This is Movie 3 in the series and the one where Jason gets his iconic hockey mask. There are lots of great deaths with barn tools, death by harpoon gun through the eye no less! Jason also gets the famous "gash" on his mask when he's hit in the head with an ax. So that's cool. It's not an entirely original story — there are a lot of rehashes from the previous two films — but I gotta give this one a lot of credit for introducing THE mask and effectively establishing Jason's look for the rest of the series.
This is Movie 11 in the series and for many horror fans a dream come true to see a clash of these horror titans. The gist of this movie is that Freddy Kreuger raises Jason from the dead in order to create fear among the people in his town, so he can regain power and start killing again, too. The premise, though ludicrous, is kind of great and the logic throughout the movie is more sound than almost all the other ones in this franchise.
They certainly delivered on the premise with this one. This is Movie 6 in the series and is, by far, the most fun. I laughed A LOT. There's absolutely nothing scary about this entire movie and that's because it's acutely aware of what it is, and does a great job making fun of itself and the genre. First of all, Jason is brought back to life by a bolt of lightning ignoring the fact that in the previous film they said his body was cremated , and then he has a James Bond-like opening sequence that's kind of AMAZING.
The tone of the movie is borderline comedic one of the characters even breaks the fourth wall, addressing the audience and that tone actually works with the cartoonish deaths. Now, it's still not a "great" movie in the grand scope of movies — even horror movies — but it's definitely one of the best of the entire series.
Who knew?! This is Movie 1 in the series and it's really hard to deny that it's iconic. Plus, Kevin Bacon! Read my mind 1. Report this review. Teen, 16 years old Written by Finch doe October 26, Teen, 14 years old Written by GamingGamerMovi October 30, The original Friday the 13th Friday the 13th is a very popular slasher film, known for the character Jason Voorhees. In my opinion, this is not only one of the best Friday the 13th movies, but is one of the best slasher movies, and spawned multiple sequels and adaptations.
The next year, two counselors are murdered. In , a descendant of the original owners reopens Camp Crystal Lake with some counselors' help. The counselors gets killed one by one by a mysterious person.
Could it be Jason, out for revenge? Age Review: Violence, blood, stabbings, dead bodies, and other forms of killing. A man and woman have sex, in which you can see one of the woman's breasts. Fortunately, there is mild amounts of language and drugs.
This is definitely a movie that you HAVE to watch with someone. It just makes the experience so much better. Either get a friend, or a family member top watch with you. Read my mind. Teen, 14 years old Written by Henry Hill15 September 5, Classic horror film is just a cheap halloween rip off M Mature teens - Strong violence, gory images and strong sex.
Violence - There is strong violence in which characters are brutally killed. Gore - There is gory images of dead bodies. These include a woman with an axe in her head and two people are discovered with their throats cut.
Sex - There is a prolonged sex scene that features thrusting and moaning. Had useful details. Teen, 14 years old Written by ianpenguin10 September 12, This title contains: Sexy stuff.
Helped me decide. Teen, 13 years old Written by Coolpool August 7, OK slasher film acually isn't that violent Friday the 13th is actually not as violent as I thought it would be, but is still very bloody. A teen is stabbed in the stomach impalement not shown, but a bloody wound is shown , a girl is killed off-screen , talk of a boy drowning. A teen enters a cabin, and later his corpse is shown with a slit throat. A girls throat is slit, lots of blood. A girl gets an axe to the face.
Blood gushes. A man is stabbed, his corpse is hung from a tree. A girl is killed. This reboot looks better, from top to bottom, than almost every other film on this list, with the possible exceptions of Part III and The Final Chapter.
Unfortunately, the script for this reboot is fucking idiotic, and mind you I'm taking into consideration how silly the other scripts are. The script doesn't play with the mythology at all, or take the chance to reinvent anything from the first round of sequels, but rather focuses on exposition and finding reason behind the defiantly illogical premise and the ludicrous creation that is Jason Voorhees.
Rather than toying with the franchise's middling tone, or finding creative new impasses in the story, or, hell, even getting more inventive with the deaths, this reboot simply takes the filmic DNA of the middle sequels and makes them more grim. In effect, the film becomes a case study in how many exercises in modern horror have grown sadistic and faux-realistic rather than imaginative and genuinely fun. In The Final Chapter , we're introduced to the young Tommy Jarvis, who becomes the hero of the series for three installments, the second of which being this bizarre, outlandishly harebrained reconfiguration, which sets Jason's fatal shenanigans in a home for troubled teenagers on Crystal Lake.
The tone here is actually pretty spot-on, straddling horror movie and sex comedy with just the right balance, and director Danny Steinmann has a way of highlighting the unique facial expressions of the victims and giving the environs an admirably loopy style.
That being said, the film enacts a twist ending that makes The Village 's final moments feel like peak Alfred Hitchcock , a narrative decision so profoundly dumb that it taints even the more juvenile passages of this film, such as the sequence where a couple sings to one another while the man takes a long shit in a port-a-potty.
After The Final Chapter , the most tonally acute and entertaining volume of the series, A New Beginning signaled the beginning of Friday the 13th being denoted by gimmicks. This is the one that stings.
The premise is impossibly promising, letting the world's foremost expert on machete-wielding and general brutality loose on The City That Never Sleeps. The possibilities are frankly endless, and rather than choose one, the makers of Jason Takes Manhattan spend most of the runtime on the voyage-by-sea to Manhattan, with Jason taking on the role of a rabidly homicidal Ishmael.
The performances are especially bad here, but even the encouraging plot of Jason on the High Seas doesn't come to much. The deaths are largely boring on the boat, but once we get to Manhattan, the film lights up with irreverence, most notably in his elongated fight with the boxing champ on the roofs of New York City.
Sequences as aggressively bizarre as these only end up teasing what could have been if the film had shown even a modicum in interest in fulfilling the promise of the film's title. The New Blood came out in the time of Scanners , which may explain why anybody anybody! In this case, the telepath also happens to be a curious and damaged blonde, who accidentally brings Jason back from the dead when she begins to remember how she killed her father with her powers on the very same stretch of Crystal Lake property.
Yes, it's convoluted, and the fact that the telepath storyline is given a bogus sense of self-seriousness bogs The New Blood down hugely. The deaths are not particularly memorable, and the characters, even for Friday the 13th , are written with little in the way of focus or even marginal resonance. For what would be the last of the original Friday the 13th films, paving the path for Freddy vs.
Per the series tradition of totally misleading titles, two-thirds of the action takes place on a boat before they reach NYC, mostly due to budgetary constraints.
Death Count: 21 Money Shot: Once he eventually does make it to Manhattan, a group of thugs threatens Jason, but in a classic move, he turns around, takes off his mask and glowers at them until they run away screaming. Verdict: Jason on a Boat is somehow worse than Jason in Space. Sweet trailer, though. In an amusing sign of the times, the movie also upgrades to coke as the drug of choice.
Verdict: The series pulls a Halloween III: Season of the Witch , ditching the real Jason to morph into this half-baked whodunit, a curious if pointless addition to the overall canon.
Death Count: 27 Money Shot: For once, the titular promise is kept, and Jason is violently dragged to hell. As a bonus, Freddy makes a surprise appearance at the very last moment to help out.
Suffice to say, horny teens go to Crystal Lake and then die. Verdict: This film may have been made for fans of the series, but it has very little reason to exist.
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