Return to Camp Blood: Part VI

By Frank Pittarese

The One in Space

We start off in the near future (very near, considering the film’s 2001 release date). The chronologically previous movie, Freddy vs. Jason, would have taken place around 2008. That one left Jason “dead” (again) in the waters of Crystal Lake. But now we find him shackled and under guard at the Crystal Lake Research Facility. They built a whole place just for our boy. There, scientists are studying Jason’s ability to regenerate, but he’s too much of a loose cannon. So the plan is to put him into cryogenic suspension — freeze him — and make him someone else’s future problem. 

But Jason is in a mood about being locked up, so he escapes and runs amok. After killing some folks, he accidentally breaches the cryo-unit, putting himself — and Rowan LaFontaine, the facility’s project leader — on ice for awhile. A very long while.

Chopsicle!

Flash-forward to the year 2455. Jason and Rowan have been popsicles for 455 years. Earth (a.k.a. Earth Prime, ™ DC Comics) is an uninhabitable wasteland, a dead planet. A team of young scientists — archeology students on a field trip — discover the frozen pair and take them back to their spaceship. Rowan is revived, but Jason is assumed dead. That’s a big mistake, especially since Future People know all about Jason Voorhees who “killed nearly 200 people and disappeared without a trace” in the distant past.

“I’ve been asleep for 455 WHAT?!”

As expected, Jason thaws out and starts attacking everyone in sight. The scientists don’t stand a chance. The students are helpless. Even a squad of soldiers (swiped directly from James Cameron’s Aliens) get wasted by a very cranky Mr. Voorhees. The team’s original plan was to reconnect with the space station Solaris before moving on to Earth Two (also ™ DC Comics), but that goes haywire when Jason causes the whole station to explode, leaving our remaining characters trying to survive long enough to escape their failing ship. 

Luckily, a female android named Kay-Em (also swiped directly from James Cameron’s Aliens) is upgraded to super-tough Terminator mode (swiped directly from James Cameron’s Terminator). Kay-Em manages to dismember and semi-decapitate Jason, but the big lug falls onto the med-labs healing unit. Oops.

Not at all inspired by Terminator.

Nanites swarm all over his bits and pieces, fixing what’s left of him and…improvising the rest. The result is Über-Jason, an unstoppable cyborg behemoth — vastly improved, but still uglier than a baboon’s butt. Chaos ensues: a countdown to the ship’s destruction, a hole in the hull, a space walk. All of of these sci-fi movie tropes survive into 2455, so we can rest easy, knowing they’re safe.

Makeover Madness

This time, Jason seems to be permanently defeated — blasted into space and burning up on reentry in Earth Two’s orbit. It’s really over. I mean, sure, a couple of teens necking in the woods of Earth Two see a shooting star, and Jason’s broken mask splashes down in a lake. But this is the last sequel before the reboot, right? And the reboot is its own separate universe, isn’t it? 

(It’s not and it isn’t. The “reboot” is in-continuity as an actual SEQUEL to Jason X. Really. I mean it!) 

I know I’m supposed to hate this movie. But I don’t. It’s goofy and the CGI is shaky, but for some reason, I’m on board with these one-off “experimental” Friday the 13th movies. Telekinetic girl? Cool. Body-jumping? Alrighty. Jason in space?? Gimme! 

Cold-blooded kill

Yes, it’s incredibly derivative and feels like a syndicated sci-fi show from the mid-1990s. Camp, intentional or not, abounds. The acting is hokey. But it has an abundance of post-Scream, self-referential charm and a pretty quick pace. Kane Hodder takes his final turn as Jason here, and still pulls off an effective performance despite the rather clunky Über-Jason suit. This entry gets a lot of flack — like Goes to Hell —  for going off-book, but ultimately, it’s refreshing and fun, so it totally has my support.   

Other things worth noting…

Somewhere between Freddy vs. Jason and now, Jason found himself a new mask. This one has the red stripes — and even the Part 3 crack — but the nose is more pointed. I guess he found his look and he’s sticking with it.

He just wants Spock’s autograph. That’s all.

The head doctor at the Crystal Lake Research Facility is played by director David Cronenberg, who REQUESTED to be in this movie. Except for The Fly, I’m generally not a fan of his, but this scores him some nerd points. He also directed an episode of Friday the 13th: The Series (season one’s “The Faith Healer”).

Rowan says that the “first time they executed” Jason was in 2008. This totally syncs up with my timeline, which places Jason Goes to Hell in that year and leads into FvJ. At the start of Goes to Hell, Jason is killed by federal agents. To me, that qualifies as an execution. It’s all accidental, I’m sure — I don’t think anyone involved in these movies gave continuity a minute’s thought — but my timeline turned out to be solid. I’ll put it on my resume! 

Not a porn parody.

Favorite moment: Jason’s holodeck visit to 1980 Crystal Lake is comedy gold. 

The So-Called Reboot

This is it. The twelfth and final (for now) Friday the 13th movie. This is the one that everyone calls a “remake” or a “reboot.” I call it a sequel — a sequel set decades after Jason X. But I’ll get to that soon. 

We start in flashback. It’s June 13th, 1980 (which was indeed a Friday). A “Camp Counselor” (that’s what she’s called in the credits, so she’s NOT officially Alice) is in mid-confrontation with a recast Mrs. Voorhees. Little Jason watches from the woods as his mom is decapitated. After Not-Alice leaves, he sneaks out, steals Mom’s machete, her locket, and her head. It’s nice to have keepsakes. “Kill for mother,” says Mrs. Voorhees in Little Jason’s screwy mind, and he scampers on his merry, deformed way.

Then we have a classic Friday time-jump to Crystal Lake, 2009. It’s present day (the movie was released in February of that year). A small group of college kids are hiking through the woods for a night of camping — although two of them are more interested in a massive weed-crop nearby.

A split decision

Having entered Jason’s territory, the kids get what they get — which, to be clear, is viciously murdered. Or so it seems… The best thing about this pre-title sequence is that, at 25 minutes long, it feels like a short film; a mini-Friday the 13th movie before the main feature. And get this — it’s Sack-Head Jason! My favorite! There’s some excitement, some drama, boobies for those who like them, a few gruesome kills, and then…

Nice try, but that yokel can’t read.

Time-jump! But it’s a small one of just six months to where the real story starts. Sam from Supernatural has come to Crystal Lake in search of his sister Whitney, who was one of those aforementioned college kids. He meets some locals and an entirely new batch of victims. Most of those victims, though, are very, very annoying. The only exceptions are Killer Frost from The Flash, who seems nice and sympathetic, and her boyfriend Trent, who is the King of Assholes. Trent will be important later, so remember him.

Trent is the worst.

All these dumb characters, along with Killer Frost from The Flash, are staying at Asshole Trent’s summer cabin, smack in the middle of the woods. For Jason, it’s his version of Fresh Direct. One by one, Jason meets and greets these dunces. Not a single one of them is a loss. Not since Part V has there been such a crappy crew of corpses. The worst are the “comic relief” characters. We get two of those, along with their relentless series of beer, pot, and masturbation jokes. You will cheer when they die. 

One otherwise forgettable kill results in Jason finding his most important prop, and he upgrades from a potato sack to his iconic hockey mask. He looks at himself in the mirror afterward, trying to decide if he’s cute. (He isn’t.)

“See the pretty girl in that mirror there…”

Anyway, surprise! Jason didn’t kill Whitney, the sister of Sam from Supernatural. He’s got her chained up in his underground lair like he’s Buffalo Bill. Remember that locket Jason stole from his mother’s corpse? It contains two photos, one of Baby Jason, and one of Mom — and Whitney is the spittin’ image of young Mrs. Voorhees. (This is because the actress playing Whitney posed for that photograph. No flies on me.) Now, amidst all the slaughter, Sam from Supernatural and Killer Frost from The Flash have to go rescue Whitney. But Jason has built an entire network of underground tunnels beneath Camp Crystal Lake — because that’s what you do when you don’t have cable or a PS4. A subterranean melee ensues, with running and screaming and stabbing and death, as they try to free this dumb girl (who looks a lot like the original Pink Ranger) from captivity. 

It’s screamin’ time!

In the end, Jason is defeated (or “defeated”), which is what usually happens. But while there’s a hint of more to come, outside of fan films, there hasn’t been a new Friday the 13th movie in over a decade. All sorts of court battles have prevented a thirteenth entry from getting off the ground. That’s unfortunate (because I want more) but maybe also a blessing (because I don’t trust them not to screw things up). Guess we’ll see what happens. 

There was a run of these horror remakes/reboots around this time, and tonally, this sits comfortably alongside some of the better ones, like The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (also directed by Marcus Nispel) or The Hills Have Eyes. Apart from a couple of aggressively irritating comic relief characters, the entire tone is deadly serious, if not flat-out grim. There are no little winks here, and although references to previous entries are sprinkled throughout. Jason is taken seriously, which results in a pretty gritty viewing experience. It’s well-shot, energetic, occasionally suspenseful, and some sometimes thrilling — and it doesn’t feel cheap.

Jason is rightfully annoyed by the comic relief characters.

This new Jason (Derek Mears) is no Kane Hodder, but he feels imposing and dangerous, while still human — and he’s fast! I like him. 

The extended “Killer Cut,” which is my go-to, runs about ten minutes longer than the theatrical version, and despite some pointless conversational padding, it features a somewhat exciting escape sequence, slightly more vicious kills, and maybe a pinch more sex than the movie really needs. At 1 hour and 45 minutes, this cut is longest movie in the series. Jason Takes Manhattan comes in second, at 1 hour and 40 minutes, because it only exists to punish us. 

“EEEEEK!!” screams Trent.

Anyway, this “update” was supposed to be a fresh start. A reboot leading to more films…

Except it isn’t a reboot. I’ll explain. 

A major plot point in Jason X was that Earth is dead, and what’s left of humanity has relocated to Earth Two. At the end of that film, we only see a tiny bit of it: a patch of woods and a lake, plus a couple of teens. My theory is that this movie takes place on that planet: Jason X’s Earth Two. It doesn’t LOOK like the future, nobody ACTS like it’s the future, but the way I see it, just getting everyone to this new planet was a drain on scientific and financial resources. Essentially, in order to survive, the people of 2455 had to become “pioneers,” in a way, roughing it out in a new frontier. For them, that didn’t mean living in log cabins or riding horses. They “roughed it” by abandoning their expensive tech for an early 21st Century lifestyle. They use simple technology (cars and cell phones) and live in average, no-tech homes. By the time this movie takes place, it’s a generation or two — or even three — after the relocation. For the kids in this movie, who only grew up knowing this “21st Century” environment, this is normal life for them (which is why the space stuff is never addressed). 

Then we get to Jason. At the end of Jason X, he essentially became a shooting star, burning up as he fell from orbit. I think he DID die, as he’s died before. But the Powers That Be…the forces of Hell…whatever you want to call the supernatural powers that guided him (and resurrected him) all those times…they deemed that the universe MUST have a Jason. Hell’s agent of death must walk the Earth. So to achieve that, Pamela Voorhees was born (again), had a child who “drowned” (again), and she sought revenge (again). And that’s how Jason — this reborn Jason, infused with a killer instinct from his previous existence — came to be. (This also syncs with why the camp counselor who kills Mrs. Voorhees this time isn’t Alice. Alice doesn’t matter in the bigger equation.) 

Fake Mrs. Voorhees, pre-decapitation

It’s out there, I know. It’s a reach, I KNOW. But there’s also this…

Remember Asshole Trent? (I told you to remember him.) He spends every moment in this movie being an absolutely relentless dick. Asshole Trent is played by actor Travis Van Winkle. Travis Van Winkle also played an asshole named Trent in the first Transformers movie. Both Transformers and this Friday the 13th were Micheal Bay productions, hence the connection. With that in mind…are the two Trents the SAME Trent? If so, this Friday takes place in a world where advanced technology, alien robots, and all kinds of sci-fi shit actually exists. It’s entirely possible that Transformers took place on Earth Two, a generation or two after the relocation from Earth Prime. Now, a couple of years after the Autobots fought the Decepticons, we pick up on (and — spoiler alert — end) Asshole Trent’s story. 

Trent was inflicted upon us in two films.

Okay, okay, I’m not sure even I buy my own patch for this. But the idea of a Friday reboot rather than a sequel really bugs me, and when I saw a way to “fix” it, I wasn’t gonna let it slide. And it does track. Sort of. So yep, this is the 11th sequel. You’re welcome. 

He’ll be back again someday…

That’s a wrap on these lengthy Friday the 13th reviews. If you’ve read them all, or if you’ve only read one or two, thanks for checking them out. Maybe I’ll tackle another franchise someday. I’ve been itching for a Resident Evil rewatch lately… 

Return to Camp Blood: Part V

By Frank Pittarese

The One with All the Easter Eggs

When last we saw our snappy slasher, Jason was apparently transformed into a completely normal-looking human child, wearing his best underpants and shivering in the sewers of Manhattan. Remember that? Well, forget it, because it’s never addressed again. This sequel opens at Crystal Lake, where Jason is home, masked, and in killing mode. How did he return to Crystal Lake? Well, I’ve had an idea about that since 1989 which I might write down someday. What really matters is that our boy is back in the woods, fully grown, and Chapter 8.5 is a story that’s yet to be told. 

This entry starts with a pre-credit sequence: Jason is hunting a lone female camper — but just as he goes in for the kill, we discover the whole thing is a set-up. The camper is a Federal agent, and Jason is ambushed by a swarm of agents who shoot him full of lead before blowing him to pieces with a grenade. His legs go one way, his arms go another, and bounce-bounce goes his head. Jason is officially dead. Again. Until next time. 

Jason is ahead of this situation.

Then things get nutty. The coroner finds himself compelled to eat Jason’s still-beating heart. Then he becomes possessed by Jason, whose spirit proceeds to body-jump from one person to the next: Coroner to cop to sleazy TV journalist, etc. It’s a funky choice. Jason is much less intimating when he’s a chubby 55-year-old dude in a lab coat and tie, but off they go. Jason is on a mission. He needs a new body, and the only way that can happen is by…creating mythology!!

So here’s the deal: A bounty hunter named Creighton Duke — who knows a lot of stuff because he read the script ahead of time — says that the only way to kill Jason is to destroy his heart, and that deed must be done by a Voorhees. If not, Jason will use that Voorhees as a vessel through which he can be reborn. But where the hell is there another Voorhees? Isn’t Jason an only child? Not anymore…

“I’d like some mythology and a Diet Coke.”

Waitress Diana Kimble has a secret. She’s Jason’s sister. Diana has a daughter named Jessica. And Jessica has an infant daughter named Stephanie. That a whopping THREE Voorheeses! It’s never clear if Diana is a full or half-sister, but I find it hard to believe that wacko Pamela had more than one kid. Diana is more likely the offspring of Elias Voorhees, who finally gets an official mention here and becomes canon. 

“My mother did WHAT?! My brother is WHO??”

Meanwhile, Steven — Final Boy and hero of our little rule-breaking film — is pulled into this complicated (for a Friday movie) plot when he’s blamed and jailed for Diana’s murder. Steven, played by John D. LeMay, is best (and only) known as Ryan on Friday the 13th: The Series. The scuttlebutt is that the character was supposed to be a returning Tommy Jarvis — but when Paramount sold the rights, Tommy wasn’t part of the deal. Bye, Tommy! 

“Running an antique store was much easier.”

All these moving parts are swirling around: A bounty hunter, next-gen Voorhees relatives, this hapless Tommy replacement getting thrown into the chaos, an abundance of body-jumping weirdness, and Jason (but not Jason) killing everyone he sees. And what’s crazy is that it all (sort of) works! People hate on this sequel, but I’m not mad at it. It’s cheesy sometimes and it totally breaks the formula, which at this point is refreshing. 

The kills are wonderfully gory on occasion — but only in the unrated cut — and the script isn’t that bad. The main characters are interesting and well-performed, the “colorful” characters (one of whom is played by gay scamp Leslie Jordan) are fun, and the whole thing is pretty lively. The movie is always in motion and there are few, if any, dull moments. It has a sense of humor and a bit of self-awareness. Rewatching it, I was completely engaged — and it’s a ray of sunshine after the awful eighth entry. 

Jason comes to grips with his fate.

It’s true that, except for the opening moments, it doesn’t feel like a Friday the 13th movie at all, but at this point, I’m happy to see an attempt at something new/different. 

Some quick bits…

The opening scene relocates Crystal Lake to Connecticut. A road sign puts it not far from Westport, but closer to Fairfield. Then Jason’s still-smoking remains are flown to the Federal Morgue in Ohio, and he (in the body of Coroner Phil) walks all the way home, to what should be New Jersey…oof.

Crystal Lake…Connecticut?!?

The diner in Crystal Lake is decorated with hockey masks, weapons, and they serve “Jason burgers” shaped like hockey masks. Remember when I said Jason was a brand? There ya go. Tourists love him…until he kills them.

When Jason is reborn, he emerges fully clothed and with his hockey mask in place. It doesn’t make a lick of sense, but it’s better than boxer shorts, so I’ll allow it.

There are some fun Easter eggs tucked away in the Voorhees House (the enormity of which again has me convinced that it’s the home of wealthy Elias, rather than Pamela, who took a job at a janky-ass summer camp to feed her ugly kid). Look for the crate from Creepshow, the Necronomicon from Evil Dead (literally the prop, lent to the director by Sam Raimi) and…a very big, prominent one at the end (spoiler alert: it’s Freddy Krueger).

Do not read this book out loud.

The presence of the Necronomicon (and the shameless embrace of Jason’s ties to the supernatural) provides answers or raises questions, depending on my mood. Was Elias so steeped in this stuff that, decades ago, he unleashed supernatural forces on Crystal Lake? The apparitions we’ve seen over the years, Jason’s near-invulnerability as a human, his literal resurrection as a zombie…could all of it be the result of Elias casting some dark spell? Or is Pamela to blame? When she thought Jason drowned, did she go to grim, magical lengths to bring her son back to life? Those Easter eggs, just nifty little props, open up some doors, story-wise. They might even explain a few things. 

Trivia alert! Kane Hodder is wearing Freddy’s glove.

Favorite moment: The final shot of this movie is EVERYTHING.

The One with the Crossover

Freddy vs. Jason isn’t the tenth movie in the series — it’s the 11th. But continuity-wise, it slides in right after Jason Goes to Hell, so that’s how I watch it. It took ten years and a bazillion drafts to get this thing made (they even wrote a book about it: Slash of the Titans: The Road to Freddy vs. Jason by Dustin McNeill). Ultimately, while not a fantastic piece of work, it’s fun and it delivers. But of course, somebody had to screw up something! I’ll get to that in a minute.

The deal here is that Freddy is (more or less) dead — or at least rendered inert — because nobody remembers him. “I can’t come back if nobody is afraid!” So his big plan is to send Jason back to Earth (specifically to Springwood) from Hell to “make them remember what fear tastes like!” If the kids remember Freddy, Freddy can kill the kids. The circle of life, y’all. So Freddy impersonates Mrs. Voorhees (recast with a rather intense actress) and gives Jason his marching orders.

She’s no Nancy, she’s no Ginny, she’s just…Lori.

Meanwhile our main girl, Lori, is living in Nancy Thompson’s house from A Nightmare on Elm Street (that’s 1428 Elm Street — now go win a trivia game). She and her batch of doomed friends are in the soup almost immediately, when Jason makes his first kill in an upstairs bedroom. Before you know it, they’re running around town, teamed up with two teens who escaped the Westin Hills psychiatric hospital (see A Nightmare on Elm Street 3: Dream Warriors), and trying to stay alive.

Initially, Jason acts as muscle while a weak Freddy taunts his victims, but as Freddy gains power, Jason’s usefulness comes to end. Unfortunately, Jason crosses the line when he kills a dreaming victim (in the real world), stealing Freddy’s teenage prey. The love affair is over. 

The peaceful comfort of an adjustable bed.

The Springwood kids are just now finding out that Freddy even existed. The whole town covered up his murders (from before and after he died) and the teens who got too close to the truth were committed to the asylum and given Hypnocil (again, see Dream Warriors — you won’t regret it) to prevent them from dreaming. Once it’s clear that Jason is on the loose, the kids learn his story, too, so the franchises are clashing in almost every scene. 

A short dream sequence flashes back to Crystal Lake 1957, where we see Little Jason being mocked and thrown into the water by a bunch of jerky kids. Is this how it really happened? There’s no way to know for sure, but there’s likely some truth to it. In one of the earlier drafts of this movie, Freddy was supposed to be a Crystal Lake camp counselor, but that idea was kiboshed, probably because it tainted Jason’s origin story. 

He wasn’t a very good swimmer.

Anyway, the two monster dudes have a couple of big, set-piece fights — and they’re awesome, over-the-top, comic book battles. They’re stylish, with great use of bold color, and each guy gets in some gory hit points. 

The first of those battles is in the dream world, and that’s where…sigh…somebody drops the ball. Somebody always drops the ball…

Hijinks and shenanigans!

See, someone decided that Jason needs a weakness. As Jason and Freddy fight in what looks like a large factory, Freddy breaks an overhead pipe. Then, as water comes rushing down, he “discovers” that Jason is…afraid of water?! Inspired, Freddy bursts even more pipes and Jason stands there frozen in terror. It’s incredibly dumb. We’ve seen Jason in the water SO many times. He was lurking under a raft in The Final Chapter. He popped out from under Tommy’s canoe in Jason Lives. He fucking swam to New York in Jason Takes Manhattan! So, no, dear filmmakers…Jason is NOT afraid of water, and certainly not terrified of a light shower coming from a bunch of pipes. But hang on — I’ve got it covered!

I’ve decided that it’s not the water that Jason’s afraid of — it’s the environment. The pipes, the rushing water…there’s only one thing that he can be remembering, and that’s his hellish experience in the sewers of New York City. See? That crappy Jason Takes Manhattan is finally good for something! My theory is confirmed when, at the end of dream sequence (which is happening in Jason’s mind), Jason turns into a wet, shivering little boy (deformed, because at least they’re on top of THAT). It syncs up with what we saw in Jason Takes Manhattan. Whatever happened to him at the end of that movie, real or imaginary, did some mental damage. 

The boy, Jason.

The second FvJ fight takes place in the real world, after Lori physically pulls Freddy out of a dream. This one is a fight-to-the-death bloodfest. And Jason bleeds a LOT, which means that in being freed from Hell, his body is (more or less) human. He’s no longer a rotten zombie. They were drifting away from that with the last movie, anyway, but at least now, being “reborn,” there’s some continuity coverage. 

Who wins? Whoever you like! They did a good job of not disappointing fans of either slasher. (But it’s Jason because Jason is awesome). And while it does feel like more of an Elm Street film than a Friday, Jason is central to the plot so Voorhees fans won’t be disappointed.

Freddy got chopped.

In other news, we learn that Crystal Lake is about a 15-30 minute drive from Springwood. But Springwood is in Ohio. In the last movie, Crystal Lake was in Connecticut, and, historically, it’s been in New Jersey. I have no patch for this, though. Geography, like math, ain’t my friend.

Next week: I wrap up this series with a trip to the future, and cover the “reboot” that’s really a sequel. Really.

Return to Camp Blood: Part IV

By Frank Pittarese

The One with Telekinetic Tina

They killed Jason. They brought him back as a murder-zombie. Friday the 13th fans have seen it all, right? NOPE! This time, the high concept is “Jason vs. Carrie.” In an endless quest to keep the series fresh, this movie introduces a new nemesis for Jason — the telekinetic teen Tina Shepard. Where’s Tommy? Who knows. Let the makers of fan-films deal with him.

Starting at the site of what was once Camp Forest Green, we’re thrust into the life of young Tina. She lives in a nice home where the camp once stood, with her mom and drunken/abusive father. After a household ruckus, Tina flees from the house and jumps into a small boat, pursued by her apologetic dad. But Little Tina is pissed, so she telekinetically destroys the pier — and kills her dad — with a death stare. And so it begins.

It’s not polite to stare…and kill your dad.

Several years later, Tina and Mom return to the lake house, along with Tina’s shady shrink, Dr.  Crews. Crews, aware of Tina’s psychic abilities, is secretly manipulating the now-teenage girl for his own greedy pursuits. The slimy doctor torments Tina into having one of her many freak-outs, causing her to run to the lake and wish for her dad’s return. But, oops! Instead of summoning Daddy Shepard, she psychically frees Jason from his underwater chains, where Tommy Jarvis left him years ago. Coincidentally? A bunch of teens have moved into the house across the road for a birthday celebration. I wonder what will happen next…?

Sleazy Crews, being sleazy.

Jason makes mincemeat of the teens is what happens next. Meanwhile, Tina has a continuous series of fits about one thing or another. Sometimes it’s predictive visions of death and/or Jason. Sometimes she’s just in a mood. Tina is a lot. Tina is EXTRA. But amidst her fits, she finds a potential boyfriend with a handsome boy from across the road, Nick (soap actor Kevin Spirtas), who actually has the patience for her shenanigans. Bless his heart. Together, they’re the last ones standing as Tina has an epic showdown with the hulking, zombified Jason, her telekinesis turned up full-blast against Jason in his relentless pursuit. 

Serial killer or decorative chandelier?

In the end, it isn’t Tina who defeats our favorite killer. Nope, nope. Tina somehow resurrects her dead father from Crystal Lake (who looks great, except for some smudges on his face). In a flash, Dead Dad re-chains Jason, dragging him into the depths yet again. All’s well that ends…in confusion. 

While this isn’t the best executed entry, I do like what they were attempting here. We’re seven films deep and an actual effort is being made to keep things fresh. With Jason having been supernaturally returned to life, this “psychic powers” element feels like a natural progression. We’re no longer in the real world of Alice and Ginny. We’re in the land of the paranormal, and it works.

Aside from the kills, which are expected, of course, a couple of familiar notes are struck. Like Tommy before her, Tina just got out of a mental institution, guilty over killing her dad with her psychokinetic abilities. And similar to The Final Chapter, the house across the road is full of attractive young adults waiting to be slaughtered. Yet things still feel somewhat fresh. 

Tina is having a mood.

Unfortunately, Tina (as played by Lar Park Lincoln) is a whiny, frumpy buzzkill of a lead character. It’s really hard to like this girl with all her gloomy crying. Still, Tina’s prolonged battle with Jason is a lot of fun (even if you do end up rooting for him a little bit). No one has ever been a physical challenge to Jason, so it’s nice to see him struggle for a change.

Most of the victims are bland and forgettable, with the exception of diva-bitch Melissa (Susan Jennifer Sullivan), who makes a fun impression with her catty, soap opera presence, and Eddie (Jeff Bennett), a sweet-but-awkward nerd. Thanks to the MPAA’s prissy interference, the majority of the kills are edited down to unimpressive slashings and stabbings. The remaining ones (like the infamous “sleeping bag” murder) only hint at what was originally shot. Did they think people were seeing these things for Oscar-level performances and insight into the human condition? 

The worst hiding place, the best kill.

The WTF ending doesn’t do this movie any favors, when Tina apparently resurrects her dead father to drag Jason into the lake. It can’t be her dad’s actual corpse – the coroner would have taken him away years ago. He’s not even rotten. I think what we’re seeing is a visual representation of Tina’s mental baggage, as channeled through her powers. She’s likely tapping into Crystal Lake’s supernatural forces, creating a vision of her own, like the many we’ve seen before. Regardless, it’s dopey, and it feels sloppy and rushed. I don’t think anyone thought it through (until me, because I obsess about these damn movies). As for Jason, I reckon Tommy Jarvis didn’t tell the authorities about his body being chained in Crystal Lake for fear he’d be set free, so Jason’s emergence from that particular spot somewhat tracks. Nobody ever looked for him, so he was never found.

This is the first appearance of Kane Hodder as Jason. He’s hulking, intimidating, and powerful — the best of the bunch — and luckily, he sticks around for awhile. For some, myself included, Hodder is THE Jason, as much as Robert Englund is Freddy Krueger. 

Buzz-kill

The New Blood has two healthy time-jumps. We left off in the vicinity of 1989, with Jason in chains at the bottom of the lake, just a few yards from Camp Forest Green. Tina is quite young when we first see her. Let’s say she’s 10. It’s hard to know when those homes went up, but if we split the difference and say it’s been five years since Tommy fought Jason, we’re starting off here with a 1994 flashback to Little Tina’s telekinetic tantrum. Assuming teenage Tina is about 16, the bulk of this film takes place in the year 2000! 

Oh, and Crystal Lake? It’s back! No more of this “Forest Green” malarky. It’s never explained, but my take is that the murders have turned Crystal Lake into a tourist attraction. People want to visit the creepy Camp Blood and buy t-shirts and Jason masks. When they changed it to Forest Green, the tourists stopped coming and Wessex County lost money — so they changed the name again and Crystal Lake was reborn. Locals gotta make a buck…even if it’s tainted by five dozen dead teens. Want confirmation of this theory? Check out my Jason Takes Manhattan review. 

The music by Fred Mollin is considerably less thrilling than what came before. He did the music for Friday the 13th: The Series, and that’s how this score sounds: dialed down and small, like it’s for TV. It bugs me. He’s back for the next movie, because that one doesn’t have enough problems already.

He’s ready for his close-up!

Favorite moment: Tina telekinetically destroys Jason’s hockey mask to reveal his nasty, rotten zombie face!

The Worst One

Part V had problems, but this one is a heaping pile of flaming poop. It’s the worst of the series, with a cheap, direct-to-video vibe and I have nothing but bad things to say about it.

We’re at the site of Jason’s “drowning by ghost” at the end of the last movie. Lo and behold, there’s been another time jump. The area has been completely overhauled with new buildings and signage, all very lovely. How much time would such an overhaul take? Five years? Let’s go with that. Welcome to 2005, kids! (This movie was released in 1989.)

Jason is still legendary. In fact, when he’s accidentally freed from his underwater trap, the first thing he does is snatch up a hockey mask that’s an exact replica of the one that he’s worn for years. It even has a crack in it from where Chris planted her axe in Part 3. Why would such a thing even exist? This goes back to my theory that the “Forest Green” name was kiboshed when the township realized that the Crystal Lake Murders had marquee value. Jason Voorhees is a moneymaker and Crystal Lake has become a legit, merchandised, tourist attraction. When Jason masks up this time, he doesn’t even know that he’s become a brand. (This merchandising theme is even touched on in the next sequel.)

Mask on, weapon up.

Things get sloppy right away, when a close-up of undead Jason’s hand reveals very normal-looking, non-zombified fingers sticking out of his gloves. They get worse when a flashback of young, drowning Jason shows a completely average, NON-mutated little boy with dark hair. 

We quickly meet our “heroine” Rennie Fartface — I might need to fact-check her surname — who is played by a cardboard standee with hair (Jensen Daggett, who I’m sure is a lovely person). Rennie is bland, boring, and listless. She’s the worst final girl in the series; a tube of toothpaste would have more presence. And Rennie has problems. She keeps having nonsensical visions of a very normal-looking young Jason (with a full head of hair), a half-mutated Jason (also with hair), and later, a bald and fully mutated Young Jason. By the time this movie was made, the original Friday the 13th was a classic — familiar to anyone with a pop culture pulse. VHS existed. Photography existed. Reference material was available. But they couldn’t be arsed to even try getting it right (or even getting things consistent from minute-to-minute in their own film). 

Rennie has a “range” of emotions.

The guts of the plot is that the graduating class of Lakeview High is taking a cruise to New York City (a cruise that departs…from a lake). Rennie is among them, but nobody really cares because she’s a friendless celery stick. Rennie’s asshole uncle is there, and he’s very unpleasant; a true garbage human. Jason stows away, killing everyone he sees on his first and only vacation. But once again, the kills are edited down to nothing and the victims are immediately forgettable, so the whole trip is pretty dreary. When the ship is damaged, a handful of surviving dullards board a lifeboat to my hometown, and Jason — who apparently has finally learned how to swim — follows them all the way to NYC. Maybe they’ll all get discount tickets to Cats

The movie is an eternal 1 hour and 40 minutes long. They reach Manhattan just past the 1 hour mark. And when they get there, it’s Canada. Yep. Fucking Canada. I used a stopwatch and the actual Manhattan footage (most of which was shot in Times Square) is about six minutes in length (one minute of which runs under the closing credits). 

Which way to Starbucks?

Manhattan is portrayed as a disgusting trash fire. It’s practically post-apocalyptic, full of sleazy back alleys, abandoned buildings, rampant crime, and drug users. Five minutes after arriving in the Big Apple, Rennie is kidnapped and forcibly injected with heroin — just before Jason interrupts her attempted rape. And everyone acts like civilization is 100 miles away instead of, say, a two-minute walk to literally ANY avenue full of people, police officers, and civilized society. Honestly, this depiction of New York is offensive to me, and I don’t offend easily. Anyway, rather than taking in the sights, Jason stalks the remaining tourists relentlessly, and every death is a gift because these are the worst characters in the franchise.

The cast upon seeing the final cut.

Then a big reveal comes via flashback, when we learn that years earlier, Uncle Asshole pushed Little Rennie into Crystal Lake — after frightening her with the legend of Jason. As she struggled to stay afloat, a young, properly mutated Jason tried to drag her into the depths. This, however, is impossible. Jason drowned in 1957. When Rennie was a child, he was well into adulthood, if not zombie-hood. Whatever Rennie saw can’t have been real, so let’s chalk it up to the Crystal Lake spooks and/or one of Rennie’s weird Jason-visions, which she repeatedly has for no reason. Or maybe Rennie was already shooting up heroin when she was 10.

Anyway, with Jason running amok, our two surviving idiots, Rennie and the cute-but-vapid Sean (soap actor Scott Reeves), eventually flee to the sewers, where a random worker informs them that the Manhattan sewer tunnels flood with toxic waste(?!?), every night (?!?) at midnight (?!?). There are also barrels of this toxic waste laying about for easy access. Sure enough, Jason comes stomping along, the sewer floods, and a now-maskless (long story), panicked Jason cries out in a CHILD’S voice “Mommy! Don’t let me drown!” before vomiting up a flood of…lake water. I want to punch this lazy, stupid movie in the face. Literally nothing makes sense — and they’re not done yet!

Pam’s little angel.

The toxic waste — for reasons absolutely unknown — turns Jason into a very normal, shivering, human boy, naked but for a pair or swim trunks (or maybe boxer shorts). This is probably an illusion. Maybe. But then Rennie and Sean seem to react to the sight of him, so who knows. Anyway, even if he IS a human boy, they leave him for dead. They have no fucks to give about some dirty, shivering sewer-child. Let the Ninja Turtles deal with him. 

Then the two dolts walk outside and cheerfully joke about visiting the Statue of Liberty — which is what you do when your friends and family members have just been murdered, when you just left a dying child in a toxic sewer, and when you’ve been shot up with a dirty heroin needle. 

For what it’s worth, I don’t think Jason was literally transformed into a child. With the movie firmly establishing that Rennie has visions of Jason — visions which, from scene to scene, are incongruous and inconsistent — it’s easy to dismiss that ending. Jason was probably swept up in the toxic waste, Rennie had another off-kilter hallucination, and we move on. 

“Choose Your Own Jason”

If it helps, much like Part V, you can skip this one and it doesn’t impact a thing. In fact, Jason is inexplicably back at Crystal Lake when the next movie starts. Maybe he took a cab back from the city. They didn’t have Uber back then.

Favorite moment: Ejecting the disc from my Blu-ray player. Okay, okay. The boxing kill is funny, at least — and it happens on-camera, so they get credit for that. And Kane Hodder makes every Jason scene work; his name should go above the title of every Friday in which he appears. 

Next time: The franchise shifts from Paramount to New Line and things really get crazy. 

Return to Camp Blood: Part III

By Frank Pittarese

The One with Fake Jason

What do you do when the lead character in your ongoing franchise is dead? Make another movie, regardless — with an imposter-killer — and hope for the best. That’s what happened here, except for that “best” part.

It’s been five years since Tommy Jarvis chopped Jason to death. The traumatized kid, now 17 years old, has spent that time in mental facilities, and we catch up to him as he’s being transferred to the Pinehurst Youth Development Center, a halfway house for troubled teens. Is Tommy ready to re-enter polite society? Oh, hell no. Exhibiting bouts of intense rage is the norm for this mostly silent and somewhat creepy Tommy — and rage isn’t a good look when Jason Voorhees is apparently back from the dead. Or does it only seem to be Jason?

When annoying Pinehurst resident Joey Burns is hacked to death by yet another troubled youth at the facility, it sparks a series of violent murders apparently committed by a dude in a hockey mask. It’s not quite Jason’s mask (which has red stripes vs. this one’s blue accents), but it’s close enough, right? And Tommy is crazy, right?? 

Every ten minutes, another half-baked, unlikable character gets offed, and while there’s a brief red herring in the form of drifter Raymond Joffroy, Tommy does indeed seem to be the culprit — until the final act. That’s when the young Jarvis arrives on the scene just as “Jason” is chasing Pinehurst’s assistant manager Pam and the ever-shrieking Reggie, grandson of the halfway house’s cook. If Scooby-Doo had a death-reveal it would play out like this, with fake-Jason impaled on the spikes of a tractor harrow, hockey mask asunder — as well as the Jason flesh mask he remarkably wore under it. The killer’s identity is identity revealed as Roy Burns, paramedic and vengeful father of the late, chocolate-stained Joey. And he would’ve gotten away with it, if not for that meddling Tommy Jarvis!  

Tommy is innocent after all. At least until the last minute of the film where, recovering from his wounds at the hospital, he grabs a knife, dons Roy’s faux-Jason mask (both from his bedside table) and masked-up, prepares to murder Pam, essentially striking the same note as the end of the previous movie.  “Tommy is the new Jason,” rinse, lather, repeat. 

It was bound to happen. Welcome to the first stinker of the bunch. Jason is officially, biologically dead, so what do you do now? Easy. You hire a porn director (seriously that’s what they did), throw together a lazy script, and crank out a quick sequel which miraculously makes enough money that it doesn’t kill the series altogether (that said, the poor performance of this one negatively impacted its pretty terrific follow-up).

A pre-credit dream sequence — where Corey Feldman returns as young Tommy Jarvis for a scene foreshadowing the opening moments of the next movie — is fun, but as a Friday the 13th, it’s mostly downhill after that. 

The problem lies with the characters, who are tied up in the knot of the premise. It’s a halfway house for socially dysfunctional kids — nobody likes each other, which makes nobody likable. The kids are antisocial nothings, which makes it more than easy to watch them die; it’s a blessing to be rid of ’em. But, on the plus side, there is Demon…

Demon, older brother of the aggressively annoying Reggie (a.k.a. “Reggie the Reckless”) is a leather-clad bad-boy and one of the few Black actors to wander through Crystal Lake (this movie does well in the diversity department, so points for that). In his brief time on screen, he’s engaging and funny to watch. He’s also another character who poops and dies with a dirty butt. Really, why is that a thing in this series??

Then there’s Ethel Hubbard and her son Junior, two filthy hillbillies (yep, hillbillies). When I first saw this movie, I hated them sooooo much! I don’t do well with comedic characters in my horror movies, and these two are living cartoons. But now I just want to give Ethel a big hug. She’s always pissed off and every sentence is peppered with one or two “fucks.” It’s a rare instance where a comic relief character helps the viewing experience. 

Meanwhile, two leather-clad boys — looking like they fled a gay bar in 1958 — show up, talk to no one but each other, and make no difference to anything that happens aside from adding to the massive body count. As Alice said in the first movie, “WHAT is going on…???

This Tommy recast (the first of two), as portrayed by John Shepard, barely speaks — but he does a good job of playing frantic, which is all that’s required. And with Tommy being 17, the timeline puts us in 1989 (which is four years into the future of this 1985 release).

The kills are quick and edited down to nothing — or they happen off-camera, thanks to the MPAA and a nationwide clutching of pearls. But hey, kids, there’s cocaine-usage and we get titties, so your mommas can sleep soundly at night! 

Pam isn’t the worst final girl, but she’s as bland as Styrofoam and completely forgettable. Still, the big “Jason” chase is solid, except for Reggie’s endless screaming. Missed opportunity: stuffing Reggie in a meat grinder — I’d pay Broadway prices for that.

So is Tommy the new Jason? They try hard to make us think he is. But he isn’t. Jason is Roy. That is, until the end, when Jason is Tommy. Maybe. And if you interpret the final scene as a dream, which is entirely fair, it doesn’t matter. Ultimately, none of this matters. They drop the whole thing and never mention it again. The cliffhanger is never resolved (but I suspect Pam is fine; if it even happened, she probably just talked Tommy into putting down the knife). Fake-Jason/Roy Burns is never addressed again, either. In fact, this whole movie can be skipped because the 4th and 6th entries flow cleanly into each other. It’s worth seeing because it’s so bad — and it’s not the even the worst one! 

Favorite moment: Every word out of Ethel’s mouth, you big dildo! 

The One with Zombie Jason

Remember how the last movie ended? It doesn’t matter. After the disappointing mess of A New Beginning, the series bounces back in a big way — by almost completely ignoring the events of A New Beginning.

Tommy Jarvis has been institutionalized for years, and now he’s returned to Crystal Lake (renamed “Forest Green” after a million murders) to make sure that Jason is really, truly dead. So he digs up his grave and, through various hijinks involving a metal fence and lightning, succeeds in resurrecting Jason Voorhees. He even had the courtesy to bring along Jason’s hockey mask. Well done, Tom. The franchise thanks you, the fans thank you, and Zombie-Jason thanks you. 

With Camp Forest Green, full of counselors and children, about to open, Jason has plenty of hapless victims to choose from, and for extra measure he offs some weekend warrior paintball players, two romantic couples, a cemetery caretaker, and a few police officers. Unfortunately, with Tommy being that notorious “crazy kid,” he quickly gets blamed for the murders by hot-headed Sheriff Garris. Before you know it, he’s in a jail cell. But thanks to Final Girl Megan, daughter of the sheriff, Tommy escapes to “permanently” defeat Jason by drowning him in Crystal Lake (or rather, Lake Forest Green), with a weighted chain around his neck. Sure…that’ll work. 

This is one of the strongest entries in the series. It’s stylish, energetic, and full of intentional, sharp humor that actually lands. Thom Matthews is a bit stiff as Tommy, but he manages to pull off the character’s desperate innocence. It’s Jennifer Cooke (best known as the star-child in V: The Series) who really shines. Her smart and spunky Megan is second only to Part 2’s Ginny; few Friday final girls have this much inherent charm.

The story moves at a brisk pace. The over-the-top kills are quick and discreet (sometimes due to MPAA-related edits) but they don’t feel like cheats. Almost everything feels like its done with intent, so the result — while not as gory as expected — is effective. Most of the victims are likable and/or entertaining, which is a nice course-correct after the bitchy crew of Part V’s dumpster fire.  

Continuity is fluid. You can choose to believe that Part V happened, or that this is a soft reboot that directly follows The Final Chapter. Both paths work, and a line of dialogue early on (“Seeing his corpse ain’t gonna stop the hallucinations.”) patches Part V’s ending and Pam’s attack…if you need it to. Either way, there’s another time-jump. Tommy now seems to be about 22 years old, putting these events even further in the future. This one takes place circa 1989 (in a 1986 theatrical release). 

Jason is buried in the Eternal Peace Cemetery, a lovely piece of real estate compared to Mrs. Voorhees’s crappy roadside plot. But who’s paying for these graves and headstones? A scene that was scripted but never shot (but included in the novelization) reveals that Jason’s father — Elias Voorhees — has been footing the bill for the graves and the upkeep. Elias never appears on screen, but his presence is felt a few sequels down the road. It’s probably thanks to him that this supernatural stuff is happening in the first place. That whole family is an event. 

Crystal Lake is no more. Because of all the murder and mayhem, it’s been renamed Forest Green. That doesn’t last, for reasons I’ll theorize about later, but despite the renaming, the story of Jason and his mom lives on. The minute Tommy identifies himself, everyone talks about What Happened Before like they’ve been listening to a “Camp Blood” podcast. Hell, one character has even invented a card game devoted to the Jason legend. 

For the first time, we see children at Crystal Lake (oops!) Forest Green. Little kids, in actual danger! It warms my heart. That aspect almost reminds me of 1982’s Madman (which you guys should watch) which itself is similar to The Burning (which you guys should also watch). Matt recently reviewed both films right on this site and they are must-sees in the summer camp slasher subgenre. 

Favorite moment: Jason leaning over that little girl’s bed is legit scary.

Return to Camp Blood will be back next week with two time-jumps and even more paranormal shenanigans, because at this point, the producers have nothing to lose….

Return to Camp Blood: Part II

By Frank Pittarese

Continuing a month-long review of the Friday the 13th film series, I dive into Parts 3 and 4 to discuss the ending that wasn’t…

The 3D One

The third in the series comes with some controversy. It was also in 3D. Let’s get to it… 

After a replay of the end of the previous movie, which inserts new footage of a very much alive Jason slipping away, we jump forward to…the next day! Yep, Friday the 13th: Part 3 apparently takes place on Saturday the 14th. But that’s okay; we’ll be on a consecutive run of calendar days through the next film, so what can you do?

After Jason murders a couple of sloppy-trashy store owners, a new crop of kids head up to Crystal Lake — specifically to a piece of land called Higgins Haven, home of soon-to-be Final Girl Chris Higgins. She’s been away for awhile because of a particularly gruesome incident in her past, and just like the late, great Alice, Chris is trying to put her life together the only way she knows how. 

In this instance, that means dragging a motley crew of friends to a Crystal Lake getaway. There’s Shelly, an overweight prankster, Chuck and Chili, two weed-obsessed potheads, the wonderfully spunky Vera, and annoyingly adorable couple Andy and Debbie…who happen to be expecting a child. Chris’s hunky boyfriend Rick is waiting at the house with the sole expectation of getting laid up to three hours a day (but, spoiler alert, he barely gets a kiss).

Shelly fakes his own death a couple of times, and gets turned down by Vera, but on a trip to the grocery store, the pair encounter a scary (“scary”) biker gang who follow the teens back to the lake. Jason, already lurking in the barn, starts by killing the punks, then works his way through all of Chris’s friends, until only she’s left for a big showdown. 

But there’s a twist! That gruesome incident I mentioned? A couple of years ago, Chris had a fight with her parents and ran into the woods, intending to hide out for the night. (She apparently never heard about The Boy That Drowned.) Jason came barreling out from the trees, literally chasing and dragging Chris hither and yon until she passed out. Chris woke up in her bed. Not a bit dead, like everyone else Jason ever met, and with no recollection of what happened.   

But here and now, Chris kills Jason with an axe to the head, and it’s, like, totally permanent until the next sequel!

This was the first Friday the 13th movie I ever saw — and I got to see it on opening night, in 3D and all — so it holds a special place in my heart. As stunt-filled as it is, with yo-yo’s, apples, popcorn, and snakes flying at the audience, it has a lot going for it. At least half of the cast is likable and engaging. Vera (Catherine Parks) is terrific; a rare instance where I was bummed out by a character’s death. Biker Fox (the late Gloria Charles) is only in a few scenes, but she’s a Top Ten favorite victim, with a personality ranging from “tough bully” to “fun-loving kid.” And Chris, as played by Dana Kimmell, has a certain sincerity to her. She’s not as tough as Ginny, but she holds her own against Jason…even if the whole experience drives her straight to the funny farm.

That said, we’re starting to slip into territory where some characters feel more like cartoonish stereotypes than realistic people we’d want to hang out with — and in these things, the stakes are higher if you give a shit about who dies. Shopkeepers Harold and Edna are just gross, and I’m not a weed guy, so Chuck and Chili’s antics were never amusing to me. Worse, they both feel like 30-year-old adults. It’s weird. And as much as I love Fox, the bikers feel like out of place stereotypes, farmed in from a different movie. There’s also a passing attempt at rebooting Crazy Ralph with a ridiculous (and legit crazy) hobo, but fortunately all but one of his scenes were cut. 

What’s the point of Debbie being pregnant? It doesn’t serve the plot, it doesn’t change her behavior (except that she won’t “hilariously” eat Chuck and Chili’s weed stash when the police zip by), and it doesn’t make a not-great actress any more compelling to watch. We’re definitely getting into some uneven territory here, with the victims painted in broad strokes while the kills become more interesting (at least until the MPAA steps in later). Andy gets chopped in half, poor Vera gets a spear shot through her eye, Rick’s head is squeezed until his eyeball pops out in all its 3D glory. 

This is the first appearance of the iconic hockey mask, which Jason steals from one of his victims. I still prefer the sack, but there’s no denying the menacing effectiveness of the hockey mask. It works. Jason, meanwhile, has mutated even further than he was the literal day before. Yes, yes, that’s due to a change in makeup artists — but I like to think that his mutant healing factor (which enables him to survive most injuries and which possibly saved him from his childhood drowning) is also affecting his body as a whole. The more he’s hurt, the stronger, bigger, and more malevolent he becomes; he’s evolving quickly. I also think there are evil forces guiding these “enhancements,” but we’ll get to that later. 

Now to discuss that controversial bit of business about Chris’s first encounter with Jason (trigger warning for those who need ’em). A big question in Friday the 13th fandom is: Did Jason sexually assault her? Nobody has an official answer (although actress Dana Kimmell says he didn’t). Unfortunately, I lean toward yes. We see, via flashback, what Chris remembers of the attack, and much of it involves Jason grabbing the girl and dragging her deeper into the woods (as opposed to, say, stabbing her, decapitating her, or folding her in half). When Jason confronts Chris in the barn during the film’s climax, he makes a pointed effort to lift his mask and leer at her. He WANTS her to recognize him — and she does. Then he tries to kill her, anyway, which he would have done the first time…if he hadn’t done…something else. In my mind, Jason is a rapist, full stop. 

Yet again, we end the movie with a WTF vision/dream. This time, it’s a rotten, worm-covered Mrs. Voorhees (head reattached, wearing her favorite sweater) popping out of the lake to drag Chris from her canoe. But it’s okay, don’t worry. The very last scene reveals that Chris has gone hopelessly insane. 

So what’s up with that Pamela appearance? It’s those dang evil forces I mentioned. Alice’s vision of Little Jason, Ginny’s window-smashing dream, Chris’s canoe attack… Something “other” is fueling the violence at Crystal Lake, and then exerting its insidious, psychic influence on those who survive. Some higher, dark power has Jason in its protective hand. That “something” is what makes him unstoppable — and it’s tied directly to the Voorhees family. This becomes even more apparent in Jason Goes to Hell, so stay tuned.

Here’s some fun trivia to share at Thanksgiving dinner: This is the first instance (of several in the series) where a character poops, doesn’t wipe, and then gets killed. Bad hygiene abounds at Crystal Lake — and Jason doesn’t like it.

Favorite moment: Chili’s whole “Oh, god…he’s dead! Shelly’s dead!” sequence, where she’s terrified but also looks like she’s about to fall asleep while slow-running through the house. It tickles me every time!

The “Last” One

Released on Friday, April 13, 1984, The Final Chapter was indeed meant to be the last in the series. The plan was to kill Jason once and for all, but that just didn’t work out because people like me kept buying movie tickets. 

The story picks up mere hours after the end of Part 3, in a dramatic fashion. Higgins Haven is swarming with police and paramedics, as helicopters hover and shine bright spotlights on the scene. Jason, still apparently dead in the spot Chris left him, is transported to a local hospital, where he stays dead for less than 15 minutes before swiftly killing a couple of goofy staffers.

Back at the lake, we’re introduced to the Jarvis family: a divorced mom, teenage good-girl Trish (Kimberly Beck), and the precocious adolescent Tommy (a pre-Goonies Corey Feldman), who briefly becomes an important figure in this series. Across the road from the Jarvis’s, a hearty group of teen victims arrive, having rented a house for a weekend of partying — the most notable among them being the awkward dork Jimmy (played by the eccentric Crispin Glover, who steals the movie). 

Jason, after checking himself out of the hospital with a prescription for murder, just walks back home — killing a hitchhiker along the way — and starts picking off the new kids. Amidst the chaos, Trish and Tommy encounter the mysterious Rob Dier, a man obsessed with hunting Jason because his sister, Sandra, was among his many victims. Sandra, huh? Interesting…

It all ends in pandemonium, with everyone dead except Final Girl Trish and young Tommy — who stops the disfigured Jason in his tracks by shaving his head, popping the collar on his polo shirt, and…impersonating him. The kid actually tries to talk Jason down, Ginny-style, and it almost works until Trish jumps in with a machete, snapping Jason out of his trance. Protecting his sister, Tommy picks up the weapon, practically splits Jason’s head in half, then chops at him a dozen times more. So Jason’s dead, right? Right…?!?

Sure, for now. But the final shot implies that Tommy, in the wake of this violence, just ain’t right.

This entry is one of my favorites, sitting right alongside Part 2. Objectively, Part 2 is a better movie, with stronger characters and some genuinely creepy moments. But the energy of this one, particularly during the final act as Jason relentlessly chases Trish — running from house to house — really pulls me in. And while the teens aren’t the most well-rounded, they still feel like people in a Saved By the Bell kind of way, with some minor conflicts between them to keep things interesting. The kills are brief, but very effective, thanks to returning makeup effects artist Tom Savini, who stepped away after the first movie. Doug’s crunching shower death, even in its edited state, packs a punch, and Jimmy’s “Where’s the corkscrew?” kill is a Friday classic. Jason’s death is a sight to behold, all done with practical effects in this pre-digital age, which makes things all the more impressive.  

In terms of world-building (as if anyone involved was actually considering such a thing)…

We’re still in the consecutive three-day run that began in Friday the 13th Part 2. Jason has killed twenty or so people in the past couple of days, but as this movie begins, he’s “dead,” so the Jarvis family are living their lives without a care in the world. The newspaper headline that says Jason’s body has gone missing from the morgue means nothing to them. The Jarvis ladies go blissfully jogging through the local murder-woods and then don’t even lock their front door.

Chronologically, the first film took place in 1979. There was a five-year time jump in Part 2 to 1984. Now, with the “serialized” format of 2, 3, and Final Chapter, we’ve synced up with this film’s release date. But get ready, because more time jumps are coming. Big ones. 

This movie establishes that Crystal Lake is located in Wessex County, and in or near Crystal Lake, there’s a Crystal Point, where one can skinny dip with one’s friends before one is hacked to bits. 

Mrs. Voorhees is literally buried by the side of the road, with a nice little headstone which reads “Pamela Voorhees 1939-1979, At Rest.” Who came up with that inscription? Who paid for the funeral? Did Mr. Voorhees write a check? There must be a Mr. Voorhees, after all… More on him in a movie or four. And for you trivia fans, this is the first official mention of Pamela’s first name.

As mentioned, Rob shows up seeking revenge because Jason killed his sister, Sandra. Sandra?! There’s never been solid confirmation of this, but it’s pretty much accepted that he’s talking about the same Sandra who was impaled with her boyfriend Jeff in Part 2. But that was just two days ago, and Rob already has a whole collection of yellowed Jason/Crystal Lake newspaper clippings. He sure moves fast! My take is that Rob was already a “Camp Blood” nerd, in the same way that people are obsessed with Bigfoot. When Sandra was murdered on Friday, Rob threw on his backpack and ran out the door. 

Little Tommy Jarvis appears to be a Tom Savini-level special effects makeup artist. This is obviously because Tom Savini did the special effects makeup for this film, and he gets to indulge himself through Tommy, who shows off his creations. And that’s great — but when Tommy decides to impersonate Young Jason, our little FX whiz looks kinda silly. They could have cheated things by having Tommy apply some pre-made “monster” appliances from his room, anything to make him look freaky. But instead we get a bald, preppy child, in cut-off jeans. It’s a goofy misstep, but we’re stuck with it. Besides, Jason believed it, and isn’t that what matters most?

The final moment of this movie led to whispers from every corner of the theater. “Tommy is gonna be the new Jason!!” Well…no. That’s like saying Jason was the new Mrs. Voorhees. But the implication that Tommy is “off” leads directly into the next adventure. They’re at least trying to keep a through line going, heading into the next sequel.

And for the record, as far as I’m concerned, Jason does — definitely and officially and for the first time — die in this movie. But although his days as a human being are over,  he’ll return after a short nap. 

Favorite moment: “He’s killing me! Oh, god! He’s killing me!!” There’s not a drop of blood in Rob’s death scene, but it’s as chilling as can be.

Stayed tuned for more Return to Camp Blood!

Return to Camp Blood: Part I

By Frank Pittarese

More than Halloween and beyond Elm Street, the Friday the 13th franchise holds a very special place in my heart. I’ve seen this series more than any other horror staple, bought every film in every home media format (and upgraded to the various special editions), and even made myself a bunch of Lego minifigures to memorialize Jason, his mom, and their various victims. It’s safe to say that I’m obsessed. 

Along the way, as I watched these movies repeatedly, my fanboy mind began trying to make sense of it all, “fixing” sloppy bits of continuity in a series that never intended for such dots to connect. I created my own little mythology to make the franchise more cohesive.

This month, here on Matt’s Horror Addiction, I’ll be doing a Friday the 13th deep dive, reviewing each film — and getting into some of those continuity theories. You might not agree with all of them, but you might see a method in my madness. 

This week, I’m checking out the first two in the series. Come with me now, to the sunny shores of Crystal Lake and the story of a boy’s love for his dear mother…

The One with the Mother

The plot is simple (but let’s face it, they all are). 22 years after a couple of unsolved, on-screen murders, Camp Crystal Lake is reopening for business. As a group of young, attractive counselors (including Kevin Bacon) fix the place up, a mysterious “someone” watches, waits…and kills them off in occasionally gruesome fashion.

After all but one counselor remains — the doe-eyed Alice Hardy — the killer is revealed to be (spoiler alert), Mrs. Pamela Voorhees, a character who literally shows up out of nowhere in the final act. Mrs. Voorhees, played to deranged perfection by the wonderfully hammy Betsy Palmer, reveals that in 1957 her son, Jason, drowned while his counselors were allegedly “making love.” So Pam has made it her job to keep Camp Crystal Lake closed and full of corpses, all to avenge her dead (well…“dead”) kid. 

This results in a prolonged showdown between Alice and Mrs. Voorhees, in which Alice usually knocks the killer out and hides, only to be found again for another round. Alice, being a soft touch, doesn’t really go for blood until Mrs. Voorhees engages her in a Dynasty-level catfight, which ends when Alice decapitates Pamela with a machete, ending her kill-spree once and for all.

Alice takes a canoe out on Crystal Lake, and in one of the most iconic moments in the series’ history, her moment of calm reflection, just as the cops show up to rescue her, is shattered when a hideously deformed, algae-covered Jason pops up from the water to drag her down into the lake. But, ha-ha…it was only a dream, right? There was no boy, was there?

That holds true until the first sequel, but for now…

This one isn’t my favorite in the series, but it’s up there and it has a lot going for it — like giving us a legitimately likable bunch of characters to care about. Poor Ned! Poor Brenda!! These young actors, on the whole, are likable and endearing, so we don’t actually want to see them die. Later on, we’ll relish every death in a parade of two-dimensional characters, but these kids are people we’d want to hang out with, so we feel for them. Final Girl Alice, as played by Adrienne King, is a bit vacant at times, but that makes it all the easier to worry about her. She’s completely guileless and helpless as these events unfold, and we want to see her triumph.  

Tom Savini’s gore effects are awesome — for the kills that we see. A surprising amount of restraint is held in this first entry, with several characters dying off-camera; we see their bodies later, but their gory ends are withheld. Still, what’s there is remarkable to see, with Marcie’s death-by-hatchet a shocking visual standout. 

Still, it’s not exactly a fair play mystery, if a mystery was even intended. There are a couple of small visual cues to imply that Bill is “off,” and he’s certainly handy with a machete, but they don’t really lean into that (and someone is clearly watching him chat with Alice early on, via first-person footage, which quickly absolves him of any wrongdoing). So Mrs. Voorhees just plain drives up with a smile and an introduction, eager to engage in some on-screen mayhem.

It would’ve been a fun bit of business to have included her in the background of the early dinette scene — when counselor Annie seeks a ride to camp — just as a silent extra. That little detail would, with future viewings, be a nice little seed, but it’s the most minor of gripes. 

With the creative team not actually planning a franchise here, Mrs. Voorhees obviously doesn’t know that Jason is truly alive; he seems to exist only in her head, she speaks in his child-like voice. But on a mythological scale, why, if Jason didn’t drown in 1957, did he remain in hiding? Is it possible that Pam wasn’t the best mom in the world? Was she always a little crazy? Did Jason fear her more than love her? Or was the little mutant boy afraid of returning to the world after being left for dead? Thanks to the sequels, we know that Jason is out there, alive, possibly watching as this movie unfolds. He sees his mother kill and he likely sees her being killed. 

A fun notion (for me): What if the early POV shots in this movie aren’t from Mrs. Voorhees perspective (like the aforementioned lakeside chat between Alice and Bill)? What if Jason is watching the counselors? 

Last up, let’s talk about the awesome and iconic canoe scene at the end of the film. That is not reality. Some folks think that’s actually Jason jumping out of the water, but it has to be a dream or a vision. Jason would be 38 years old at this point, but Alice sees a child. In fact, she sees a deformed child. Mrs. Voorhees never said anything about Jason’s appearance. So how would Alice know what Jason looks like? Are supernatural forces already in play at Crystal Lake? I’ll circle back to this idea in a sequel or two!

Favorite scene: Alice frantically barricading a door that opens outward. Delightful! It gets me every time!

The One with the Sack-Head

The second in the series is one of the best — and there’s lots of nerdy bits to unpack here, so let’s get to it. Heads up for 40-year-old spoilers!

In a prologue that takes place two months after the first movie, sole survivor Alice Hardy is putting her life together in the wake of beheading a crazy lady. But Jason Voorhees doesn’t care about Alice’s problems. She killed his momma, and thus, Alice is quickly dispatched.

Five years later, Packanack Lodge — located on the lovely shores of Crystal Lake — is prepping for camping season. A group of counselors, including soon-to-be Final Girl Ginny Field (the fantastic Amy Steel), gather for their training session…but they’re in Jason’s territory, and he’s still not over his personal trauma. He picks off the youthful gang one (or two) at a time, until only scrappy Ginny is left, for a chase scene that’s a thrilling step up from the previous film’s showdown between Alice and Mrs. Voorhees.

Ginny and Jason face off in one of the series’ best moments, where she — wearing the moldy sweater of the late Mrs. Voorhees — impersonates the dead woman in an effort to trick (and kill) Jason once and for all. Does it work? Well, there are a lotta movies after this one, so no, it doesn’t work by any means. 

In a callback to the end of the first film, the final moments showcase a maybe/maybe-not-a-dream-sequence, in which Jason’s deformed mug is revealed as he smashes through a window in an attempt to snatch Ginny as “Final Boy” Paul looks on.  

This is a rare instance where a sequel exceeds the quality of the original. Apart from a somewhat lengthy opening flashback, full of clips from the first film’s final scenes, the pace is steady. The kids are a likable bunch, again played by actors with enough personality to make their characters feel like more than two-dimensional victims (well, mostly — sorry, Sandra!). Comic relief character Ted (Stu Charno), despite being a reboot of Ned from the first movie, is an endearing, surviving standout, and it’s a shame he didn’t come back for Part 3. Most of the kills are generic stabbings or slashings, but a couple — the double impalement of Jeff and Sandra (sorry again, Sandra!) and the brutal machete-kill of wheelchair-bound Mark — are especially memorable.  

That said, even with this second entry, questions are raised…

In the opening prologue, Jason has tracked Alice down to an apartment. But where is this apartment? Well, it’s definitely not California, where Alice apparently lives. My guess is that she’s renting a place in the Crystal Lake-adjacent town seen at the start of the first movie. It’s walking distance from “Camp Blood,” and close enough that Jason can drag Alice’s body back unnoticed (look for her dried-out corpse in the climactic shack scene.) Why return to Crystal Lake? In a tense phone call, Alice tells her mom, “I just have to put my life back together and this is the only way I know how.” Alice’s quest for mental health was her undoing.

The five-year time-jump means Jason is now 43 years old. I’m on board with Ginny’s theory that he didn’t actually drown, but grew up wild in the woods. It’s a solid, clean theory. The Jason seen in this movie is very much human. He groans and he grunts, and he’s terrified of the chainsaw Ginny points toward him. But his story — his history —  has officially become a campfire legend. He might be “a child in a man’s body,” but at Crystal Lake, Jason is already larger than life.

The ending of this one is notoriously problematic. Ginny and Paul leave Jason for dead in his shack with a machete embedded in his shoulder. That machete is still stuck in him when he jumps through the window to grab Ginny. But at the start of Part 3, we see Jason holding that machete as he crawls away, still in the shack. It doesn’t track. And Muffin (Terry’s dog) is positively dead – we see the mangled body – so the pup’s “return” at the end of this film can’t be anything more than a fantasy. 

I assume Ginny’s memory of those moments is chaotic mush, a confused recollection of actual events — and that’s what we see on screen. For me, Jason did indeed crash through the window, machete in hand (not in his body). The last time we see Ginny, she’s being packed into an ambulance. “Where’s Paul?” she asks. Where indeed? Her memories and thoughts are jumbled, as illustrated by that impossible window-smash, jump-scare scene. 

The newscaster at the start of Part 3 says “Eight corpses have been discovered.” That almost makes sense: six counselors, Crazy Ralph, and the cop. (Never mind that Alice’s body in the shack should bring the total to nine.) Regardless, that’s enough to convince me that Paul is fine; carted off in another ambulance and living a happy life with Ginny to this day (even though he’s sort of a jerk).

And for the record, Jason’s hockey mask is iconic, but Sack-Head Jason is the scariest Jason. Full stop.

Favorite moment: “Paul, there’s someone in this fucking room!!

Return to Camp Blood will return…