Welcome Back to Honey Island, Population: Nobody
If Hatchet III proves anything, it’s that you can’t keep a good swamp monster down—or a bad franchise from gleefully bathing in its own blood. Directed by B.J. McDonnell and written by series creator Adam Green, this third trip into the Honey Island Swamp is a cinematic buffet of decapitations, disembowelments, and chainsaw-induced joy. It’s gory, it’s absurd, and it knows exactly what it is: a love letter to old-school slasher excess, sprayed liberally with fake blood and dark humor.
You don’t watch Hatchet III for subtlety. You watch it because you want to see Kane Hodder—legendary stuntman and eternal Jason Voorhees—rip human beings in half like he’s opening a bag of beef jerky. And on that front, the movie overdelivers.
Blood, Sweat, and Swamp Water
The film picks up right where Hatchet II left off, with our eternal survivor Marybeth Dunston (Danielle Harris) standing over the apparent corpse of Victor Crowley. She’s covered head-to-toe in blood, holding his scalp like a deranged trophy, and still somehow has the emotional range to look both traumatized and annoyed.
She staggers into the Jefferson Parish Police Department, which immediately treats her like a serial killer instead of, you know, the one person trying to stop Louisiana’s most overachieving undead hillbilly. The cops are skeptical, the sheriff (Zach Galligan, aka Gremlins alumni cashing a nostalgia check) is furious, and Marybeth just wants to go home, shower, and probably burn everything she owns.
Of course, things go south faster than you can say “cajun catastrophe.” The authorities retrieve Victor’s body from the swamp, stuff him into a body bag, and—shock of shocks—he wakes up and turns the ambulance into a Cuisinart of human misery. It’s the most effective use of paramedic equipment since Bringing Out the Dead, except here the patient is wielding a belt sander.
Victor Crowley: The Swamp’s Angriest Homeowner
If you’re new to the Hatchet series, Victor Crowley (played by the always-delightful Kane Hodder) is basically what you’d get if the Michelin Man and Leatherface had a love child raised on gator meat and trauma. Cursed to relive his death every night, Victor doesn’t just kill people—he art-directs their deaths.
Heads are ripped clean off, spines are used as party favors, and the camera lingers lovingly on every spray of blood. There’s a moment where he uses a belt sander to kill a man—through the chest. The sheer commitment to absurd brutality is admirable, like a slasher version of synchronized swimming.
The joy of Hatchet III is that it doesn’t apologize for any of this. It’s a movie that looks at the notion of “good taste” and decides, “Nah, let’s chainsaw that in half too.”
Marybeth Dunston: The Scream Queen Who’s Just So Done
Danielle Harris returns as Marybeth, and at this point, she’s less of a “final girl” and more of a professional swamp trauma specialist. She’s the only person in horror history who can say “He’s back again?” and make it sound like she’s talking about a bad ex-boyfriend.
Locked in a jail cell for most of the first act, Marybeth gets interrogated by Amanda (Caroline Williams), a journalist and Victor Crowley expert who also happens to be the sheriff’s ex-wife—because apparently, this town’s dating pool is as shallow as the swamp’s gene pool. Amanda informs Marybeth that Victor’s curse can only be broken by confronting him with his father’s ashes. This is the kind of supernatural exposition that sounds like it was written by someone drunk on moonshine and horror trivia—and it’s perfect.
Marybeth, of course, doesn’t want to help, because she’s already killed this guy once (or twice?), but after some persuading (and about five gallons of disbelief), she joins the cause.
The Supporting Cast: A Buffet for Victor
The film introduces a new SWAT team led by Derek Mears (another former Jason Voorhees—yes, two Jasons in one movie). You can tell they’re doomed from the moment they arrive in their tactical gear, because in the Hatchet universe, professionalism is just a faster way to die.
They stomp into the swamp with guns, flashlights, and bravado, all of which prove equally useless against Victor. Within minutes, the body count skyrockets. One poor soul gets his head removed with such enthusiasm it should come with a confetti cannon. Another gets split vertically, which is impressive because that requires both strength and precision.
By the halfway mark, you’re no longer watching a story—you’re watching an R-rated Rube Goldberg machine made entirely of human parts.
The Gore: Artistry Through Artery
Let’s talk about the gore, because that’s really the film’s star. McDonnell and Green treat every kill like a punchline—gruesome, grotesque, and darkly funny. There’s a rhythm to the madness: set up, panic, splatter, reaction shot, repeat.
If Quentin Tarantino made a slasher movie after chugging six Red Bulls and watching Looney Tunes, it would look like this.
Limbs fly like confetti at a parade. Blood sprays in slow motion like it’s auditioning for a shampoo commercial. It’s gleeful carnage, and it never once feels mean-spirited. Instead, it’s an affectionate nod to the practical effects glory days of Friday the 13th and Evil Dead 2.
The Humor: Cajun Fried and Extra Crispy
Unlike many modern horror films that think “dark and gritty” equals “good,” Hatchet III understands that horror and humor go together like vodka and regret. Every decapitation comes with a wink, every explosion of entrails lands with comedic timing that would make Sam Raimi proud.
Caroline Williams delivers her lines like she’s narrating a haunted cooking show (“We have to bring him his father!”), and Sid Haig pops up in a gloriously offensive cameo as Abbott McMullen, a racist hillbilly who hoards Victor’s dad’s ashes in a mason jar. It’s tasteless, it’s ridiculous, and it’s kind of amazing.
Even the SWAT team gets a few moments of unintentional comedy, mostly by being the least competent armed force since Police Academy 4.
The Ending: Ashes to Ashes, Dust to Gore
By the time Marybeth finally faces Victor Crowley, the swamp has more corpses than vegetation. There’s a tragic misunderstanding (of course), a couple of heroic deaths (maybe), and a finale that turns into a supernatural barbecue.
Marybeth smashes Victor’s father’s ashes over his head, melting him like a cursed popsicle, then finishes the job with a gun blast that could double as a mic drop. The National Guard arrives to find a swamp full of red goo and one very exhausted heroine.
And then, just to keep the franchise doors open, the movie ends on the perfect note of ambiguity—Marybeth gasping for air, alive or not, who knows? Probably “alive enough for Hatchet IV.”
Final Thoughts: Swamp Thing, You Make My Heart Bleed
Hatchet III is everything a slasher sequel should be: loud, messy, and unapologetically ridiculous. It doesn’t reinvent horror—it celebrates it, with buckets of blood and a grin that says, “We know this is stupid, and we love it anyway.”
The acting ranges from solid to gloriously hammy, the gore effects are top-tier practical artistry, and Kane Hodder once again proves that no one kills with quite as much passion.
If you’re looking for realism, depth, or coherent police procedure, stay away. But if you want to watch Louisiana’s angriest zombie butcher people like he’s auditioning for Iron Chef: Carnage Edition, then step right up.
Verdict: ★★★★☆
Hatchet III is swampy, splattery bliss — a blood-soaked carnival of chaos that slices its way straight into your dark little heart. It’s not high art, but it’s high-octane horror, and sometimes that’s exactly what the doctor (and the coroner) ordered.


