The killer reads the note first and chainsaws the girl to, well, pieces. Then, in the library, Kendall gets a note from a girl, telling him to come see her at the pool. Rounding out our suspects would be Willard (Paul Smith, Bluto from Altman’s Popeye, one of the first movies that I remember hating as a child), a groundskeeper who is using a chainsaw. Holden (Frank Braña, Yellow Hair and the Fortress of Gold, If You Shoot…You Live, God Forgives…I Don’t!) start their investigation, meeting the dean (Edmund Purdom, Absurd, 2019: After the Fall of New York) and anatomy Professor Brown (Jack Taylor, Horror of the Zombies, Conan the Barbarian). Bracken (Christopher George, Day of the Animals, City of the Living Dead) and Sgt. Yes, Pieces packs more gore and strangeness into sixty records than most movies do in ninety minutes.Ĭut to (no pun intended) a girl studying outside, who gets her head chopped off by a chainsaw and stolen. This all happens within the first minute of this movie. He hides in a closet and the police send him to live with his aunt, as they believe whoever killed his mother had escaped. Instead, he came back with an axe to her head and then cut her up with a hacksaw. His mother, understandably, is upset and demands he get a garbage bag to throw the puzzle away. But more importantly, it is never ever boring.īack in 1942, a young boy named Timmy was putting together a jigsaw puzzle of a naked woman.
It is at the same time the best and worst film you’ve ever watched. When the general public thinks of a slasher film with no redeeming value whatsoever, chances are they’re thinking about this movie.