Sawmovie | 2004 Instant
: Shot in just 18 days on a budget of roughly $1.2 million , the production was so rushed that Wan didn't have time to finish all the shots. The iconic "grungy" and "experimental" editing style—using rapid cuts, surveillance-style footage, and still photos—was actually a way to "cobble together" the film and fill gaps in the footage. The Story: A Test of Survival
The story of the 2004 horror classic is as much about the desperate "games" on screen as it is about the grit and invention of the filmmakers behind it. Directed by James Wan and written by Leigh Whannell, the film revitalized the horror genre by blending psychological thriller elements with visceral, low-budget ingenuity. The Origin: Art Born from Adversity SawMovie | 2004
: The character of Jigsaw was inspired by a health scare Leigh Whannell experienced. Dealing with persistent migraines, he feared he had a brain tumor. While waiting for an MRI, he imagined a character who was actually given a death sentence and decided to test others' will to live. : Shot in just 18 days on a budget of roughly $1
The film follows two men, Dr. Lawrence Gordon and Adam Stanheight, who wake up in a dilapidated industrial bathroom, chained to pipes with a "corpse" lying between them. Directed by James Wan and written by Leigh
The idea for Saw was born from necessity. Recent film school graduates James Wan and Leigh Whannell were living in poverty and wanted to make a movie they could film in a single room with just two actors.