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| Saw IVMore gory pranks October 31,
 2007 12:37:54 PM 
Unless his name is Jason, Freddie, or Michael, a serial killer has problems returning from the dead, especially one suffering from terminal cancer, as Jigsaw (Tobin Bell) was before an angry victim terminated him and his sidekick in Saw III. No worries: Jigsaw has a new apprentice, and the apprentice has a battery of scratchy videotapes from the puppet master explaining how to escape if you wake up in an iron maiden or the like. (A personal favorite: extricating the key to freedom from one’s own eye socket.) In this episode, Jigsaw directs his ire at the police officers who dogged him over the previous three films, but most of the movie consists of a backstory about how he came to be that includes his charity work, his wife (Betsy Russell) and the son they never had. All of which is marginally engaging, but save it for your therapist — director Darren Lynn Bousman muddles the flashbacks and they take the edge off the gory pranks.
|   SAW IV: Jigsaw lives.
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							 John Hodgman holds forth on eels, mole men, and Macs
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  An Obama win in November would be historic for reasons beyond race
  Never mind its tough-girl alt-porn feminism: SuicideGirls has already moved on to a new generation
  Some Things at Trinity
  The governor’s gaming legislation crapped out, but are casinos still alive in a compromise? Plus, a school-budget crisis could start a political firestorm.
 
				
					
					
							 An Obama win in November would be historic for reasons beyond race
  Bill Gage has Down syndrome. And his band rocks
  Raw power
  Rawson bridges two distinctly different eras in journalism
  Michael Morse’s Rescuing Providence
  Gamm’s Boston Marriage is a ticklish toss-off
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												Strange but slickly done 
												Another Martin Lawrence shtick 
												A chilling gangland epic 
												A grand idea 
												A step ahead of the rest 
												A rich kid on the road to comeuppance 
												Ever shirtless, ever silly 
												Oodles of fun 
												Inadvertent camp 
												No pulse
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 | More gripping than highlight reelsNot scary and a measly PG-13Predictable, pointless, and sadRepackaged stereotypesEveryone calls you "dude"Cold feet and NikesStrange but slickly doneA novel transformationThe Narragansetts’ Stories in StoneClever, clever conceit
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