In 1980, screenwriter Victor Miller and director Sean S. Cunningham launched Friday the 13th, a low-budget summer horror that unexpectedly became a phenomenon. The twist ending – killer Pamela Voorhees avenging her drowned son – catapulted the idea of Jason Voorhees into the franchise’s DNA. Miller himself recalls that in his original screenplay “Jason was … Read More “Jason Voorhees – The Birth of a Slasher Icon” »
Category: Reviews
In the long and bloodied history of slasher films, few franchises are as iconic—and as overextended—as Friday the 13th. By the time the 2009 reboot arrived, the hockey mask had been worn thin. Yet with Friday the 13th (2009), directed by Marcus Nispel and produced by Michael Bay’s Platinum Dunes, Jason Voorhees was given a … Read More “Friday the 13th (2009): The Brutal Reboot That Forgot the Soul” »
For decades, fans whispered about it. Two of the most iconic horror villains — Freddy Krueger of A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Jason Voorhees of Friday the 13th — finally crossing blades in a shared cinematic bloodbath. When Freddy vs. Jason finally hit theaters in 2003, it was the culmination of fan dreams, studio … Read More “Freddy vs. Jason (2003): When Nightmares Meet Crystal Lake” »
When a long-running slasher franchise ends up in space, the jokes write themselves. Jason X, the tenth installment in the Friday the 13th saga, doesn’t just embrace the absurd—it practically salutes it. Released in 2001, this film catapults Crystal Lake’s most notorious killer into a new frontier: outer space. And the result? A film that … Read More “Jason X (2001) – A Space Odyssey of Slashes and Silliness” »
By the time Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday slashed its way into theaters in 1993, the Friday the 13th franchise had already delivered eight films, countless teens sliced and diced, and a hockey-masked killer who had become both pop culture icon and self-parody. So when New Line Cinema took the reins from Paramount … Read More “Jason Goes to Hell (1993): The Body-Hopping Butcher and the Death of a Slasher” »
“He took a boat ride and stole our time.” A Title That Promised the World There’s a certain chutzpah in naming your eighth entry in a horror franchise Jason Takes Manhattan. It suggests scale. It hints at ambition. It practically demands that we, the audience, buckle in for mayhem on a new level. After all, … Read More “Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989)” »
Jason Meets Carrie: A Gimmick Too Far or a Bloody Good Time? By the time Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood slashed its way into theaters in 1988, the franchise had already become a cinematic ritual. Jason Voorhees, the hulking, silent killer in a hockey mask, was no longer just a character — … Read More “Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988)” »
A Franchise Resurrected — With Winks, Kills, and Campfire Glee Introduction: Death Wasn’t the End — Just the Sequel Setup By the mid-1980s, the Friday the 13th series had become the horror version of comfort food — bloody, predictable, and just familiar enough to keep fans coming back. But after the widely maligned Part V: … Read More “Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives (1986)” »
The One That Swung—and Missed Jason Voorhees is dead. Long live Jason Voorhees. Or… is he? With Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning, the franchise attempts something different, even bold—but ends up with a film that feels more like a placeholder than a rebirth. It promises a new chapter, yet mostly delivers familiar … Read More “Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning (1985)” »
Introduction: Not Quite the Final Chapter By 1984, Jason Voorhees was practically a household name. Hockey mask? Check. Machete? Check. A loyal cult of horror fans begging for more? Absolutely. So, when Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter was released, the title alone felt like a dare. Was this truly the end of Jason? (Spoiler … Read More “Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984) – The Best-Lit Death March Yet” »