Friday the 13th, Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan
Starring: Jensen Daggett, Scott Reeves
Director: Rob Hedden
Runtime: 96 minutes
Rating: R
I caught this the other night on Showtime Beyond, or Showtime Extreme, or Showtime Insomnia, and promptly remembered why this rates up there as one of my least favorite entries in the Friday the 13th series.
In a nutshell, a couple of kids are out on a boat that catches a power line that hits a submerged-under-Crystal Lake Jason Voorhees and the power line zaps some life back into everyone’s favorite hockey-mask wearing serial killer. Jason climbs aboard, kills the kids and the boat drifts out to sea. This is where I start scratching my head. Since when was Crystal Lake connected to the ocean in any way? Perhaps I missed a key plot point, but this seems hard to swallow. Nonetheless, Jason winds up on a boat full of kids who have just graduated from high school and the fun and frivolity ensues. One by one, Jason starts offing these overly annoying 20-something looking “teenagers” until the boat explodes and the survivors end up in Manhattan. As luck would have it, Jason is still hot their trail.
Now, usually Jason is following one certain person, for one reason or another, and in this one we learn that the female lead was apparently attacked by a young Jason when her evil uncle pushed her over the side of a boat in, of course, Crystal Lake in order to teach her to swim. I’m guessing Jason has a thing about leaving business unfinished. However, a SERIOUS flaw in the series continuity arises from this; It’s established over the course of the series that Jason should be at least in his forties by the time this movie takes place. However, the main girl is 17-18, remember she’s a just-graduated high school senior. In the flashback she looks to be eight or nine, so we’ll be generous and say ten years has passed. There’s no way that this girl could have been attacked by a young Jason who should have drowned sometime around 1960, give or take a year or two. Of course, it’s not the only timeline continuity error in the series, so we’ll let it slide.
The movie itself departs from the norm of the campgrounds/woods setting. 3/4ths of the film is on the boat, the remaining 30 minutes or so are actually in the city. There are a couple of funny parts while Jason stalks down the center of Times Square. He scares some street thugs by showing his disfigured face and admires the picture of a NY Rangers goalie. Funnier still is the fact that no one, and I mean NO ONE, gives this moldy, most likely stinky, huge hulking creature carrying a big knife and wearing a hockey mask a second glance! Then again, it IS New York we’re talking about.
I won’t give away the ending, but suffice it to say it’s bad. We’re used to seeing Jason get “killed” and we’re expecting it in this one, but director Rob Hedden gets creative with the movie’s ending which was, thankfully, totally forgotten and ignored in part 8.
All in all, it’s a decent slasher flick, but not up to snuff with the rest of the series.
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(This was originally posted on imboden.org back some time around 2002. My feelings on the movie haven’t changed in that time)