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The 1980s were a haven for horror cinema and that’s what led to exploitation and hardcore pornography filmmaker Dick Randall and Italian producer Roberto Loyola to get together and write a script for a movie under the pen name “John Shadow.”
The end result was a project called “Jigsaw” that eventually landed in the hands of director Juan Piquer Simon, who had just recently been approached to helm “The Last House on the Left” sequel but he passed because he felt the script was too boring.
That’s when he read the treatment for “Jigsaw,” which was somehow supposed to be made as a TV movie. Simon was so blown away by the script that he decided to help mold this into a feature length film.
What resulted was a gruesome, blood soaked film that was far more concerned with jaw dropping kills than anything that could pass as a coherent story.
Four decades later, this is a film that Eli Roth called a “glowing work of art.”
In the latest edition of Rewind of the Living Dead, we’re going to rev up our chainsaws and put together a puzzle as we talk about the 1982 film “Pieces”…
Music courtesy of Andrew Scott Bell and Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio
For more Rewind of the Living Dead, visit our website or follow on social media:
https://www.rewindofthelivingdead.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rewindofdead
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rewindoflivingdead
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rewindoflivingdead/
By Nerdcore Movement4.8
4646 ratings
The 1980s were a haven for horror cinema and that’s what led to exploitation and hardcore pornography filmmaker Dick Randall and Italian producer Roberto Loyola to get together and write a script for a movie under the pen name “John Shadow.”
The end result was a project called “Jigsaw” that eventually landed in the hands of director Juan Piquer Simon, who had just recently been approached to helm “The Last House on the Left” sequel but he passed because he felt the script was too boring.
That’s when he read the treatment for “Jigsaw,” which was somehow supposed to be made as a TV movie. Simon was so blown away by the script that he decided to help mold this into a feature length film.
What resulted was a gruesome, blood soaked film that was far more concerned with jaw dropping kills than anything that could pass as a coherent story.
Four decades later, this is a film that Eli Roth called a “glowing work of art.”
In the latest edition of Rewind of the Living Dead, we’re going to rev up our chainsaws and put together a puzzle as we talk about the 1982 film “Pieces”…
Music courtesy of Andrew Scott Bell and Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio
For more Rewind of the Living Dead, visit our website or follow on social media:
https://www.rewindofthelivingdead.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/rewindofdead
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rewindoflivingdead
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/rewindoflivingdead/

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