You can stop yourself coughing and sneezing easily enough(I've gone days without coughing or sneezing... so he went 8 hours without doing either) and can stop yourself farting out loud(not exactly going to smell it with that dirty toilet in the room if he does fart quietly).
Also, be hard to fall asleep with all the racket going on in the room, he might have had something to keep him awake too.
Got the first, saw the 2nd and too scared to watch the rest of the series after number two .... it was horrific ... and that syringe pit still makes me wince
I'm not mad on the series and one watch is enough for me, but the Saw movies are better than a lot of horror crap that is released at least, great to follow. Though I could watch the first movie's twist again and again. Perfect.
I will keep seeing them. There is a teaser trailer out for Saw V if you haven't seen it yet hdfan.
You mention the videogame Margo Channing, apparently the 'twist' in the Saw videogame is very very good and the filmmakers wish they thought of it for one of their films. Sure I heard them mention that.
Saw IV appears to be a sequel to Saw III as Jigsaw's corpse is shown in the opening scene. However, this is just a flashforward. The main story happens at the same time as the events of Saw III and both stories join together at the conclusion.
I'm in the process of doing that. I commented on the first one earlier, and I'm currently up to 3.
I still like the second film, but I can understand that others don't. It's relatively pedestrian compared to the others. I like it partly because I think there's the least wrong with it; it's a decent horror/thriller.
I appreciated the third film more this time around. Where it fails for me is that Jeff's tests just don't work for me. The choice between eg
burning some old toys versus saving someone's life
seems like a no-brainer and I had very little empathy for his predicament. I also didn't like the traps he encountered much.
However, I now see that takes a relatively small part of the film. The other traps (eg the Angel trap) were up to par, and the relationship between Jigaw and his apprentice was developed well.
I don't agree with the people who say the series declined as it progressed. I think it has got better, certainly more dense and convoluted. The Saw films have always had a complex temporal structure, with many flashbacks and changes of perspective. With Saw 2 we had flashbacks to the events of Saw 1, and Saw 3 revisited many events from 1 and 2, and it added further scenes for which the pay-off is in Saw 4 (and maybe 5). It's interesting how minor characters from early films develop into more major ones in later films.
I could totally understand his prediciment there, it was all he had left of his son. I can't remember the full details of the trap but the last one Jeff had with the shotgun, that to me was more of a no-brainer!