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 alert: no.)
Directed by Joseph Zito (The Prowler) and with Tom Savini returning for some much-needed gore craftsmanship, the film promises to go out in a blaze of bloody glory. And in many ways, it does. It’s meaner, slicker, and, dare we say, more cinematic than its predecessors. But is that enough?
This entry lands somewhere in the middle—not quite a genre milestone, not quite a mess. It’s a sequel that knows its audience, adds a few visual flourishes, and throws a couple curveballs. But it also clings to the franchise’s worst habits, recycling the same structure like a campfire tale on a loop.
The Plot: Familiar Campground Blues
The story picks up immediately after Part III, with Jason’s seemingly lifeless body carted off to a local morgue. Naturally, our hockey-masked friend doesn’t stay down for long. Before you can say “CPR,” he’s slicing his way out of cold storage and heading back to his favorite hunting grounds near Crystal Lake.
Enter two cabins: one filled with the standard-issue horny teens, and the other with a young boy named Tommy Jarvis (played by a very committed Corey Feldman), his sister Trish, and their mother. You know the drill—Jason arrives, the body count rises, and a final confrontation looms.
If you’ve seen any of the previous entries, you’ll spot the beats a mile away: skinny dipping, inappropriate pranks, softcore flirtation, gruesome kills. What The Final Chapter does, however, is package all that in a slightly shinier box.

The Direction: Cinematic for Once?
Joseph Zito deserves some credit here. The film, while still firmly within its slasher framework, looks better than anything that came before it. There’s more style in the lighting, more patience in the framing, and—at times—a genuine sense of suspense. This isn’t The Shining, but for a franchise that usually treats aesthetics like an afterthought, the bump in visual craft is noticeable.
Zito reportedly clashed with producers, wanting to bring some grit and danger back to the series after the increasingly cartoonish vibe of Part III. He succeeds, to an extent. There’s a colder, more predatory Jason here, one who feels less like a boogeyman and more like an unstoppable animal.
The Cast: Judie Aronson and the Rest
Judie Aronson as Samantha: A Missed Opportunity
Judie Aronson steals every scene she’s in. Best remembered by most audiences for Weird Science, Aronson brings a level of natural charisma and screen presence that most of her co-stars sorely lack. As Samantha, she plays the flirtatious but sweet girl who feels like she wandered in from a better movie.
She’s radiant, expressive, and oddly grounded despite the paper-thin character she’s given. You can’t help but wish the film had centered more on her than the interchangeable ensemble around her. Her death scene—isolated, cold, and cruel—is one of the more haunting in the film, and not just because of the gore. It’s a true loss of charm in a movie that needed more of it.
Corey Feldman as Tommy Jarvis: Enter the Boy Genius
Casting a young Corey Feldman was a gamble that mostly pays off. As Tommy Jarvis, Feldman brings a frenetic energy to the final act that lifts the film out of its middle-act slump. He’s a precocious monster-movie kid with a thing for masks and makeup, and he becomes instrumental in Jason’s temporary downfall.
Is it believable? Not really. But Feldman goes for it with all the reckless commitment of a child actor on a sugar high, and the film is better for it.
The Rest: Forgettable Fodder
Beyond Aronson and Feldman, the rest of the cast is pure slasher wallpaper. Lawrence Monoson as the terminally horny Ted is grating. Crispin Glover, as the awkward Jimmy, injects some bizarre charm—especially with his infamous dance moves—but even he is mostly there to get dispatched in creative fashion.
Kimberly Beck as Trish tries to give the film a final-girl backbone, but the script doesn’t give her much to work with. Still, she’s competent and carries the climax with reasonable grit.
The Kills: Back to Basics
Tom Savini’s return brings a welcome dose of practical FX authenticity. The kills are brutal but not over-indulgent. There’s a cruel efficiency to Jason here, less theatrics and more raw violence. From corkscrews to window tosses to slow-motion decapitations, it’s a greatest-hits album for horror fans.
What separates these deaths from the rest of the franchise is the pace. Zito and Savini give some of the more graphic scenes room to breathe. They let you squirm. It’s not elegant, but it’s effective.
The Soundtrack: That Same Old Song
Harry Manfredini’s iconic string stabs return, but by Part IV, they’re losing their edge. The soundtrack does its job, but it never surprises. It’s more wallpaper than mood-setter.
In fact, the silence in some scenes works better than the recycled score. The moment Jason crashes through the window (a franchise highlight) is more effective because it leans on pure shock value rather than musical cues.
Jason Voorhees: A Predator Refined
Ted White dons the mask this time around and delivers one of the better portrayals of Jason. There’s a heaviness to his movements, a sense of urgency that earlier versions lacked. This isn’t a slow, lumbering killer—this Jason runs. He hunts.
Gone are the loony, almost slapstick vibes of Part III. This is Jason as a proper monster, silent but not passive. There’s menace in his posture, and when he crashes through doors or windows, it feels less choreographed and more instinctual. If the movie deserves praise for anything, it’s Jason’s physicality here.
The Final Act: Shaving Heads and Swinging Blades
The final confrontation between Jason and the Jarvis siblings is surprisingly intense. When Tommy shaves his head and pretends to be a young Jason to confuse the killer, it’s equal parts absurd and inspired. It shouldn’t work. And yet, Feldman sells it with the kind of manic energy that makes it feel earned.
The final blows—delivered with an axe, then again and again in a blind rage—are oddly cathartic. There’s real trauma in Tommy’s face as he loses himself in the violence. It’s a strangely poignant note for a slasher film to end on.
The Verdict: A Decent Entry, Nothing More
Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter isn’t the best entry in the series, but it might be the most refined. It sands off some of the jagged edges of earlier sequels while avoiding the self-parody that would soon define the franchise.
It’s also, despite its many flaws, kind of pretty. The lighting, the forested exteriors, the cabin interiors—it all looks better than it needs to. Zito knew how to stage a horror scene, and with Savini’s FX in tow, it gives the illusion of sophistication without ever straying too far from its grindhouse roots.
That said, it’s still a formulaic body count movie. There’s little innovation, little commentary, and almost no narrative depth. But you don’t come to Friday the 13th for philosophy. You come for creative deaths, attractive teens, and a killer with presence.
On that front, Part IV delivers.
Final Score: 6.5/10
A technically competent, occasionally stylish slasher that elevates the formula just enough to stand out—without ever really escaping it. Come for Judie Aronson, stay for the kills, and remember: it wasn’t really the final chapter.
🔪 The Friday the 13th Retrospective Series
A look back at every machete swipe, scream, and sequel in the Friday the 13th franchise:
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Friday the 13th (1980) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-1980-the-one-that-started-it-all/
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Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-2-1981-the-birth-of-jason-the-middle-child-of-the-franchise/
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Friday the 13th Part III (1982) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-iii-1982-mask-on-shirt-off-and-body-count-rising/
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Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter (1984) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-the-final-chapter-1984-the-best-lit-death-march-yet/
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Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning (1985) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-v-a-new-beginning-1985/
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Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives (1986) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-vi-jason-lives-1986/
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Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-vii-the-new-blood-1988/
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Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-part-viii-jason-takes-manhattan-1989/
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Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday (1993) – https://pochepictures.com/jason-goes-to-hell-1993-the-body-hopping-butcher-and-the-death-of-a-slasher/
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Jason X (2001) – https://pochepictures.com/jason-x-2001-a-space-odyssey-of-slashes-and-silliness/
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Freddy vs. Jason (2003) – https://pochepictures.com/freddy-vs-jason-2003-when-nightmares-meet-crystal-lake/
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Friday the 13th (2009) – https://pochepictures.com/friday-the-13th-2009-the-brutal-reboot-that-forgot-the-soul/

