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Friday the 13th
Friday the 13th — They were warned...They are doomed...And on Friday the 13th, nothing will save them.
1980 6.5 86.7K views saved
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Friday the 13th

1980 6.5 86.7K views saved
Friday the 13th

Camp counselors are stalked and murdered by an unknown assailant while trying to reopen a summer camp that was the site of a child's drowning.

Countries: US
Languages: English
Runtime: 1hrs 35min
Status: Released
Release date: 1980-05-09
Release format: Streaming — Jun 13, 2003
Comments
@adam-spybey 9 years ago

One of the best slashers ever made, in my opinion :)

10
@adam-spybey 9 years ago

One of the best slashers ever made, in my opinion :)

10
josh19838
@josh19838 12 years ago

Great horror. Although part 2 was better cause thats when we got jason.

6
Blake Patterson
@blakepatterson 3 years ago

A slasher movie I love for the reasons you hate it.

5
Lars Sieval
@larziej 4 years ago

"Kill her, Mommy! Kill her! Don't let her get away, Mommy! Don't let her live!"

I still really enjoy the first Friday the 13th. It has a killer soundtrack, Betsy Palmer as a middle age woman killing off teenagers and talking like she's her son, Kevin Bacon (wish he had his City on a Hill mustache here), Tom Savini's special effects, killer ending, strip monopoly, Crystal Lake, Ralph foreshadowing everything, some amazing effects, kickstarting one of the most iconic horror franchises and one killer of a jump scare.

I just love the fact that Jason isn't even the killer yet and they keep us in the dark until the moment Mrs. Voorhees shows up. Those final 10 minutes are so much fun and damn Mrs. Voorhees just looks so angry without a head. Adrienne King is also a fun final girl. Best kill? Kevin Bacon getting pierced by that arrow.

Friday the 13th is a must watch and a film I never get tired of watching. Fun way to spend a friday night.

3
Demitriss Campos
@demitriss 1 year ago

Watching for the first time. Very good film, I really liked it. Just the last part of the blonde girl that I didn't really like because she acted kind of bad. but the film itself was very good and the effects of the time also left me perplexed with some scenes that were quite difficult to do at the time.

1
Spiritualized Kaos
@spiritualized-kaos 1 year ago

The origin of an endless series. One of the best of Gore cinema.

1
Siggi
@siggi963 7 months ago

The first Friday the 13th. A classic of the genre not to be missed.

0
Andrew Bloom
@andrewbloom 7 years ago

[7.1/10] Sometimes you just come to something too late to fully appreciate it. *Friday the 13th* didn’t necessarily start the slasher genre, but it certainly codified it. So coming to the horror movie after seeing films like *Scream*, which deconstructed and rebuilt the slasher movie tropes (and, incidentally, spoiled this movie for me), or *Cabin in the Woods*, which remixed them in trippy meta fashion, it’s hard for the 1980 originator to rise above “enjoyable but rote” for a viewer raised on its inheritors.

When you know what the rules are, how the sinful must be punished in a slasher film, how the crazy old guy must give warnings that will never be heeded, right down to who the woman behind the knife is, it’s just hard to be emotionally invested. That’s no fault of the movie. If anything, it’s a sign that *Friday the 13th* did its job too well, that it become too embedded in our pop cultural DNA that something once innovative retroactively becomes playing it straight, which makes it hard to quicken the pulse of jaded scary movie watchers like me.

The interesting thing is that while, by that standard, *Friday the 13th* feels a bit quaint, it never reaches the levels of cheesiness or hokiness that, for instance, its future franchise combatant Freddy Krueger does in *Nightmare on Elm Street*. As silly as some scenarios like a game of “strip monopoly” are, and as shopworn as the slasher beats seem to the modern eye, the film never gets cartoony, which makes it easier to appreciate on a craft level even it doesn’t quite move or scare you.

Part of that comes from the tone and style of the film, which is an interesting blend of stylistic flourishes but also a cinema verite feel. As banal as some of the interactions between the steadily mowed-down counselors are, there’s definitely a sense of director Sean S. Cunningham just pointing his camera at a pack of teenagers at a summer camp and watching them go. Portions of the dialogue get hammy, but everything from horsing around by the lake to a collective flip out over a snake in a cabin feel true to the way unsupervised young adults act around one another.

And that ties into the movie’s theme, such as it is, with Mrs. Voorhees as an instrument of karmic punishment for the way such adolescent indiscretions can lead to neglect or, in this extreme case, tragedy. It’s hard to take the psychotic revenge tale told in the film too seriously given its outsized bent, but there is a sense that *Friday the 13th* is, like much of great horror, reflecting the anxieties of its teenage audience back at them. The notion that the carefree and exhibitionist vibe of youth is not, in fact, weightless, and that the ignored authority figures are right and a day is going to come when you’ll face consequences for your actions builds some social subtext into the undercarriage of the film’s scares that give them a bit more weight than they might have otherwise.

But much of that is a small layer of extra meaning given to the various kill and chase sequences that make up the main focus of the film. And these are where the film feels like a well-done blend of tones, as the realness of the kids’ interactions gives way to any number of stylistic flourishes meant to heighten the horror and suspense of each gory scene. Images like a close-up of a hand grasping flesh, or a cadaver strung up in horrifying detail evince an intention to use the movie’s cinematography to convey the film’s pleasure and pain motifs in an artistic way.

The peak of this is the way *Friday the 13th* uses point-of-view shots to obscure who the killer is until the big reveal. While the “ch-ch-ch, ah-ah-ah” is so hardwired into the horror genre that it’s hard to take it seriously, and while *Halloween* used the same trick earlier and better, putting the viewer behind the killer’s eyes serves both to allow us to see the killer’s deeds without knowing her identity, and to make us distantly complicity in the grisly acts put up on the screen.

The twist itself -- that Mrs. Vorhees is out for revenge on the sorts of teenagers who let her beloved son die nearly 25 years prior -- is neat enough. The fake out and explanation is a little *Twilight Zone* in its tidiness, but that’s not necessarily a bad thing. Knowing the twist lessened its impact, but there’s still something laudable about how Mrs. Voorhees shows up to the camp and seems to be the savior, only to turn around and unveil that she is, in fact, the cause of all this murder and mayhem. Her schizophrenic orders from “Jason” himself come off more corny than scary, and she has the “thought I killed you already” fake out that a modern viewer is inured to, but she makes for a solid antagonist to anchor the last act of the film.

That’s the worst you can say about *Friday the 13th*. In 2017, its tricks have become old hat, and it’s incapable of spooking or scaring a horror fan coming to it so late in the game. But it’s still a solid, well-made picture, with just enough thematic material to make it interesting, and enough cinematic touches to make it an interesting study in how to use images and editing to create satisfying horror set pieces.

It may not carry the same oomph it once did, with thousands of (mostly pale) imitators sapping the power of its tropes and beats, but it’s still hard not to admire the film in an academic sense if nothing else. *Friday the 13th* is a sturdily-built little horror machine, one that manages to feel both real and outsized in turn, and delivers its kills and twists with aplomb, even if they can’t quite keep you on the edge of your seat anymore.

11
Torgo
@torgo 2 years ago

Not a technically great film, but one I've watched and rewatched countless times. A bone fide October classic.

1
Overquake
@overquake 3 years ago

I've never really given 80s slashers too much attention, but this film makes me want to search out more. As many other reviewers have said, the last 20 minutes really make the movie.

1
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