The Messy Making of Texas Chainsaw 3D Explained
Get your popcorn, a Coke, and a blanket, cuz. It’s time to dive deep into the sordid tale behind one of the wackiest entries in one of the wackiest horror franchises known to man. Today’s film features a fantastic-sounding Texas Chainsaw Massacre sequel trilogy that never was, a producer allegedly claiming a writer’s work as his own, and some of the best ideas you’ve ever heard turned into some of the worst. It’s time to take a 3D look at all the questionable ingredients in this hot pile of Sawyer family chili. This is what happened to Texas Chainsaw 3D.
The Rights Shuffle and a Lost Trilogy
After two innovative forays into the franchise with the 2003 remake and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre: The Beginning, Platinum Dunes and New Line Cinema parted ways, letting the rights revert to original creators Kim Henkel and Tobe Hooper. Seeing an opportunity, Twisted Pictures, led by Mark Burg and Oren Koules, partnered with Lionsgate around 2009 to secure a multi-year deal.
The plan? A bold, low-budget, high-return trilogy model similar to Saw.
The Original Vision (That Never Happened)
Writer Steven Susco (The Grudge) crafted a story picking up immediately after the original 1974 film, continuing from Sally Hardesty’s escape. The trilogy was envisioned as:
A direct continuation
Shot on 16mm
Possibly directed by James Wan
But Lionsgate had other ideas.
They pushed for:
A PG-13 rating
A modern setting
3D presentation
The final film? Somewhere in between: modern, 3D, and R-rated. The original plan was dead and the chaos was just beginning.
The “Shady Producer” Situation
Writers Adam Marcus and Debra Sullivan were approached by a producer they later described as “shady.” They pitched a concept, coincidentally similar to Susco’s: picking up right after the original film and transitioning into the present with 3D elements. According to them:
Their two-page outline was taken and presented as someone else’s idea
Lionsgate then shopped it to 17 writers
Including Marcus and Sullivan themselves
Instead of backing out, they:
Expanded it into a 15-page treatment
Wrote the opening act
They got the job and ended up working with the same producer.
A Slick Director for a Gritty Franchise
With a script in place, Lionsgate and producer Carl Mazzocone hired director John Luessenhop. Fresh off Takers, Luessenhop brought a sleek, stylized look. For a… Texas Chainsaw Massacre film.
Casting Leatherface and the “Cool Kids”
Leatherface was played by Dan Yeager, a non-actor discovered through construction work connections. He was essentially cast on the spot.
The supporting cast leaned heavily modern:
Alexandra Daddario as Heather Miller
Trey Songz as Ryan
Scott Eastwood as Deputy Hartman
Tania Raymonde as Nikki
Shaun Sipos as the hitchhiker
Yes, the timeline makes absolutely no sense. Heather is kidnapped in 1973 and somehow ends up in her twenties in 2012. Don’t worry about it. Just eat your popcorn.
Legacy Cast Returns
To its credit, the production brought back several original cast members:
Gunnar Hansen as Boss Sawyer
Marilyn Burns as Verna Carson
Bill Moseley as The Cook
John Dugan as Grandpa Sawyer
Hansen returned partly because he liked the direct-sequel concept and because he was finally paid what he felt he deserved.
What the Script Was Supposed to Be
According to Marcus and Sullivan (and corroborated by a journalist), the original script had:
More likable, layered characters
Stronger relationships
Significantly more gore
Creative 3D kills
Leatherface battling townspeople
A chase through a herd of cattle
A ’90s setting
Instead, many sequences were replaced with:
Modern gimmicks
Smartphone scenes
Simplified character writing
Budget Cuts and Production Chaos
The reported $20 million budget? Supposedly slashed to $8 million when Lionsgate only covered distribution. Filming began in 2011 in Louisiana under brutal conditions:
100+ degree heat
Tight schedule
Complex 3D rigs
At one point, Adam Marcus had to step in as a stereographer. The crew worked around the clock. Writers stayed on set for 20-hour stretches rewriting scenes on the fly. Just another Texas Chainsaw production nightmare.
Gore, Ratings, and Practical Effects
The legendary KNB EFX Group, led by Greg Nicotero, handled the effects. The original cut earned an NC-17 rating. To secure an R-rating:
Several death scenes were trimmed
A more graphic version was later released unrated
One standout moment? Leatherface stitching a face onto his own. Owie.
Recreating the Original and Burning It Down
The opening sequence:
Recreated the original house
Blended 1974 footage with new 3D material
Used miniatures and CGI to burn it down
It’s an impressive effort, regardless of what follows.
The Haunted Mansion Story
A key location, the Carson Mansion in Louisiana, reportedly came with a ghost story. According to Alexandra Daddario:
A crew member claimed to see a ghost
Refused to enter the room
Later learned the owner’s wife had died there
Make of that what you will.
The 3D Problem
The production used dual RED Epic cameras, which were cutting-edge at the time (also used on The Hobbit: An Unexpected Journey and The Amazing Spider-Man). But:
Constant calibration slowed everything down
Filming fell behind
Crews worked in rotating 24-hour shifts
Release and Box Office
Texas Chainsaw 3D hit theaters in January 2013. Results:
#1 opening weekend
$21M domestic opening
$47M worldwide
Not bad for a troubled January horror release.
Critical Reception
Critics were far less kind. Common complaints:
Timeline inconsistencies
Weak characters
Plot holes
Questionable creative choices
Some even called it embarrassing to the franchise.
The Franchise Lives On
Despite the backlash, the film kept the series alive, leading to Leatherface (2017). And somehow… that makes this one look better in hindsight.
The Good Stuff (Yes, There Is Some)
For all its flaws, the film does have highlights:
A carnival attack sequence
A Ferris wheel chase
An overturned vehicle assault
Some genuinely gnarly kills
And hey, we got a full 3D entry in the franchise. It might not be what anyone asked for, but it is exactly what happened to Texas Chainsaw 3D.
A couple of previous episodes of this show can be seen below. For more, check out the JoBlo Horror Originals YouTube channel—and don’t forget to subscribe!
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