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Directed By Joseph Zito
Written By: Barney Cohen
Cast: Erich Anderson, Judie Aronson, Kimberly Beck, Peter Barton, Tom Everett, Corey Feldman, Crispin Glover, Richard Brooker, Lawrence Monoson, Joan Freeman, Camilla More, Bruce Mahler, Carey More, Barbara Howard, Clyde Hayes, Carey More
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Friday the 13th Part 4: The Final Chapter (1984)
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Movie Review by Ben October 11th, 2009
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The Final Chapter? LMAO
I was in the second grade when this movie came out back in 1984. It was also one of the few movies in this endless series to actually open on Friday the 13th. Looking back, it was interesting to see a lot of 8 and 9 years old get excited about a movie that had absolutely no business seeing at that age. Whether the adults liked it or not, these movies did play a part be it big or small in our young lives. They were to my generation what the "Saw" movies are to today's generation of kids. The sight of bloody violence on the big screen (as opposed to real life) is still exciting to many, and this has been the case for longer than any of us really realize. Still, it would be several more years before I actually bothered to see it, and on television with all the good parts taken out no less.
The "Friday the 13th" movies have routinely featured actors who you never really hear from again after you see them in these cinematic spectaculars. However, Part IV features two actors who are still working today, Corey Feldman and Crispin Glover. We get to see Corey as a pre-teen with all those drug addiction years ahead of him (he's clean now, good for him), and he plays the young Tommy Jarvis who has a passion for making masks of all kind. Crispin Glover plays Jimmy, a man who has had no real luck with women. Throughout the movie, he gets woman advice from Ted (Lawrence Monoson) who seems to know everything about them. Guess who gets laid first. No, it's not who you think...or maybe it is.
Of course, the one thing we do look forward to in these movies are the kills. Jason definitely gets some nasty cuts in they were most likely even more nasty until the MPAA came in and said:
"Uh, no I don't think so."
One of the classic moments in this film features a guy getting it right in the groin. Oh to be in a theater when this scene was displayed on the silver screen. It's one of the few times where you can see a whole audience of men grab their crotches, thankful that it was not them who suddenly got turned into falsetto singers. There is a nice shower scene as well which ends with Jason doing his Norman Bates routine. It's not as suspenseful as the original "Psycho," but it sure as hell is a lot bloodier!
It's a kick to see such a young Corey Feldman here. To see him before he sadly felt into a nasty drug addiction (which he has since overcome) and before he did "The Goonies" and "The Lost Boys" does feel a little strange as we are so used to him as an older guy, and he does show promise in this sequel. Seeing him jumping up and down in his bed when he sees one of the women next door undress brings back a lot of memories. Just don't ask me to tell you which ones, ha, ha, ha! Corey is actually pretty good here as he goes from innocent naïve young boy to a seriously disturbed boy as a result of witnessing Jason's rampage. I also admired how fast he was in shaving off his hair so he could look like Jason as a boy, and he managed to do all this in record time while Jason was waving that rusty machete at his big sister. Give me another actor who could have made that seem somewhat believable, I dare ya!
Crispin Glover is also a big kick to watch in this movie, and I'm not sure he's changed all that much since. We get to see him here before he hit it big as George McFly in "Back To The Future," and before he got all those bizarre panic attacks about doing the sequels which he ended up dropping out of.
You also gotta dig Glover's nice spastic dance which more or less predated the break dancing era. No one dances like Crispin does, and no one else dies like he does in this movie. Could he be as strange as the characters he plays? Maybe so, but these days he seems to be using it to good effect.
This "Friday The 13th" sequel is also notable as it is the last one Tom Savini did the makeup effects for. Having worked on many different horror films of the immensely gory kind like "Dawn Of The Dead" (the original) and "Maniac" among others, his work has a realism to it that is as uncomfortable as it is brutally effective. This is even more so when you look at the rest of the sequels in this series where the kills look utterly fake and are played for laughs more than anything else. Apparently, Savini based a lot of makeup work on what he saw as a combat photographer and soldier in Vietnam, so there is an authenticity to his work that many have to give him credit for. Whatever you think about Savini's work, there's no doubt that he is brilliant at what he does, and that other makeup artists have to work twice as hard to even come close to outdoing his bloody accomplishments.
The director for this particular sequel was Joseph Zito, and he has also directed such amazing B-movie classics like "Missing In Action," "Invasion U.S.A.," and "Red Scorpion." Zito is one of those workmen like directors who gets the job done and gives the audience what they want. Other than that, his style of directing doesn't really have any distinguishing characteristics to it. It takes a lot of movies produced by Cannon Pictures to keep a director like this working because he sure hasn't done anything else outside of that.
Playing the immortal (whether you like it or not) Jason Voorhees in "The Final Chapter" is Ted White, but you almost wouldn't know it since he had his name taken off the credits. Ted was selected for the role because he is a big guy (6' 4" were talking), and he said that only did this movie because he needed the money. I'm sure that a "Friday The 13th" movie is not something you want to put at the top of your resume, especially when you're playing a character whose face is hidden behind a hockey mask. But Ted, for what it's worth, your Jason was one of the best and certainly one of the most threatening in this never ending series. From what I heard, you were not at all happy about working on this one, but please don't think that this movie was a waste of your time. Remember, you could have been in "Jason X."
And of course, you have Harry Manfredini's music score which involves the endless wailing of woodwind instruments with the occasional trumpets and tubas blasting away at the climax of this endeavor. I wonder if there is any video of Harry conducting these scores with his orchestra. That would be a kick to see how he goes about conducting, let alone writing the score. I can see him telling the violinists to play all over the place, and that it won't matter if it sounds off key as long as its really creepy sounding.
Look, no one is ever gonna mistake any of the "Friday the 13th" movies for great cinema, but nobody goes in expecting that either. "The Final Chapter" certainly wasn't that, especially when you look into Tommy Jarvis' eyes in the final moment ("The Omen," eat your heart out). While this sequel is certainly dated stylistically, it actually holds up better than many of the others. This really was the last of this series that set out to be truly scary, and the series (for better and for worse) went downhill into comedy and pathetically ridiculous storylines.
"Friday The 13th Part IV: The Final Chapter" is a movie people will enjoy more than they ever care to admit. Call it a guilty pleasure if you will, but it is an entertaining one even if it "rots your brain" like others love to say. Any guy who tells you they hate these movies has got to be lying to a certain extent, especially when they are just going out the door to see the new "Saw" sequel.
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