By Patrick Cremona

Published: Monday, 21 February 2022 at 12:00 am


In the near 50 years since Tobe Hooper’s terrifying horror flick The Texas Chain Saw Massacre was released, all sorts of sequels, reboots, and remakes have appeared – each pitting a new bunch of teenagers against the chilling flesh-wearing villain Leatherface.

The latest to do so is Texas Chainsaw Massacre, which was released on Netflix last week and sees a bunch of young entrepreneurs accidentally awaken the chainsaw-wielding serial killer for another gory murder spree.

As with the very first film in the franchise, the events in the new movie are presented as if they really happened – opening with a news report detailing the original murders – and so some fans are wondering if the film is based on true events.

Read on for everything you need to know.

Is Texas Chainsaw Massacre a true story?

The relieving news is that thankfully the story is not really based on real events – so fans needn’t worry about having to find themselves on the run from Leatherface any time soon.

However, there are a number of real cases that served as inspiration for the original movie and the creation of Leatherface, primarily that of serial murderer Ed Gein, who is suspected to have been behind several killings in Wisconsin in the mid-’50s.

There are a few common traits shared between Gein and Leatherface – most notably that both of them wore a human skin mask and that they kept gruesome mementos in their homes – however, Gein never used a chainsaw, instead shooting his victims with a pistol.

Gein was also reportedly the inspiration for two other iconic cinema villains – Psycho’s Norman Bates and Buffalo Bill from The Silence of the Lambs – while there are also references to him in American Psycho.