![]() Throughout its near-50-year life span, the Texas Chainsaw Massacre franchise has undergone a number of narrative and timeline changes. Though stating they approached it as a direct sequel to the original, he doesn't entirely disregard the previous films as non-canon and says audiences can choose what they want from them. While speaking exclusively with Screen Rant to discuss the horror sequel, director David Blue Garcia offered some insight into Texas Chainsaw Massacre's place in its franchise's continuity. Related: Texas Chainsaw Massacre's Best Reboot Would Follow The 2003 Remake ![]() Garcia would subsequently be brought on to helm and Texas Chainsaw Massacre would film from August 2020 to March 2021, with Netflix acquiring the rights the following August. Development on the film saw a rollercoaster of changes as the rights to the franchise shifted from Lionsgate to Legendary, cancelling the former's plans for sequels to 2017's Leatherface, and directors Ryan and Andy Tohill being fired within a week of filming from Legendary being underwhelmed by their material. Sarah Yarkin leads the cast of Texas Chainsaw Massacre alongside Elsie Fisher, Mark Burnham as the older Leatherface, Jacob Latimore, Moe Dunford, Alice Krige, Jessica Allain, Nell Hudson and Olwen Fouéré as original survivor Sally Hardesty.
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