Review: Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives

The film feels more like a harbinger for the Scream series with its self-aware jokiness.

Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives
Photo: Paramount Pictures

Though it has the requisite murder every 10 minutes or so (including victims snapped in half and punched through the heart, and a triple decapitation), Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives feels more like a harbinger for the Scream series with its self-aware jokiness. The first person who gets picked off by Jason is played by Welcome Back Kotter’s Ron Palillo, and various characters wryly comment on the familiar on-screen action, practically winking as they say stuff like, “So what were you gonna be when you grew up?”

The film’s pre-opening credits sequence harkens back to classic Universal horror territory, with regular Jason hunter Tommy Jarvis (Thom Matthews) digging up Jason’s grave to make sure he’s really dead and inadvertently bringing him back to life with a bolt of lightning. The graveyard is foggy, moody, and atmospheric, and Jason has evolved from a mutant hick goon into a kind of zombie Frankenstein, his skin all purple and green with maggots slithering around his pus-rotten face before he dons his hockey mask.

While the characters remain somewhat cookie-cutter, the dialogue has a fast, hard-boiled snap and crackle (“Don’t piss me off or I really will repaint this office with your brains!”) and Tommy is mostly led around by a brassy, race-car driving, saucy bad girl, Megan (Jennifer Cooke), who makes a nice change from the goody-goody, virginal babysitter heroine established in John Carpenter’s Halloween and copied almost ever since. While there’s a superficial been-there-done-that, why don’t-we-just-mock-the-whole-thing quality to this entry in the series, it certainly livens up what has become by this point a stale franchise.

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Score: 
 Cast: Thom Matthews, Jennifer Cooke, David Kagen, Kerry Noonan, Renee Jones, C.J. Graham, Tony Goldwyn, Ron Palillo  Director: Tom McLoughlin  Screenwriter: Tom McLoughlin  Distributor: Paramount Pictures  Running Time: 87 min  Rating: R  Year: 1986  Buy: Video

Jeremiah Kipp

Jeremiah Kipp is a New York City based writer, producer and director with over ten years experience creating narrative and commercial films.

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