Spiral: From The Book Of Saw Review - 4 Ups & 6 Downs

Ups...

4. The Sharp Production Values

Spiral from the Book of Saw Chris Rock Marisol Nichols
Lionsgate

Easily the most imminently praise-worthy aspect of Spiral is its production quality. With a budget of $20 million - more than double Jigsaw's price-tag - this is by far the most professional-looking and aesthetically appealing Saw movie to date.

The cinematography, lighting, and production design are all a major leap ahead of the first seven movies in particular, ensuring that even in its worst moments it's at least appealing to look at.

Returning director Darren Lynn Bousman - who previously helmed Saw II through Saw IV - combines this slicker style with some of the more typical Saw hallmarks, such as speed-ramped editing during traps, to ensure it looks consistent enough with what came before.

It's just a shame the clear care put into the film's production didn't transpire through to the script.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.