Episode Transcript
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Is the Texas Chainsaw Masker just a slasher or a ritualistic horror masterpiece from real
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cattle blood and face masks to Saturn, retrograde, secret societies and cannibalistic vampires
we break it all down to making the meaning that hidden esoteric symbolism behind Texas
Chainsaw Masker.
That's right, today we're doing a film analysis of the classic horror movie, Texas Chainsaw
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Masker. We're going to talk about the origins, the making of the film, we're going to walk
through the whole story as we reveal symbolism of the elites, astrology, Saturn, blood,
sacrifice, vampires, energy rituals, voodoo, Satanism, Freemasonry, cannibalism and of
course the Illuminati.
Illuminate confirmed the Texas Chainsaw Masker.
I'm sorry leather face, but I had to do it.
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You know, every year for Halloween we do a horror film, right?
I tried to hit one every year and the last few years we hit the Halloween series, we hit
Halloween one, two and three.
We're going to shift gears this year and hit the Texas Chainsaw Masker and I ranked the
Texas Chainsaw Movies.
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I watched the whole series.
If you go to my letter box, Isaac Wise obviously, username, peep that if you're into
if you're a horror nerd like me.
You can find out my link tree linked in the show notes.
Now let's start with my prerequisites for any film analysis that I do because as you know
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my forte is finding a cult symbolism hidden in our favorite pop culture and we're going
to talk about the cast and the breakdown and all the things, right?
So first off, should you watch this movie if you haven't seen it yet?
I don't know who hasn't.
It's one of the best, if not the greatest horror film of all time, but it's not for the
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screenish.
It'll it'll make you nauseous if you're not into this kind of thing.
So that's your warning.
You don't also amplify any kind of haunted house Spook alley that you ever go to in the future.
You choose if that's good or bad for you.
I don't know because you know every Spook alley's got a chainsaw man, which always terrifies
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me regardless.
And how long is this movie?
What kind of investment are you making?
Well, I could tell you that this podcast is probably going to be longer than the movie.
Well, maybe not longer than the movie, but it's more than the perfect 90 minute length.
It's only 83 minutes.
How you learn at 83 minutes?
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My man came in at less than 90.
You can't beat that.
Let's talk about the making of Texas chainsaw because it's actually pretty interesting.
The movie is quite legendary.
Different accounts.
Some say it was made between $100,000 and $300,000 is what it took to make this movie in the
70s there.
74, I believe.
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And ends up grossing 30 million plus 30 M's franchises, all kinds of stuff, right?
And the movie was so gory back in the 70s when this thing released that it was banned
in a bunch of countries.
Audience members were complaining about the Gore.
It's a different world back in the 70s.
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They couldn't even dream of the Saul and hostile movies.
But Toby Hooper, the director, he came up with the idea for Texas chainsaw massacre when
he was Christmas shopping.
And that's right.
New York Post wrote an article about it.
Noticing a bunch of chainsaws in an upright display, he fantasized about slicing and dicing
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his way through the consumer swarm.
He repressed his dream of a yuletide blood bath.
But once he escaped the claustrophobic mall and settled back home, visions of chainsaws
were in his head, sitting off a chain reaction of story ideas.
Now also the idea of let a face, as you know, wears the mask of his victims like a skin
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mask.
This was inspired by a doctor who once told Toby Hooper that he had made a mask from a
cadaver back in the pre-med days.
What?
Boy.
And this was a low budget film, like I said.
They did it in Texas in July and the heat was unbearable.
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It was 110 degrees.
Not an air conditioner to be found in 1974.
They didn't even have enough budget to make multiple costumes.
So poor leather face and company had to wear the same gross outfits every take.
And in some of the scenes, there's blood and bones and crap everywhere, right?
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Well, that was real.
That was real cattle blood on the walls of the houses and real bones scattered everywhere.
They actually got a bunch of them from a local slaughterhouse.
And furthermore, people were literally being hit and cut in this movie.
One guy almost died getting hacked up by a chain saw.
It's crazy.
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There's a making of documentary out there I've seen it years ago.
But the actors, it's interesting.
The actors got a cut of the shares for the distribution of the film mostly because they
couldn't, the film was a film with such a low budget that they couldn't afford to pay
the actors up front.
But then the actors they fumbled in negotiation and with the first film distributor.
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So we're not having the first time they distributed the film was that the actors had to split
up $8,000 amongst 20 of them.
But then later they sued the distributor after it became a hit and the distributor went
out of business anyway and then New Line Cinema picked it up in 1983 and then they got
paid properly at that point.
Now who's in it?
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Well, I mean, first off, let's talk about the director.
The most famous person involved is the director Toby Hooper.
Now he died in 2017, but he's a legend in the horror film industry.
He's from Austin, Texas where this movie was basically filmed nearby.
This sort of rural areas outside of Austin.
Also I think I was a little too hard on Austin when I went last year.
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I had a rough go at a homeless guy charge.
I mean, I lost my toenail.
I talked about this on my breaking social norms podcast back in May of 24.
I believe when we went down there for the great eclipse, I should give it another shot.
All right.
I was a little, you know, I just had no toenail that I had a rip my own toenail off.
It was terrible.
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Okay.
But ironically, when the eclipse happened, we drove west from Austin because we were trying
to get out from under the cloud cover and we actually drove, I didn't even know it.
We drove right by the house that they filmed Texas chainsaw.
I was like, oh my God, lost opportunity.
My goodness.
It's out near like Fredericksburg, which is where LBJ and his big old hog used to have a farm.
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But anyway, LBJ's big hog on the farm.
It's a Toby Hooper.
He started making films in 1969.
A film called Egg Shells that he co-wrote with Kim Henkel.
All right.
Then the next, the second film he did was Texas chainsaw massacre also with Kim Henkel.
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And Kim, which is a dude, by the way, they would kind of continue having input on the Texas
chainsaw series.
Kim did Texas chainsaw from 2003, Texas chainsaw next generation with Matthew McConaughey.
Oh, right.
Oh, right.
Which has a little notty references as we'll talk about in the conclusion.
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Texas chainsaw the beginning from 2006 Texas chainsaw 3D leather face and the 2022 Texas
chainsaw Netflix flop.
What a bummer that was.
Now Toby, if you want to know where I rank that one, check out my letter box Texas chainsaw
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list.
So Toby Hooper also did the classic 1979 Stephen King sale and was lot mini series.
He did Fun House, which was great.
He did Poultergeist.
I mean, that's obviously a huge one, right?
He also did Texas chainsaw 2, which arguably might be well, not better.
It's an interesting story.
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I love Texas chainsaw 2 as much as I love Texas chainsaw 1 almost.
It's got Dennis Hopper.
I mean, come on.
And he also did Toby also did an episode of Freddy's nightmares and fun fact, he filmed
the Billy Idol music video for dancing with myself.
No big deal.
Another fun fact Toby Hooper was at the University of Texas in Austin when Charles Whitman shot
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the people from the clock tower and women actually shot and killed a police officer that was
standing right next to Toby Hooper.
Which through six degrees of separation takes us into there's a scene in full metal jacket
where they talk about the Whitman shootings and what one motivated Marine and his rifle
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can do, which is filled by Stanley Kubrick.
And now boy, Toby and Stanley.
So Toby Hooper and Kim wrote the story of Texas chainsaw loosely based on a mix of inspirations.
The ones I talked about already plus a sprinkle of Ed Geen, which is like the Netflix series
you know, Ed Geen, Texas chainsaw and fun fact.
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I talked about this on breaking social norms as well.
When we and my wife went down to Zach Begins haunted museum, there's an Ed Geen room and
there's this pot that he used to boil his bones in inside of a big glass case.
My wife actually like bumped into the case.
I was like, you know, thank God there was a case around it because I was like weird energy
on some of that stuff, right?
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The haunted museum was creepy, by the way.
Also had the Belologosi mirror in the basement, which I actually paid for the VIP to go down
there, but then I backed out once I got in there.
I was like, ooh, the energy, the vibes I ain't passing the vibe check in here, which we're
going to talk about Belologosi in this movie as well and in the conclusion.
Now Texas chainsaw strangely enough would influence Ridley Scott for the alien movie, believe
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that or not.
Now in the cast itself, no one really broke out and became a star.
All right.
Marilyn Burns plays Sally and it's arguable that she is the queen of horror.
She's the first famous screen queen.
She's one of the first famous final girls.
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She also would play Linda Cassabie and on the Helter Scouts or TV show and she made a bunch
of cameos and return of Texas chainsaw, Texas chainsaw 3D.
In 7th grade, she started out her acting career in a play of mid-Summer Night's Dream
Ties, tying us into the theories that I talked about with Robert Frederick on my episode
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in September about the Shakespeare conspiracy.
Because he was saying that every actor seems to have to pay dues to Shakespeare.
Sadly, she would die in 2014, unspecified cause of death.
Paul Partine plays the role of Franklin.
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Now Paul, he's from Austin, Texas, Vietnam, and he basically stopped acting after this movie,
like what?
And it would end up being a manager of an electronic store.
He made a cameo in the return of Texas chainsaw, but died of cancer in 2005.
Edwin Neal plays the hitchhiker, easily the most memorable character.
He would also be in JFK.
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He was also a Vietnam vet, he got a bronze star for combat zone stuff.
And fun fact, he owns the world's largest poster collection.
He's still kicking it.
He's still doing small roles here and there.
The other main actor we want to talk about is the guy plays leather face, Gunner Hanson,
described as the mentally impaired cannibal.
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Now Gunner was born in Iceland and has grown up in Austin cause they did hire from the
local area.
And he kept on acting after Texas chainsaw did some writing, he was in Texas chainsaw 3D.
Also the highly acclaimed Hollywood chainsaw hookers, I've never seen it.
I don't know.
And he did a bit of a method acting for this role in Texas chainsaw because leather face
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is a special needs character.
So Gunner spent time at a school for developmentally disabled children where his mother had worked
and he was studying their movements.
So we also have this milestone in this film of leather face being the most easily the most
popular special needs killer.
Gunner sadly died in 2015 of pancreatic cancer.
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Oh, and last but definitely not least.
At the beginning of the film, there's a narrator.
That narrator is John Leroy Ket.
Yes, that John Leroy Ket from Night Court, the movie Stripes, tons of TV shows.
And fun fact, he almost lost his entire nose during a, he was filming something and there was
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a scene where a door was supposed to open and it didn't and his head smashed through the
glass.
Anyway, Texas chainsaw was actually his first film of parents and he did the role in exchange
for a payment of marijuana.
And he's got a massive resume.
He was also in the 2022 garbage Texas chainsaw movie.
So now without further ado, let's get into the movie.
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It's a lot of spoilers from here on out.
If you're still with me, let's go.
They start out with the for warning by John Leroy Ket.
Suggesting it is a real story and one of the most bizarre crimes in the anals of American
history.
And they prefer to Sally and her invalid brother Franklin.
He's in a wheelchair.
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And about how this whole summer afternoon turned into a nightmare.
Take a listen.
Film what you are about to see is an account of the tragedy which befell a group of five
youths.
In particular, Sally Hardesty and her invalid brother Franklin.
It is all the more tragic and that they were young.
But how they lived very, very long lives.
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They could not have expected nor would they have wished to see as much of the mad and
Macomb as they were to see that day.
For them an idealic summer afternoon drive became a nightmare.
The events of that day were to lead to the discovery of one of the most bizarre crimes
in the anals of American history.
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
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Now, that whole based on a true story bit has always been done since film started, but
Texas Chainsaw was the one that had some virality to it.
The player which project is probably the second most famous to pull it off, maybe even the
most famous actually.
But back in 1974, there was a lot of protesting about the Vietnam War and I'm going to read
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to you from Wikipedia.
Hooper has cited changes in the cultural and political landscape as central influences
on the film.
His intentional misinformation that the film you are about to see is true was a response
to being lied to by the government about things that were going on all over the world.
Man was the real monster here just wearing a different face so I put a literal mask on
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the monster in my film.
So as you're going to find out by the time we get through this whole thing in the conclusion,
the Texas Chainsaw Sery is the most sort of like conspiratorial horror movie that there
is if you read between the lines of what's going on and they specifically talk about it
in Texas Chainsaw next generation, wait for the conclusion.
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So let's set up the scene.
It's August 18th, 1973.
It's Texas and it's Flamin' Hot.
Texas is brutally hot in the summers.
I went through basic training in San Antonio in January and I remember just like, there was
like humidity.
The walls were just like sweating.
It was just so hot everywhere you went.
I can't imagine August.
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We see this great little feature that Hooper does.
He does these photo flashes of like ooey gooey body parts, nice little camera flash technique.
And they're playing the news and the news anchors are going on and on and on and on and on
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about grave robbings that have an outside of Newt Texas because it's a grizzly work of art
and it shows like the cemetery with this body set up like a piece of art take a listen.
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So the hitchhiker then pulls his blade and cuts Franklin's arm, crew freaks out, they kick him out of the van,
but when the hitchhiker gets kicked out of the van he takes the blood from his hand and he wipes it on the outside of the van,
like he's marking it again ritualistic and it kind of looks like an X as in like X marks the spot,
meaning they're now a target, the van has been targeted, but it also looks like a sif, a reaper.
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What do you call that?
A sif? What do you call that?
Like a Saturn, right? The grim reaper's got the sickle. That's what's called sickle.
It kind of looks like a sickle as well with a sort of a loop top, which is very strange.
So the kick him out, all this crazy stuff happens and they're driving again and the woman is
reading more astrology stuff about Franklin than how it's going to be a disturbing day as if
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that wasn't already a disturbing day.
And the driver asks the woman to read Sally's astrology and then she says something about Capricorn
being rolled by Saturn and something ominous about having to pinch yourself to realize that what is happening is real.
Take a listen.
Hey, listen to Franklin's horoscope.
[Sounds of a car driving in background]
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[Sounds of a car driving in background]
Travel in the Colties, on-ranked plants, that's heading persons around you, could make this disturbing and unpredictable day.
The events in the world are not doing much either to cheer one up.
That's just perfect.
Franklin, I think that'll be all-
Hey, Mary Sally.
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Just Capricorn.
[Sounds of a car driving in background]
I don't know. Capricorn's rolled by Saturn.
There are moments when we cannot believe that what is happening is really true.
Pinch yourself and you may find out that it is.
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[Sounds of a car driving in background]
[Sounds of a car driving in background]
[Sounds of a car driving in background]
[Sounds of a car driving in background]
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So now they pull to a gas station and the attendant, he's staring up at the sun.
Again, with this, you know, noting the power, it seems.
And this reminds me of John Carpenter's "Prince of Darkness,"
which I talked about in Aliens, UFOs, and the occult user illusion 2, my book.
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(30:26):
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And the point is that there's an occult thing happening here with the universe.
All right?
So the gas station naturally had a gas.
(33:06):
The crew asked the old man.
He's like, hey, do you know where the old Franklin places?
And the old gas station guy warns them, you know, you boys all be fooling around.
Other folks's property.
Now, fun fact, Franklin in the wheelchair, apparently his name is Franklin Franklin.
If this is his grandfather's house, which is kind of a stupid name, right?
(33:29):
But Franklin Franklin, he's talking about how he's in the van and he's talking about how he's still got the hitchhiker's body.
Now, he's still got the hitchhiker's blood on his knife still.
And he's playing with the knife and he's picking at it and playing with it.
And then about a one minute, he proceeds to eat some fruit without washing his hands or nothing.
And I was like, oh, that's probably the most grotesque thing about this whole movie.
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To be honest, so then we hear that Newt Texas is the closest place to get gas.
Right?
Newt Texas, of course, the same Newt Texas from earlier that the...
All the terrible stuff's happening.
So they're going to head over to Grandpa's Place and they talk about how they think the hitchhiker may have wrote something on the van in his blood.
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They fight out, tell you that this isn't just him smearing it.
There was a symbol loaded onto the van.
So they finally pull up to the old Franklin house and they're damn near out of gas.
And of course it's all dilapidated and hasn't been inhabited for decades.
And someone gets out of the van and says it looks like the birthplace of Bella Legosi.
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Again, another reference to the vampires.
What are we talking about with the vampires?
The examine the blood print and that the hitchhiker left on the van and the one guy says it's like the mark of Zoro.
Referring us back to the idea of that blood sigil being of Saturn being on the van.
It's the mark of Saturn.
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So they all go into the house.
Of course it's a mess or spiders and tetanus everywhere.
My goodness.
And there's a clearly marked triangle on the doorway.
What is that about?
And in case you're just listening to the audio version, I'm going to make a...
I'd down do video versions of this show.
I'm going to put it here too on the supporter feeds on Patreon and VIP section.
(35:20):
You can watch the ad free video version of this show.
My goodness.
Most of my videos I'm able to get up on YouTube at a cult symbolism.
They block a lot of stuff and there's a lot of drama with the YouTube and ads.
But I'm going to put that on there and I'll put the images of what I'm talking about here.
And if I cannot get them on Instagram as well.
But you'll notice the triangle at the doorway.
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What's that triangle?
It's the Triangle of the manifestation.
I propose they are in fact doing magical rituals in this house.
So everyone's in the house.
Typical harm movie.
Everyone's giggling.
So for Franklin, now he's annoyed that everyone else is having a good time and he's stuck downstairs.
And one of the couples is like, "Oh, let's go swimming in the...
...disease infested water hole."
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And Franklin, he sees a couple of strange pieces of evidence of rituals.
Like witchcraft or voodoo. There's talismans. These charms of bones and animal things.
So the couple, they get to the water hole.
Naturally it's all dried up.
But while they're there, they see another house in the distance.
And they're like, "Oh, perfect.
Let's go see if we can get some gas from that house."
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They walk up to the house.
It's total hoarder house territory with multiple vehicles.
Hidden underneath Camo netting, which is kind of a clue, right?
And they go to the front porch and knock, nobody's home.
But they manage to see a human tooth on the porch.
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And the guy picks it up and hands it to his girlfriend.
A little prank.
Picking up teeth with a bare hand, playing with blood on a stranger's knife,
and then eating fruit, these people are insane.
So old girl, she storms off.
She's like, "Ooh."
And he decides, he's like, "Look, I'm just going to walk into this hoarder house."
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And when he walks in, you can see a room straight back
with a bunch of skulls mounted on the walls.
And dummy proceeds to go towards that room.
And right when he gets to the threshold of the door,
we're introduced to the leather face.
The leather face comes out with a sledgehammer and bam,
it's one to the dome, it's murder.
And Kirk, the boyfriend here, he starts flopping around,
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just like we heard about the cattle earlier,
when they get hit in the head with the hammer.
It's completely oblivious.
She's out front on the swing, and she's like, "Alright, let me go check on Kirk."
And she goes into the house too,
and she walks into this room of horrors,
of chicken feathers and bones and skulls everywhere.
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And then she sees a lot of faces.
The front, but the leather face is faster, he snatches her up.
The thrills are up on a giant meat hook,
while he proceeds to fire up his chainsaw
and cut up her boyfriend right in front of her into pieces.
Now, you can't see a ton of gorg ironically,
because if this movie was made today,
they would show all of it, which dare I say is too much.
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But back then, they had to cut out a ton to get an R rating,
and it straight up still got banned and denied in a bunch of countries.
Now, fun fact, this scene, they used a real chainsaw,
and they almost actually killed the actor
who came within a couple inches of killing him.
And you're gonna hear at some point in this analysis,
(38:44):
I talked about how the cast hated Toby Hooper by the end of this thing.
So they get back in the van at, or, I'm sorry,
they get back to the van a few of them, right?
And Franklin is still talking about this blood sigil,
on the van, and he thinks that hitchhiker is now going to kill him.
And he asks, and you know, they have no idea what happened
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at the chainsaw house.
They don't know that these people who went off to get gas are dead.
And he asks Sally if she believes in all that retrograde talk.
And he's like, "I'm really scared this guy's gonna kill me
in the sanders and retrograde and, uh, uh, uh, right?"
So the John Lennon looking dude comes out
and he's like, "Look, I'm gonna go over to that house to find Kirk."
And then he goes to the front porch of the house,
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knocks, nobody answers.
But then he sees their blanket and he's like, "You know what?
Maybe I should just walk into this creepy house.
Maybe they're playing a prank."
He goes right into the animal's skull room.
Here's a bagging on the freezer and great scene.
He opens it up and there's old girl.
She's in there.
And here comes Leatherface.
(39:48):
And Leatherface, he's, you know, he's screaming, he's panicking.
And this is a weird scene because he looks out the window now
and he like sits and he puts his head in his hands.
Like he's going to be in trouble for doing this.
Anyway, now it's nighttime.
Again, shot the full moon.
Sally and Franklin, they're at the van.
They debate if they should go get help or look for Jerry, right?
(40:13):
And Sally is like, "Look, I'm not gonna leave without my boyfriend, Jerry."
So she's like, "I'm gonna go over to that house."
And Franklin, he's acting like a little bitch right now,
crying about it.
And he decides, "Look, if you're going to the house, I'll go with you."
Bad idea.
Again, another shot of the full moon.
And the whole point is to show us with these shots of the moon
(40:34):
and the sun is to show us as above so below the hermetic doctrine
that the magician on the earth can influence the planets and vice versa.
So they're going through the path to this house
and they're screaming for Jerry and, boom, out pops Leatherface
with the chainsaw.
And just like that, Franklin's dead.
(40:55):
He was right the whole time.
That whole astrology talk, the whole curse on the van,
he was 100% correct.
And that's why he didn't want to go.
And Sally, she takes off run and she runs right to the house.
She runs upstairs though.
And she finds grandma and grandpa in the room chilling,
which is quite disturbing because they basically look dead.
(41:19):
We'll find out grandpa is still alive.
Grandma's definitely dead.
She's a skeleton at this point.
And she jumps out the way.
And as far as I know, this was like mind blowing in the 70s, right?
Because Psycho was just a few years prior
and the rating people had a fit because it showed a,
I think I showed a toilet on the movie.
(41:41):
And they're like, "You can't show a toilet.
Like goodness."
And then you got disintegrating bodies.
It's crazy.
Anyways, the film holds up great.
She jumps out the window, runs back towards the van.
But now Leatherface chasing her.
Great cardio, by the way, on both of these people,
(42:03):
especially Leatherface.
He's a massive man who's carrying a massive chainsaw.
So let's not forget about the cardio of Gunner.
So Sally's running, running, running.
She gets to the gas station.
She crashes through the door.
There's the old man from earlier.
Thank goodness.
She screams, "Call the police.
Get help."
(42:25):
The man's like, "Okay, okay."
He's like, "Look, there's nobody out there now.
I got no phone.
I'm going to drive you to the next town for help."
And she looks over.
And she sounds good.
She looks over.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
(42:47):
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
And there's a wood stove of sorts.
(43:09):
And knowing what I know about this movie, I'm like,
"Maybe that was a real bloody rag.
I don't know."
These people, I hope, they're up on all their shots.
Okay.
If you believe in that sort of thing.
In this scene, they actually had him really hit her, apparently.
And she could send it to it.
And he wasn't really loving it, but like he did it, right?
(43:33):
And he kept hitting her.
And when they cut, she passed out, because it hurts so bad, I guess.
So anyway, he gets her in the truck.
And he's like, "Oh, darn.
I forgot to lock the front door of the gas station to turn off the lights."
Because the cost of electricity is outrageous.
That's what he says. So there's this whole thing.
And he's casually beating on her as he drives her.
(43:55):
You know where he's taking her?
He's taking her to the house.
He's not taking her for help.
He's giggling the whole time.
And then here's the hitchhiker dude stumbling around the driveway.
Going towards the house.
And the man stops and gets out.
And he talks about the hitchhiker.
He talks about how he almost got caught.
And they're arguing about staying away from the graveyard.
(44:17):
And he starts beating on him.
And he's like, "Oh, you shouldn't have left your brother alone."
So now it's like, "Oh, they're all family."
Okay.
And they left leather face to brother alone.
So the gas station guy, he starts beating on a leather face too for ruining the door.
So like, this guy's got to be dead.
And leather face and the hitchhiker are his sons.
(44:39):
We know that now.
He tells hitchhikers, "Go up and grab grandpa."
Yes, the dead guy. Go grab grandpa.
And meanwhile they tie up Sally to a chair in the dining room.
And here comes grandpa carried down the stairs in the chair
so they can set up over the dining room table with Sally.
And they proceed to cut Sally's finger
(45:01):
and put it into grandpa's mouth as he sucks blood from her finger.
And he's even doing a little nom nom dance.
These people really are vampires.
Now fun fact, Toby Hooper really cut her finger in this scene
because they had fake blood,
though it's supposed to happen when it wasn't cooperating.
(45:25):
So he just went up and was like, "Screw it."
And he cut her finger.
This is one of the reasons why the cast hated him.
And the guy who played grandpa,
because the grandpa was sitting there with like a big mask.
He can't, because he looks like a dead person or something.
The guy who played grandpa said, "I didn't find out until years later,
I was actually sucking on her blood, which is kind of erotic really."
(45:46):
What?
And I read a New York Post article that this dining room scene
that we're about to go through was filmed in a 26-hour marathon filming
and the house had no air conditioning. It was 115 degrees.
And the actors would periodically have to run outside for fresh air and to vomit.
Okay, back to the movie.
We get another shot of the full moon.
(46:08):
Sally wakes up.
Everyone's at the dinner table now.
And there's a bunch of weird meats on their plate,
which obviously isn't beef.
And there's even a skin over the dining room light
and leather face is wearing a new face with makeup on it.
Dad starts arguing about who's doing all the work in this house.
It sounds like a very typical family fight, to be honest.
(46:32):
And Sally is begging for her life.
And the family is mocking her.
Right? And it's a pretty terrifying sequence, honestly.
And they decide they're going to let grandpa have a whack at Sally
with the sledgehammer.
They're going to kill her like the cattle.
Like grandpa used to do.
And dad's going on and on.
He's like, "Oh, you know, my family's the best.
They're so accurate with the hammer and they could kill in the first whack."
(46:54):
So they hold Sally's head over a bucket.
And they give grandpa the hammer, but he's really old.
And he has a hard time swinging.
He's barely swinging it.
Like I feel like if he would have made contact,
it wouldn't even hurt.
So he's kind of lazily swinging this hammer at her head.
And in the commotion, she breaks free.
And she sprints towards the window.
(47:15):
It jumps through it.
And now hitchhiker and leather face, they run after.
Hitchhiker catches up to her and it's morning now.
It's dawn now.
And he's stabbing on her.
But then a big rig called the Black Maria comes through
a just the right time and runs over the hitchhiker.
And he's clearly dead now.
(47:36):
The driver stops.
He gets out to help Sally.
But here comes leather face with the chainsaw.
All right.
So now they're doing this little low, you know,
thing with their chasing each other.
And a different pickup truck cruise down the road.
Sally hops in the back, leather face to chase.
And after her with the chainsaw, she takes off in the truck,
maniacally laughing, covered in blood.
(47:58):
And the final shot of the movie is leather face swinging the chainsaw
and dancing in the dawn.
What is happening in this movie?
Well, in conclusion, let's break it down.
What are we going to illuminate confirm here?
First, let's talk about Michael Hoffman,
a secret society's encyclological warfare book.
And we talked about this idea extensively in the Twin Peaks
(48:19):
gray lodge series.
If you haven't checked that out, I don't know what you're doing.
patreon.com/aluminatiwantre.
Go check it out.
55 episodes about Twin Peaks that most of you didn't want.
And we talked about this idea in there about how there's this struggle
that Michael Hoffman describes of the capitalist material
realm versus nature.
(48:40):
And we talked about how this shows up in Twin Peaks as the Packard's
sawmill. It shows us the struggle in the credits, right?
And Twin Peaks is all about the woods fighting back against the capitalist forces.
Well, we kind of have that here with leather face using the chainsaw.
Recall all the talk about Saturn being in retrograde,
shots of the movement of the sky objects and the full moons,
(49:02):
which again, you see a ton of in Twin Peaks.
And Saturn would, you know, destroy the Earth using the,
the, the, the cycle.
And if you think that's a stretch, there's a dialogue in the movie about how technology
ruined how they used to kill cattle with the, the sledgehammer,
the old fashioned way, remember?
(49:23):
And then all the sledge was better.
And they even try to do it to our final world.
Now, it should also be noted that the, the, the, the,
the secret society of the Freemasons or the cryptocracy of Michael Hoffman
and James Shelby Downer talked about.
That's the illuminati, right?
Well, they would routinely evoke and reenact the ritualistic murder of their dear leader,
(49:48):
hire a biff.
And how would they do that with the three ruffians, the three hobos, striking
hire a biff in the head with a hammer?
Huh?
See how that was depicted in this film?
They try to do that with Sally.
For Carl Haltovi Hooper was inspired to create this film originally.
(50:09):
He was Christmas shopping and he was fantasizing about cutting through all the,
the capitalistic shoppers with a chainsaw.
So that's one element.
Another element is, of course, astrology, the oldest art in the occult.
And one of the names considered for this film was actually Saturn in retrograde,
referring, of course, to the forces of Saturn, the grim reaper, trying to catch bodies.
(50:31):
And when Saturn is in retrograde, it causes all this conflict on the earth,
which is depicted through the moon in the sun.
And the chainsaw family seems very well versed in a cult rituals, right?
They know this.
They are in the Saturn death cult, and they're doing blood sacrifice rituals to Saturn,
which I'm going to deep dive here in the next couple of months,
the brotherhood of Saturn, the death cult of Saturn, and why they do blood sacrifices.
(50:57):
Now, furthermore, they are doing it with Freemasonic hire a biff symbolism in the movie.
Now, I went and saw the re-release of Texas chainsaw massacre a couple of weeks ago,
me and Jimmy the jackhammer went to the theater.
And at the end, they played a five minute preview of a new documentary about the making of Texas chainsaw massacre.
(51:20):
What's it called?
Anyway, the five minutes I saw had Pat and Oswald in it.
And he talks about his theory about the movie is that it's an apocalypse,
and it's actually happening everywhere.
And that's why they keep looking up at the sun in the moon.
Pat and Oswald is interesting because he got roped into the conspiracy world
when he seemingly defended James Gunn, the director who got fired from Guardians of Galaxy III,
(51:44):
because James Gunn had tweeted some weird jokes about RAP to the E and PD to the O stuff, right?
And people then went after Pat and claiming that he was one of those types of people.
It's just strange.
But the apocalypse theory is interesting. I like that.
Next, cannibalism.
(52:06):
It's a story about magical vampires doing blood sacrifices and cannibalism practices.
They're absorbing the powers of the victims.
And they're all young people and there's this ritualistic element of this in the last supper scene.
Remember, grandpa's getting the nom-nomes from Old Girls Blood,
which as I stated was a real thing that really happened in the movie when they filmed it.
(52:28):
And the crew called this the last supper scene, right, in the making of the film,
which I think that's literally being used as a satanic black mass of the blood and body
that they're eating and they're drinking the blood.
And grandpa's like the high priest here.
And the reason, one reason for the cannibalism is the debasement thing of mankind.
It's like the ultimate form of power over another, like a nihilistic view of how you can have power over one another.
(52:55):
So you could eat them. And they refer to Dracula several times in the film.
They're calling people vampires, referring to Bella LaGosi, Grandpa's literal vampire drinking blood.
And the vampires in the Dracula, they drink the blood for power.
And David Ike talks about all this.
And he refers it to as the constellation of Draco, where these people come from.
(53:18):
Because Dracula comes from son of Dracool. Dracool means dragon.
It takes us to the order of the dragon. And these are shapeshifting lizard people.
And they feed off of negative, negative energy, fear and blood, blood energy.
And remember the film started out telling us about how these body parts are arranged in a grisly ritualistic fashion.
(53:39):
Furthermore, leather face wears the faces of his victims, skins over his face.
And what is that? That's the frazzle drip. That's right.
And if you don't know what I'm talking about, there's a woman with the initials H.C.
That's alleged to be doing this exact practice of leaching a drain of chrome from the face of a victim on the
(54:06):
the Anthony weeny laptop, which I've read all of that's completely fake and staged seems like it is you decide.
Now Toby Hooper says this is a movie that's all about meat.
And many people say it's actually the ultimate vegetarianism film because it shows humans going through slaughter like cattle do.
(54:30):
Especially when they're talking about how they kill cattle with a hammer.
And we talked about all the idea of the elites in the Illuminati eating people.
Well, I did a film analysis on the film fresh years ago, which I did a two-parter.
I did film fresh and we did a book review of Kirk Barker's book about all the elements that were found in the movie fresh.
(54:52):
Now strangely enough, in Texas Tainsaw Masquer, next generation with Matthew McConaughey.
So you know it's all right, all right, all right.
There's a strange reference to the Illuminati.
In next generation, we find out there's an elite group that leather face and the whole family is working for.
And they put on these shows of murder for the elites for the Illuminati.
(55:16):
And Matthew McConaughey drives a truck that says Illuminati wrecking.
And he's a sort of mind-controlled killer handled by the Illuminati.
So there you go. Lots of actual real symbolism and conspiracy to connect in with Texas Tainsaw Masquer.
And if you want more in Texas Tainsaw, there's two documentaries dropping this year.
There's one called Dinner with Leather Face, a documentary about Gunner Hansen who plays Leather Face, and chain reactions is the other one with Pat and Oswald and so on.
(55:45):
And his rumor to 824 is going to be buying the rights of the franchise.
So hopefully we'll get more Texas Tainsaw Masquer in the works, TV shows, movies and so on.
So there you go. There's my film breakdown, my analysis of Texas Tainsaw Masquer for this happy Halloween or Saline or whatever you want to call it.
Fall Festival, you pick your path.
(56:07):
But thanks for joining me. If you like the show, share it with a friend. That's how we grow the show.
Okay, and that's how I can keep plucking money into my studio, I got this sweet mixer. Thanks to you guys.
We're working to drop FX paddles, right?
So yeah, thanks for listening to the show. If you like the show, share it with a friend.
(56:29):
I love the show, leave a 5 star review because that helps me combat the one star haters.
I got one star haters, they don't like me, they don't like my message, so they try to destroy 15 years of work with a one star.
And you can help me fight them with a 5 star review.
Alright, thank you for your support until next time. Stay positive.
I'm your host, Isaac Wisehub, and I'm actually not going to take you down Griffith or Alli today, sort of.
(56:58):
If you'd like the show I put on, and enjoy the journey of research, we go on to try and make sense of this world.
Full of unsavory characters, all trying to make you believe in their versions of reality,
which are often funded by corporate slave masters, foreign governments, or political and religious agendas.
Then I'm calling on you to help me get our word out there.
I need you to leave a 5 star review for my podcast right now.
(57:22):
As long as you're not driving, I need you to literally pull your little phone out of your pocket or your purse while I'm talking to you and click on that 5 star rating or review button.
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As you can just leave a 5 star rating right now.
On whatever app is convenient, Apple is kind of the most popular app, so that would be ideal.
(57:46):
But again, whatever app you're using is great. Let's keep this easy for you.
I ask this because I often times see one star reviews from people who either disagree with me or don't give the show a reasonable effort.
And trust me, it's not easy having an opinion that goes against the grains of the normies or even a lot of the truthers because I find myself in a very peculiar position where I don't fit in entirely in either world.
(58:10):
Like I always say, I'm a one man army behind the scenes doing everything.
So normies are too close-minded, truthers sometimes are too biased, so I'm stuck eating up all these one star reviews and it hurts the show.
And the only way to combat that is for you to leave a 5 star rating or review right now.
Thank you for your time, thank you for your support and listenership.
I would not be doing this show without you.
(58:31):
(gunfire)