http://videos.theonion.com/avclub_video/2011/poppilgrims/POP014_TexasChainSawMassacre.flv Pop Pilgrims Austin A.V Culture Dan Telfer Host: When the A.V. Club travels we always make time to visit pop culture landmarks. If something memorable happened in the world of film, tv, books or music we want to go there. We are not just tourists, we are pop pilgrims. “Hello! Is anybody home?” If you feel disturbed when you look at this classic Texas home turned into a restaurant well there is a reason for that. This is the house where Texas Chainsaw Massacre was filmed. The house was originally in round rock Texas and then in 1998 it was cut up into little pieces and shipped here to Kingsland, Texas and now the location that once served humans as meat serves meat for lunch and for dinner. [Scream] Tim here is an expert on Texas Chainsaw Massacre and we are currently in Leatherface’s house. Tim Harden TexasChainsawMassacre.net: Yes we are. Leatherface (Gunnar Hansen): You think this is a party? Dan: What was it like in that room? Tim Harden: Just about anything you could think of to make this a bad shoot was in full play. You have hot lights, there is no ventilation because you know as the sun is going by outside it had all still be at night so they had to close off the windows. There was no AC, you had dishes that real head cheese, sausage, you had a rotting chicken head and as people got sick from the heat and what not then you have people who are actually throwing up outside. And then over here we called the chicken room or the bone room. There is a curtain here and Pam stumbles over here, we had a giant bench that was made out of bones that side over here. This is where you first see Leatherface, Pam came stumbling in and sees him down at that door Bob Burns opening a fake door kind of like a slaughter house door where they would bring in cattle and slaughter them and then shut the door. And now at the top of the staircase where Sally came running up the stairs and dives out this window trying to escape Leatherface. Dan: Have you eaten the food here. Tim: Yes it is delicious. Dan: Is it delicious, I’m a vegetarian so the irony won’t be quite as thick for me if I get— Tim: You are in the wrong place. Jeremy Lee Chef and Owner, Junction House: We get emails you know I don’t know how you can work in a place or run a place where so many people die and we had to reply back nobody died here in the house it is just a movie. Dan: How do you think such low budget movie got to be so popular? Tim: People made the greatest works of art when they are hungry, angry, lonely and tired you know if there is no complacency but yet they are out to get a job done and they have close to zero resources. They have a vision, they work as a team to get that done and that comes across because you literally see them blood, sweat and tears in that film. Junction House Restaurant 1010 King Street, Kingsland, TX Behind the Scenes with FIAT The famous dinner scene was shot in one 36-hour stretch during an oppressive heat wave. The dinner table in the film was made from swimming pool diving boards. Gunnar, Hansen the actor who played Leatherface, did not wash his costume for the duration of the month-long shoot. Our Partner FIAT Travel provided by ORBITZ A.V. Club Picture Show

Austin: The Texas Chain Saw... family restaurant?

People typically chuckle when they hear the Texas Chain Saw Massacre house is now a restaurant, and with good reason: The site of one of the most grotesque, unnerving dinner scenes in horror-movie history now serves up (non-human) meat in a dining room that’s homey, not horrifying. Well, not everyone chuckles: As owner Jeremy Lee explains in this episode of Pop Pilgrims, he receives the occasional e-mail from people who think the house was the site of actual murders.

A lunchbox for your people parts

Those people are mistaken, but not necessarily crazy; the text underneath the title on the original movie poster certainly hinted at reality—“What happened is true. Now the motion picture that’s just as real”—and elements of Leatherface’s character were inspired by real-life serial killer Ed Gein. At the top of texaschainsawmassacre.net—the comprehensive fan site run by Pop Pilgrims guest Tim Harden—there’s a giant link at the top of the home page saying “DID THE TEXAS CHAINSAW MASSACRE REALLY HAPPEN? Click HERE to find out!” The link leads to a page with a long explanation best summarized by the word “No.”

Regardless, it’s a little silly to believe The Texas Chain Saw Massacre was real. The house from the movie that caused so much controversy upon the film’s release four decades ago is a local landmark in Kingsland, Texas, about an hour northwest of Austin. There’s a plaque out front, and a life-sized Leatherface mannequin in Junction House’s upstairs bar (along with a pack of Texas Chain Saw Massacre chili mix). While The A.V. Club was shooting in the building, a group of senior women said in chipper voices, “Oh, you must be here for The Texas Chain Saw Massacre!”

It’s a happy ending for a house that was almost lost. When the owners bought the place in 1998, years of abandonment left it in rough shape. The house was broken apart and moved from its original location in Round Rock, Texas, to Kingsland, where it sits on the property of The Antlers Hotel.

The original layout mostly remains. While the upstairs area—where Leatherface’s dead grandmother and barely alive grandfather hung out—has been opened up for Junction House’s bar, the downstairs retains the original layout seen in the film. Director Tobe Hooper and his crew only used the left side of the house; the house’s tenant moved all of his stuff into the right side during the shoot. The sliding door from which Leatherface emerges was built for the film. (So was the dining-room table, which was made from swimming-pool diving boards.)

The Texas Chain Saw Massacre was made for less than $300,000, but went on to make many, many times that, though the actors and crew received virtually none of the money. In her book Chainsaws, Slackers, And Spy Kids: Thirty Years Of Filmmaking In Austin, Texas, author Alison Macor lists a dizzying number of investors, business partners, and producers that the filmmakers cut deals with, not to mention the mob-associated film distributor, Bryanston Pictures. (The company made a fortune—and landed itself in a landmark legal case—by distributing the famous porn film Deep Throat.) With so many fingers in the pie, little was left for the people who actually made The Texas Chain Saw Massacre. As Macor told The A.V. Club, “Someone made a lot of money on that movie.” It’s just that no one’s sure where it went.

But the success of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre, which spawned three sequels, a prequel, a remake, and an Atari 2600 videogame, did trickle down to the cast and crew in other ways. The film launched the careers of Hooper, cinematographer Daniel Pearl, makeup artist Dorothy Pearl, and special-effects artist Dean W. Miller. And several of the cast members went on to earn appearance fees at horror conventions, especially Gunnar Hansen, who played the original Leatherface.

Cast members Marilyn Burns, Edwin Neal, and Allen Danziger were on hand at Junction House a couple of weeks back, when Austin-based theater group the Alamo Drafthouse did one of its “Rolling Roadshow” screenings of The Texas Chain Saw Massacre at Junction House. Nearly 40 years later, they’re still going back to the scene of the film, if not the scene of the crime.


Seasons: 1 / 2

Total Episodes: 33