60
Metascore
26 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
- You don’t need to watch the other movies in the “Saw” series to enjoy this one, but it will help. With some Avengers-style phone calls in Act One and a mid-credits kicker, this is “Saw” in the superhero age. It’s a flick for the die-hard fans that rewards those who keep asking for more. After a decade as Halloween’s most hyped-up annual release in the aughts, “Saw” is finally back this October to tell Taylor Swift she’s not the only one doing vigilante shit. Congrats, Tobin. You deserve this one.
- 80The Daily BeastColeman SpildeThe Daily BeastColeman SpildeBy cleverly setting its timeline between the series’ first two installments, Saw X is both an invigorating thrill ride on par with the franchise’s best entries and a trenchant, timely charge against industrial systems set in place to keep humans sick.
- 79TheWrapWilliam BibbianiTheWrapWilliam BibbianiGreutert’s film brings back the core elements that made these movies work. It’s an uncomplicated, effective horror thriller, even though it’s trapped itself in the past with nowhere else to go.
- 70Little White LiesHannah StrongLittle White LiesHannah StrongIt’s encouraging that 10 films in, the Saw franchise has remembered what makes it so great: a potent blend of true horror, twisted imagination, comedic timing, and above all, the legend that is Tobin Bell. Whether or not they can write around Jigsaw’s canonical death to bring Bell back again is another matter…
- 70IGNAmelia EmberwingIGNAmelia EmberwingAlmost 20 years into the franchise, Saw X showcases an emotional depth that manages to take one of these stories higher than ever before. Make no mistake, though, the traps are still on full display and Jigsaw still has full intent to showcase the true evils of humanity.
- 63Slant MagazineSlant MagazineThe film mostly makes you wish that a Saw film would finally let Amanda be the one that audiences worship.
- 60The Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckThe Hollywood ReporterFrank ScheckNone of this would work nearly as well without Bell, whose raspy voice and menacing gravitas are so riveting that he makes Jigsaw’s oft-repeated declaration “I’d like to play a game” scary as hell. He’s made the character truly iconic, much like Robert Englund did with Freddy Krueger. Accept no substitutions.
- 60VarietyOwen GleibermanVarietyOwen GleibermanThe torture set pieces in the “Saw” films are lavish gifts of baroque horror presented to the audience. They are, quite simply, the reason we came. Tobin Bell, with his stare of pitiless wisdom, is also a draw, but “Saw X” raises the issue of how much of John Kramer’s hand-wringing is too much. In the eyes of a lot of “Saw” fans, hand-wringing < hands cut off with mechanized garden shears.
- 40Total FilmNeil SmithTotal FilmNeil SmithTobin Bell’s comeback may please some, but it’s not a sufficient X-cuse to see Saw resuscitated.
- 40The GuardianBenjamin LeeThe GuardianBenjamin LeeWhen the traps begin, they’re as gnarly as ever, if not gnarlier, and with very little suspense about the outcome given how they tend to end, we’re reminded of what a Saw film is: a juvenile endurance test.