FRIDAY THE 13th PART 3
Much more flawed than the
first two films in the series but featuring a chilling second half,
Friday the 13th Part 3 opens with a five-minute prologue
that recaps the end of Part 2 and then sows further confusion about
just how the previous film ended by depicting Jason on the floor of
his shack with the machete no longer embedded in his body. Was the
“Jason jumps through the window” moment just a nightmare?
Apparently, which leaves the question of what happened to Paul at the
end of Part 2 (unless the bit where Ginny's loaded into an ambulance
is also part of a dream).
Friday the 13th
Part 2 paints Jason as a territorial recluse who only goes after
people who enter his turf. Here in Part 3, he's more proactive in
terms of seeking out victims. He first goes after a general store
owner named Harold and his wife, apparently drawn to their laundry
that hangs outside so he can get a change of clothes. Harold's wife
watches a newscast that establishes “Crystal Lake” as the name of
a community, not just a camp and a lake. Harold snacks on the food
in his shop and swills Jack Daniels as he sits on a toilet,
continuing the Friday the 13th tradition of painting many
of the locals (like Crazy Ralph) as colorful eccentrics. Jason
dispatches Harold by lodging a cleaver in his chest, then kills the
missus by jabbing a knitting needle through the back of her neck.
The sequence in and around Harold's store runs about eleven minutes,
so once again the viewer must wait an inordinate amount of time
before meeting the protagonist.
Chris Higgins (a young
woman) and a small group of her friends (inexplicably including a
marijuana-loving couple who look about ten years older than the
others) travel via van to a place called Higgins Haven (a bit of land
on which a barn and a two-story house sit near the lake). En route,
they encounter a strange older fellow sleeping in the middle of the
road. The young adults get out of the van and listen to the man
ramble on in a manner that makes it clear he's meant to be the
equivalent of “Crazy Ralph” for this film. He shows them a human
eyeball, which sends them fleeing back to the van. As they drive
away, the eye-toting fellow bellows “I've warned thee!”
Upon arrival at Higgins
Haven, Chris goes into the house where her love interest (a guy named
Rick) practically assaults her on sight, lunging forward and
surprising her with a hug and a kiss. She rightly rebuffs him.
Chris looks out a window and notices the barn door moving. She and
Rick head outside and shortly thereafter hear a scream from the
house. They rush in and find a fellow named Shelly with a small axe
apparently embedded in his head, but it's not real; Shelly is the
prankster of the group, and he pulls such stunts for attention. He
sits up and laughs at his own cleverness, oblivious to how much the
others dislike his brand of humor.
Shelly and another one of
Chris's friends (Vera) go on a supply run in town, where they get on
the wrong side of three bikers (two guys and a woman). The gang
shows up at Higgins Haven looking for revenge (Shelly ran over their
motorcycles with a car). They siphon gasoline from the van with the
intent of using it to burn down the barn. Unfortunately for them,
Jason lurks in the barn and picks them all off in quick succession.
Chris and Rick have a
heart-to-heart discussion in which Chris reveals her backstory of
having been attacked in the nearby woods by a hideous man a couple of
years earlier. She's returned to Higgins Haven to conquer her fears.
The Jason of Part 2 would never have left her alive, so once again
the narrative of Part 3 alters the nature of the antagonist.
The male stoner goes to an
outhouse at night, hears something outside, and finds his girlfriend
lurking out there.
Vera sits at the end of a
dock at the lake, and Shelly (clad in a wetsuit and wearing a hockey
mask) grabs her leg and leaps out of the water to scare her. He
holds a spear gun. Shelly heads for the barn, and shortly thereafter
Jason emerges with the hockey mask hiding his face: the first time
the killer sports his iconic look. Jason uses the spear gun to shoot
Vera in the eye, killing her.
Two other members of the
group (Andy and Debbie) have sex. Debbie then goes to take a shower.
Andy walks down the hall on his hands, and Jason (apparently tired
of hanging out in and around the barn) appears and slices him in
half. Debbie returns to her hammock following her shower, and Jason
(hiding below) thrusts a blade up through her back and out the front
of her chest.
The male stoner goes to
check the fuse box. Meanwhile, Shelly (with his throat slit)
stumbles into the kitchen and startles the female stoner, who thinks
that he's pulling another prank.
Jason throws the male stoner
into the fuse box, electrocuting him.
The female stoner realizes
that Shelly's throat actually has been slit, and she panics and races
through the house until Jason stabs her in the belly with a hot
fireplace poker.
Rick and Chris (who had been
out hiking) return to the property and find popcorn burning in the
kitchen. They split up and explore in search of the others. After a
bit, Chris goes outside and calls for Rick, unable to see that
Jason's right around the corner of the house with a hand clamped over
Rick's mouth. Jason crushes Rick's head.
Chris finds blood and
clothing in the bathtub and realizes something's seriously amiss.
She runs outside and approaches the barn and finds a biker's corpse.
Chris retreats to the house and locks the doors, but Jason hurtles
Rick's corpse through a window to create his own entrance. Chris
runs upstairs, hides in a closet, finds Debbie's body, and gives away
her location by screaming. Chris pulls the knife out of Debbie and
goes on the offensive as Jason chops down the door with an axe.
Debbie stabs Jason's hand and leg, and thus the third act begins
seventy-seven minutes into the film.
The remaining fifteen
minutes of the story are best experienced firsthand, so track down
the Blu-ray (which unfortunately does not include the commentary
track one can find in the “From Crystal Lake to Manhattan” DVD
box set) and enjoy Jason versus Chris in high definition. I won't
spoil the final twists and turns of the plot, but I will say that
it's a harrowing ride that ends with Jason seemingly dead with an axe
stuck in his head on the floor of the barn.
Friday the 13th
Part 3 expands the Crystal Lake mythos but creates some paradoxes and
questions. If Chris and her family have inhabited Higgins Haven for
some time, why did Jason never slaughter them given that the property
seems to be in his territory? Why did Jason leave Chris alive when
he attacked her in the woods a couple of years earlier?
Not as focused or as
chilling as the first two films in the series, Part 3 nonetheless
delivers an entertaining and tense second half saturated with
innovative kill scenes. It's the weakest of the first four tales in
this franchise, but it's nowhere near as vile and unwatchable as,
say, Part 5. A new spin on the Jason Voorhees legend, Friday the
13th Part 3 delivers the goods that fans of quality
slasher films expect. It could've been better, but it ain't bad.
FRIDAY THE 13th:
THE FINAL CHAPTER
The fourth film in the
series picks up the night after the end of Part 3 as law enforcement
officials and ambulances swarm Higgins Haven and cart away the
deceased. Jason (still seemingly dead) heads to a morgue, where
fourteen minutes into the tale he stops playing possum and kills a
morgue attendant and a nurse.
The next day, a woman known
as Mrs. Jarvis jogs through the woods with her daughter Trish. They
return home (a house near Crystal Lake) and find Trish's younger
brother Tommy playing a video game as he wears a monster mask. The
Jarvis family discusses the fact that six young adults have rented
the property next door.
The six renters (four guys
and two girls) drive toward the property and pass a cemetery in which
a prominent headstone marks the resting place of Pamela Voorhees.
This is the first time fans of the series learn the first name of
Jason's mother. This gravestone is also the source of some
controversy among fans, for it lists Pamela's year of death as 1979.
Until the release of The Final Chapter, everyone assumed that Part 1
took place in 1980 (its year of release). I stand by the 1980
continuity, for June 13 in 1979 was not a Friday. Perhaps the
tombstone engraver made a mistake.
That night, Tommy and Trish
greet the six renters as they arrive next door to the Jarvis place.
The new neighbors include two single fellows (Jimmy and Ted) and two
couples: Sara & Doug and Samantha & Paul.
The next day, the renters go
on a hike and cross paths with twins (Terri and Tina). The twins go
skinny-dipping with the group (aside from Sara, who heads back to the
house).
Tommy and Trish have car
trouble on their way home. As Tommy attempts to fix the engine, a
fellow named Rob shows up and offers to help. He gets the car
running, and Trish offers a ride to Rob (who claims he is hunting
bear).
That night, Trish advises
Rob to stick to the trails that wend all around the lake.
Next door, the renters party
with the twins.
Near the midpoint, Samantha
goes for a nude swim alone and climbs into a rubber raft. Jason (who
can apparently hold his breath a really long time) leaps out of the
water and stabs her from below.
Back at the rented house,
Ted smokes a joint while Jimmy goes upstairs with one of the twins.
Paul looks for Samantha and
swims out to the rubber raft, where he finds her corpse. Panicked,
he heads back to the dock where Jason stabs him in the crotch.
Rob (at his campsite) hears
Paul's screams and heads into the woods with a machete.
Back at the party house,
Jimmy and Tina get intimate. Their bed breaks.
Ted finds and watches some
old nudie films as he smokes dope.
Fifty-one minutes into the
plot, a thunderstorm commences. Terri goes to leave without her
sister but bumps into Jason outside. She's killed.
Mrs. Jarvis returns to her
home to find that the power is out and her kids are not home. She
goes outside and is presumably killed (an off-camera death).
Trish and Tommy return home
and cannot locate their mother. Trish goes to search the trails
outside only to locate Rob.
Jimmy goes downstairs for
some post-coital wine. Jason drives the corkscrew through his hand
and embeds a cleaver in his face. Jason next appears outside a
second-floor window, where he pulls Tina through the glass and sends
her toppling to her death.
Out in the woods, Rob
explains to Trish that he's actually hunting Jason, not bear, because
Jason killed his sister Sandra (see Part 2).
Sara and Doug enjoy each
other in the shower while downstairs Jason kills Ted by shoving a
knife through the back of his head.
Sara heads back to the
bedroom while Doug remains in the shower. Jason kills Doug.
Sara returns to the
bathroom, finds Doug's corpse, and runs downstairs. An axe comes
through the front door and kills her.
At the Jarvis house, Tommy
heads downstairs as Rob and Trish arrive. Jason disables the phone
line. Rob and Trish go next door and realize Jason has been there.
The final eighteen minutes
of the tale depict the efforts of Rob, Trish, and Tommy to survive as
Jason stalks them. This film boasts one hell of a denouement, and I
won't spoil the ending here: watch it yourself (ideally on Blu-ray)
and enjoy the jolts and scares that lead up to Jason's final moments
as a living breathing human being.
Friday the 13th:
The Final Chapter (like Part 3 before it) begs certain questions: how
has the Jarvis family existed in Jason's territory for so long
without having been stalked and killed before? Why would the Jarvis
family stick around after hearing news about the slaughter at Higgins
Haven (presumably elsewhere on Crystal Lake) when they're aware (via
a newspaper that Mrs. Jarvis has) that the killer's “body” is
missing?
These flaws aside, The Final
Chapter remains one of the strongest entries in the franchise and is
on par with the first two films in terms of sheer entertainment
value. A major step up in quality from the third film, Part 4 boasts
stunning practical special effects and some truly chilling imagery.
I recommend the first four Friday the 13th tales if you're
in the mood for a bloody good time this October.
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