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  • Saw III (2006) – Where Pain Is Cheap and Story Is Cheaper

Saw III (2006) – Where Pain Is Cheap and Story Is Cheaper

Posted on June 11, 2025June 11, 2025 By admin No Comments on Saw III (2006) – Where Pain Is Cheap and Story Is Cheaper
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You know you’re in trouble when a horror movie starts lecturing you about justice and redemption before the first artery is even severed. Saw III — that third steaming pile from a franchise that mistook gore for gravitas — isn’t so much a film as it is a meat grinder that forgot it was once a typewriter. It talks too much, thinks it’s smarter than it is, and tortures its characters (and audience) with all the joy of a DMV clerk on a double shift.

I went into this thing  hoping for a little blood, a little chaos, maybe even a ghost of suspense. What I got was a funeral procession through a slaughterhouse — endless, humorless, joyless — and all of it pretending it had something to say.

But it doesn’t. Not a damn thing.


The Setup: Rotting Morality Theater

So the old bastard Jigsaw is dying. He’s strapped to a bed with tubes in his throat and a beard that screams “I’ve been pondering death for six sequels.” He brings in a doctor — Lynn, played by Bahar Soomekh, who seems like she wandered into the wrong script — and chains her to his heartbeat. If he dies, her head explodes. You know, just standard job hazards in this cinematic dung heap.

Meanwhile, some poor bastard named Jeff is shuffled through a series of morality plays where he’s supposed to forgive people involved in his son’s death. But “forgiveness” here means letting someone drown in pig guts or get their limbs twisted off while you cry like a hungover welder in therapy. It’s ugly, mechanical, soulless. It’s like watching Dante’s Inferno re-imagined by a pack of rabid high school metalheads.

This isn’t storytelling. It’s punishment porn for people who think empathy is weakness and that plot is just a speed bump on the road to mutilation.


The Characters: Talking Corpses with Sad Backstories

There are no people here, just mouthpieces for pain.

Jigsaw, played again by Tobin Bell, mumbles philosophical nonsense through gritted teeth like a dying Nietzsche fanboy. “Live or die — make your choice.” Over and over. Like it’s supposed to mean something. Like anyone here had a choice. He talks of morality like a drunk preacher outside a strip club. And just like that preacher, he reeks of hypocrisy and formaldehyde.

But if there’s one half-lit flame in the middle of this sewer tunnel of a movie, it’s Shawnee Smith as Amanda. She comes back to the genre like a familiar bruise — you know it’s gonna hurt, but you still keep pressing on it. Smith, who once fought off amorphous alien goo in The Blob (1988), slides back into horror with the kind of twitchy intensity that makes you almost forget the script’s trash. Almost.

Amanda is a raw nerve pretending to be steel. She’s volatile, scared, dangerous — and Smith plays her like she’s got nails under her tongue and a hole in her chest where her soul used to be. It’s the closest Saw III comes to anything resembling a heartbeat. She sells madness better than the writers sell the message.

There’s something poetic in her presence — an old scream queen coming home, drowning in blood and grief. You don’t root for her, exactly, but you damn sure keep watching her. In a film rotting from its own self-importance, Shawnee Smith is the one bit of meat that still has some fight left in it. She deserved a better script, a better movie — but then again, don’t we all?

Then there’s Jeff. Good old Jeff, played by Angus Macfadyen with all the charisma of a boiled cabbage. He cries. He shuffles. He whines. He fails. Over and over. And we’re supposed to believe his arc — from broken father to “forgiver” — is some grand redemption. What it really is? It’s lazy. It’s manipulative. It’s bullshit on a plate.


The Gore: Artless Blood for the Algorithm

Let’s not pretend Saw III is aiming for suspense. This isn’t Hitchcock. It’s a damn hardware store catalog — chains, hooks, acid, bones cracking like peanut shells. Everything is loud and ugly and wet. The traps are more elaborate than the plot. More attention is paid to how someone’s ribcage is torn open than how a single line of dialogue is written.

There’s a scene with a guy in a rack, his limbs being twisted like a rotisserie chicken. Another where a woman freezes to death while water sprays her down like she’s in the worst nightclub on Earth. And don’t forget the pit of rotting pig corpses — a disgusting, overlong metaphor for forgiveness that just stinks of effort.

And yet, none of it scares. None of it sticks with you. There’s no tension. Just cruelty — industrial-grade cruelty, reheated and served like a gas station burrito. It’s all noise. And noise, as any drunk in a dive bar will tell you, isn’t the same as meaning.


The Message: Hollow as a Dead Man’s Eyes

Jigsaw wants you to believe this is all about learning to appreciate life. But let’s not kid ourselves. These movies aren’t about rebirth — they’re about dismemberment. They sell nihilism to teenagers and wrap it in cheap morality like it’s a goddamn fortune cookie. “Live or die.” “Appreciate what you have.” “Don’t waste your life.”

But nobody here learns anything. Not the characters. Not the audience. Because the movie doesn’t care about change — it cares about watching people suffer for 108 minutes while some B-movie Aristotle lectures from a hospital bed made of rust and regret.

This is not philosophy. It’s exploitation dressed up in a funeral suit.


Cinematography: Rot with a Camera Filter

Visually, it’s like someone smeared vaseline and motor oil on the lens. The whole film is green. Or yellow. Or just dark. Every room looks like it smells like copper and mold. The editing is frantic — quick cuts, shaky cams, split-second gore flashes like it’s trying to make your eyeballs puke.

Nothing breathes. Nothing lingers. Not even the deaths. You’re not watching. You’re surviving it. And for what?

To see someone’s head explode like a rotten pumpkin in the final five minutes? To watch a man scream “Noooooo” while his wife dies in front of him for the eighth goddamn time in horror cinema?

It’s exhausting.


The Verdict: Rotting from the Inside Out

Saw III is what happens when you take a halfway-interesting idea — moral punishment by trap — and run it into the ground with every bit of subtlety stomped out like a cigarette under a boot. By the third outing, the franchise is just dragging its own entrails down the alley, hoping you won’t notice how little it has left to say.

It’s like watching a drunk uncle scream about discipline while he pisses himself. It’s loud, it’s embarrassing, and the only thing you’re left with is the stench.

And worst of all? It thinks it’s important. It thinks it’s got soul.

But Saw III is soulless. And in its soullessness, it reveals just how far horror can fall when it confuses pain for power.


Final Thoughts

They say horror is a mirror, a reflection of the times. If that’s true, then Saw III is a cracked mirror in a motel bathroom — stained with blood and bad decisions, fogged over with the breath of people trying too hard to be deep when all they’re doing is drowning.

It’s not a movie you survive. It’s one you crawl away from.

If you want to feel something — anything — there are better ways. Try heartbreak. Try living a life worth regretting.

But don’t watch Saw III.

★☆☆☆☆

🔗 Further Viewing: Betsy Russell Essentials

📼 Private School (1983)
Cheeky, wild, and unforgettable — Betsy Russell’s breakout role as the bold and rebellious Jordan Leigh-Jensen defined the 1980s teen comedy.
👉 Read our retrospective on Private School

🌴 Out of Control (1984)
Stranded on a tropical island with danger, romance, and synth beats — Russell’s performance as Chrissie Baret shines in this overlooked cult survival flick.
👉 Visit our full write-up on Out of Control

🔫 Avenging Angel (1985)
Russell steps into the boots of street-smart vigilante Molly Stewart, returning to the underworld to seek justice in this pulpy, neon-lit sequel.
👉 Check out our review of Avenging Angel

💖 Betsy Russell

The Ultimate Betsy Russell Tribute

👉 From 1980s Dream Girl to Horror Icon

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