Summary

  • Saw X was a surprising success, netting $111 million worldwide despite a $13 million budget.
  • The film's unique storyline and connection to the franchise's lore elevated it above recent entries.
  • Tobin Bell's performance as Jigsaw made Saw X a worthwhile watch that challenges the series' original themes.

Although 2023’s horror box office was dominated by the likes of Five Nights at Freddy's, The Nun II and Scream VI, the best franchise entry of the genre last year was a much-belated reboot of a franchise so firmly rooted in the 2000s it’s amazing there’s already been two attempts in recent years.

Saw X was a more-than-respectable success when it released in October 2023. Made on a $13 million budget, Kevin Greutert’s movie netted $111 million box office gross worldwide. Adjusted for inflation, that’s a far cry from the mid-2000s heyday, but a pretty great return for a series that felt tired in 2010. And given it not only had positive critical attention, but the first Certified Fresh score for the series on Rotten Tomatoes, something special was clearly afoot.

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Despite being an ardent Saw-head who's seen the Saw movies in order multiple times, I missed the movie in theaters - but have now caught up as it’s hit streaming. I knew the hype, but wasn't prepared for Saw X: a totally unexpected movie that shows there’s life in the old buzzsaw yet.

Saw X Flips What It Is To Be A Saw Movie

When it comes to any entry in the Saw franchise, there’s several key tenets that the movies can be graded on. While often known for its gore (i), Saw was always offering more. There’s the meaning behind the story (ii) - is this about the US medical insurance system (Saw 6) or a weird Se7en riff (Spiral: From The Book Of Saw)? There’s the inevitable twist (iii): how exciting and predictable is it? Then there’s how the film connects to the wider universe (iv), an increasingly difficult USP given the main villain died in 2006’s Saw III.

It’s not that Saw X scores well on these metrics (the biggest knock, as you’ll see, is that twist). It’s that it overindexes on Story and Lore - and a fifth, highly underappreciated factor - when those have taken a backseat in the past few entries.

Factor

Saw X Score

The Story

5/5

The Lore

4/5

The Twist

2/5

The Traps

3/5

Bonus: Tobin Bell

5/5

Warning: Spoilers for Saw X come after.

The Story

John Kramer in Saw X looks blankly composited over an image of a person in a trap
Custom Image By SR Image Editor

The story of Saw X follows John Kramer aka Jigsaw as he struggles with his impending death. In a final Hail Mary, he goes through an experimental cancer treatment in Mexico which ends up being a sophisticated con. Cue a series of kidnappings and a group trap for those who instigated the grift.

On the surface, it’s an exploitation revenge thriller. But the deep focus on Kramer’s introspection in the first act pairs with the victim’s tough decisions - along with a simmering question of what Jigsaw wants to get out of the game - makes for something with more to say about facing mortality.

The Lore

This is bolstered by how the story fits into the wider franchise. Ostensibly set between Saws II and III (just don’t look too closely), Saw X adds a shade of anti-hero color to Kramer and brings back Shawnee Smith as Jigsaw’s first acolyte, Amanda. There’s only so much that can be done in this time period, but this gives his actions in Saw III - desperate surgery - more context.

A cameo from Detective Hoffman (Costas Mandylor), a character much-maligned during his reign of Saws IV-VII, further proves the franchise’s ability for reinvention.

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The Twist

It’s a shame, then, that the movie’s actual twist is rather lackluster. Due to the focus on Jigsaw - and thus limits on what can be done with the main characters the audience knows will make it to their ultimate fate in the next chronological movie - there’s only so many options for a substantial rug pull. I won't spoil for those who haven't seen the movie yet, but it's here where Saw tradition is softer. The accompanying clues are obvious on first watch (nothing close to Saw II’s tongue-in-cheek “your son is in a safe space” here) and the drawn-out reveal falls flat.

The Traps

So, to the gore. The traps in Jigsaw take a good 45 minutes to appear (bar a nifty eye-sucking dream sequence) and lean heavily on the direct self-mutilation side. There’s a rough-and-ready nature, fitting of this being a reactionary game (in stark contrast to the overly polished early career mega-traps of Jigsaw), and a handful of truly wince-inducing moments.

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That said, the same thing that makes the story so much stronger - an almost elevated horror approach - hurts the kills, which lack the lurid grunge of the franchise’s early years.

The Bonus Factor: Tobin Bell