Sunday, July 8, 2012
Friday the 13th - Part 3 (1982)
There is something about the atmospheres of parts 1 and 2 that
still give me chills to this day. There’s a pronounced feeling of impending
doom that I’m sorry to say the third installment lacks. Sure, it’s set on the
usual clichéd “house in the middle of the country”-type setting, save for the
campgrounds of the introductory two films, giving us a change in scenery of
sorts to set up the Jason character in a deeper perspective. You can still feel
the sadness of Part 2 in the opening flashback sequence, but once the camera
looms down onto Jason with the machete stuck inside him and then we see
him take it out, you can’t help but feel inclined to scoff loudly. I mean
seriously, it just so happens Jason was strong enough and able to remove that
big ‘ol machete from deep inside his shoulder?
Now, let’s cut to the opening credits and that addicting disco
song. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not chastising it in any way. In fact, I love
that it oozes New Order’s “Blue Monday” – speaking in terms of the similarities
in percussion, drum programming, and throbbing synth bass line – from all sides
and love how eerily effective it really is. It was good enough to be a single
and surprisingly, can still hold its own this many years later. Not for
anything, but the theme on its own makes up the better part of the film.
So we all know the movie’s premise and that Jason gets his
trademark hockey mask in this installment and blah-blah-blah. That’s not what
I’d really like to talk about because as horror fans – especially of this
particular franchise – we know everything there is to know about them. We’ve
done research, we’ve gone to and read information on website upon website, and
we consider ourselves “pros” when it comes to trivia about these films. We know
the running-scenarios: The group’s encounter with a Crazy Ralph-esque loon on
their way to the campsite, the couple to have sex during the middle of the film
get the worst death(s) (Jack and Marcie, Jeff and Sandra and now Debbie and
Andy), the final girls’ boyfriend is always killed penultimately (Bill in part
1, Paul in part 2, and now Rick) and so on. Some of the murder sequences
in the film aren’t all that impressive, save Andy’s awesome
torso-split-by-a-machete demise. Vera’s arrow-to-the-eye death was fantastic,
also, but it loses a lot of clout due to the obvious wire that comes out from
the gun as it hurls toward her. The others are cookie-cutter and unimaginative
even with the whole 3D going on (Can you say “Rick’s obviously fake eye”?). And
usually I wouldn’t complain about something like this, but if I see a girl
taking a shower alone in a slasher film, I do expect to see her slashed to
bits, especially if the one-sheet hanging in the theater suggests it.
I wish that I could have seen this in its anaglyphic 3D version
when it was first released. There is something about the standard “blue and
red” 3D version on the deluxe edition DVD that just doesn’t do it for me. When
it was first released, I sat down in front of a big-screen television and
popped this in the player, slid on my 3D glasses and held my breath because I
was finally going to see this the way it was meant to be seen. Or so I thought.
Jason didn’t even get past Higgin’s Haven before I switched over to the
original 2D version. I was disappointed, but at least it was available in 3D
period.
So why is it that I’m not awed by this one? I could sit here all
night and point out every reason but we won’t go there. The ones that bug me
the most though, are the so-called “backstory” between Chris and Jason. Her
monologue to Rick as she recounts her nightmare encounter with Mr. Voorhees has
got to be one of the most laughable in horror history. It’s so over-acted, it’s
so inane and so unbelievable that you have no choice but to buy it. So was
Jason following her? Is that why he showed up and recognized her enough to lift
up his mask and make sure she knew who he was at the film’s finale? Was there
more to their relationship than she led on? Because I’d like to know more about
the alternate ending that was never used. You know, the one where Jason beheads
her? I have this idea that Jason knew Chris more than she was willing to admit.
That would explain why she is so terrified of him to the point of madness. But,
this is only my opinion. They should have put the stills of this ending on the
DVD so everyone could see it and make their own decision of which one could
have/would have been better. Because this whole
“let’s-copy-the-first-ending-but-replace-Jason-with-Mrs.-Voorhees-and-maybe-nobody-will-notice”
ending really stinks, let’s be honest. To me, it felt like a cop out. As if the
ending was thrown together because maybe the Chris-gets-her-head-chopped-off
ending wasn’t going to work? Or would it have worked so well that the heads at Paramount didn’t want to risk it and
order the generic re-tread of the first film’s scare the green light?
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