The Making of the Saw Movie Traps
The Saw movies are some of the scariest horror films to ever screen. This is probably because a lot of the torture and traps found in the Saw movies could be replicated in real life and rely on no special powers. Saw bred a new type of horror killer, one that was smart, mechanically inclined and strategic. Jigsaw is so good at being a horror slasher that he has even overcome his own death to continue killing from beyond the grave.
So how were the Saw prop-traps made? How did the crew and engineers put together these terrifying contraptions that Saw fans enjoy in all of the films? Horror Enthusiast has paused every scene to inspect every bolt and every spring to find the origin of the Saw trap designs.
How The Saw Traps Were Made
Although each movie features different cast and crew, a lot of the ideas behind creating torture devices that inflict “unimaginable pain” on human beings seem to spread from movie to movie fairly easily. Here are some of the things that are known about the creation of the traps in the Saw movies.
Must Force Victims Into Action
The Saw traps have one hugely common theme: they force a victim into action which poses imminent danger for their life. Most of the traps bring the victims very close to death, if not actually killing them. Because of the risk, the victims must be forced to act.
Capable of Death
Just about every trap risks the victim’s life completely. There is no chance of survival if the victim fails to beat the game. Many of the traps deploy an unsustainable injury in the event the victim loses.
The Game Must Be Beatable
Any AUTHENTIC Jigsaw trap is supposed to be able to be won by the victim. This is to provide motivation for the victim to want to fight for their life.
Timed Traps
Many of the traps are timed, so that there is a reason to act with urgency. This ensures a victim cannot simply “ignore the situation” or “wait it out,” but that the situation requires their attention.
An Instruction Manual
Jigsaw never leaves his victims in the dark, in the sense that they do not know what is going on. Each victim is informed, nearly right away, that they are there because of actions they have taken (or failed to take) in their life. They are informed (usually by audio or video tape) that they have a chance to survive if they survive playing a game. Each trap is briefly explained with an idea of how to beat it. Only the determined shall survive!
Super Scary Looking
While Jigsaw may inform the victims of their imminent doom, nearly every Jigsaw trap is self-explanatory. The terrifying metal, teeth, blades, razors and needles used in the Saw movies are meant to strike fear in the heart but also show the audience exactly what is at risk.
Real Mechanical Designs
With the exception of SOME of the traps in the newer films, almost all of the traps are real, mechanical designs. That means, no CGI. An authentic Jigsaw trap should be made of metal, not pixels.
The Traps Must Be Safe
The crew ensured that although the traps may have looked incredibly dangerous…they were in fact, very much safe for the actors themselves.
Final Engineering Notes: Saw Movie Traps
Jigsaw may have had a team of engineers and special effects people to help him make his traps in the movie, but the truth is, there is no limit to the creativeness in human innovation. If more Saw movies were made, more traps would be devised and boundaries, pushed. The traps featured in the Saw movies thus far have been gruesome and claimed many victims. While they claim Jigsaw (2017) was the last of the franchise, there always seems to be “another final chapter” and another house of traps, right around the corner!
Tritone’s love of horror and mystery began at a young age. Growing up in the 80’s he got to see some of the greatest horror movies play out in the best of venues, the drive-in theater. That’s when his obsession with the genre really began—but it wasn’t just the movies, it was the games, the books, the comics, and the lore behind it all that really ignited his obsession. Tritone is a published author and continues to write and write about horror whenever possible.
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