Watched: 03/13/2026
Format: Prime
Viewing: First
Director: Tom McLoughlin
JAL texted me at the end of the work day on Friday and said "You have to watch Friday the 13th Part VI. It will make you miss Showplace 6".
I was more likely to go see Mad Max: Beyond Thunderdome at Showplace 6 than a horror movie during the window he and I were hitting the family owned theater in North Austin, but I get it. The place was there for us during a crucial period of movie-going. It was the kind of theater that welcomed kids, did not ask if we were 17 before letting us into Rated-R movies, and always had Spree as an option for candy.
As stated *last* Friday the 13th when we watched the first Friday the 13th movie, these movies were never part of my canon. I've not really spent time with them. But after watching two of them, I *do* have a pitch for a new one, which I'll share at the end.*
I guess in the 4th movie, they killed Jason? Like, fer reals? Which - this is where I found out Jason wasn't previously a magical kill zombie? You learn new things all the time. It seems the fifth movie was about the Corey Feldman character, now played by someone else, becoming the killer? And that went over like a lead balloon, so they re-cast the character *again*, ignored his murderous tendencies and made him the focal character for this installment as Jason is reborn from a lightning strike (it makes sense in the moment).
Anyway - rejuvenated and feeling fancy free, Jason spends the day killing everyone he can find in what feels like a highly populated recreational forest area. I mean, he is just finding new victims hither and yon.
There's absolutely nothing *scary* in this movie - it's like watching an NES side-scroller play-through of Jason killing people. But it does have good set pieces, the best of which is the Winnebago stuff.
But, man, does it look like everyone making this movie is having fun. Even the prop department. There's a "well, we tried" fake head that rolls out of a truck. And someone was very good at a very particular blood splatter pattern we see performed like five times.
This is the stuff that drove moral crusaders nuts in the 1980's that teens knew was just a good time, and has subsequently been absorbed into the popular consciousness to such a degree *no one bothers to talk about horror movies as being a problem anymore*.
Is the movie good? No. Is it fun? Yes. It has no artistic aspirations, and wants to say nothing other than "this goon in a mask will murder you good", and sometimes that's all you need, I guess. But we're past trying to scare anyone here, just get hoots and hollers from the audience as an assortment of folks are dispatched in a series of creative ways.
It does make me wonder what Jason does during his downtime.
*I think you could make a good Friday the 13th as a sort of Road Runner or Tom and Jerry cartoon, with Jason trying to get Natasha Lyonne as our Final Girl, and there's lots of 4th wall breaking
















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