe flocked to Plainfield,

    Wisconsin. Ed was an instant celebrity: the combination of transvestism, fetishism and necrophilia shocked people,

    but they just couldn't get enough.


    Declared mentally incompetent, Gein was committed to the

    Central State Hospital in Waupun, Wisconsin. Ten years later, the court ruled that he was now fit to stand trial but

    he was found not guilty by reason of insanity. Although acquitted, he was sent back to the Central State Hospital

    for the rest of his life.


    Described as a model patient, he was constantly quiet and even

    happy; however he would stare fixedly and disconcertingly at the female nurses and staff members whenever they

    stepped into his field of vision. Cancer eventually got the better of him and he died on July 26, 1984.




    Source of inspiration

    All this notoriety seemed to represent evil

    incarnate and artists felt inspired. Author Robert Bloch saw in Ed a weird personality worth exploring. He wrote a

    story about a grippingly wicked character named Norman Bates. Alfred Hitchcock later adapted it into one of his

    masterpieces, Psycho.


    The Ghastly Gein, as he was nicknamed, was thrust back into

    public consciousness when Hooper released his film The Texas Chainsaw Massacre in 1974. A decade later,

    novelist Thomas Harris also derived his inspiration from Ed, when he wrote The Silence of the Lambs. Buffalo

    Bill, the chief villain is, like Ed Gein, driven to wear his victims' skin.


    The

    legacy


    Hooper's film was influential in many ways. Most importantly, it was full of

    gore and bodily slaughter. While it wasn't the first movie to do so, its success inspired other filmmakers, and

    soon the teen slasher genre was born.


    These films, where a group of teenagers is stalked by

    a faceless murderer, picking them off one by one until only one girl is left, were soon a commercial phenomenon. In

    1978, John Carpenter fine-tuned the genre with Halloween and dozens of copycats followed such as the

    Friday the 13th and Prom Night franchises.


    The era of ingenious murders lasted

    until the mid-'80s, but didn't stay dead for long. In 1996, screenwriter Kevin Williamson resurrected the teen

    slasher genre with Scream, by injecting it with self-consciousness and parody.


    In the

    end, even if the chainsaw was pure invention, there are definite similarities between The Texas Chainsaw

    Massacre
    and the Ed Gein story. Are the similarities consistent enough to unambiguously state that the movie was

    based on a true story? After all, both Gein and Leatherface lived on isolated farms, impaled their victims, and wore

    their skin. It's up to you to decide.


    Why is it searched?



    Human deviance always fascinates people. What we don't understand becomes a source of voyeurism,

    which, in turn, also explains the popularity of reality TV shows. With an ongoing interest in such horrific events,

    these stories will always get our attention.


    Length of the public’s

    interest?


    While there was still a media frenzy in Plainfield, Ed Gein's belongings

    were auctioned off. His car went to a man who wound up displaying it at county fairs; people paid a quarter just for

    a glimpse of the murderer's automobile. He was popular from the start.


    Many books and

    articles were written about the man, and as mentioned above, he was the inspiration for numerous films. With the

    2003 version of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre already hailed as a blockbuster, it's obvious it will continue

    to fuel interest in Ed Gein and similarly ghastly stories.


    TRICKED OR

    TREATED!?

    IF YOU HAVE A CARCASS HANGING IN YOUR KITCHEN ... YOU ...

    COULD BE SOME KIN TO ED GEIN!
    Never argue with ignorant people! They pull you down to THEIR level, and then they BEAT YOU with experience. Who said that!? I don't know, but tis gold I tell'ya!!

  2. #2
    Phero Enthusiast ManBeast's Avatar
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    Also the songs "Dead Skin Mask"

    by Slayer, and "Nothing to Gein" by Mudvayne are about our buddy Eddie as well

    MB
    "You are a sick f*ck, but I wouldn't have you any other way. "
    ~Becca

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by ManBeast
    Also the songs

    "Dead Skin Mask" by Slayer, and "Nothing to Gein" by Mudvayne are about our buddy Eddie as well

    MB

    How appropriate!
    Never argue with ignorant people! They pull you down to THEIR level, and then they BEAT YOU with experience. Who said that!? I don't know, but tis gold I tell'ya!!

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