Vendredi 13, chapitre 4 : Chapitre final backdrop
Vendredi 13, chapitre 4 : Chapitre final poster

VENDREDI 13, CHAPITRE 4 : CHAPITRE FINAL

Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter

1984 US HMDB
avril 13, 1984

À Crystal Lake, Jason qu'on croit mort s'échappe de la morgue. Une famille s'installe dans leur maison de vacances, les enfants Trish et Tommy font connaissance avec Rob, un campeur. Or, Rob raconte à Trish qu'il est là pour venger sa sœur que Jason avait tuée, car il sait que Jason est revenu à Crystal Lake...

Réalisateurs

Distribution

👍 1 👎 🔥 🧻 👑 (1)

Commentaires

Commentaires (0)

Equipe

Production: Lisa Barsamian (Executive Producer)Frank Mancuso Jr. (Producer)Robert M. Barsamian (Executive Producer)
Scenario: Bruce Hidemi Sakow (Story)Barney Cohen (Screenplay)
Musique: Harry Manfredini (Original Music Composer)Charles Grenzbach (Music)
Photographie: João Fernandes (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Après le dernier massacre à Crystal Lake, le corps sans vie de Jason Voorhees est transporté à la morgue. Mais Jason n'est pas vraiment mort et, après avoir tué un ambulancier et une infirmière, il s'échappe de la morgue et se dirige à nouveau vers les bois. Près du lac vivent Trish, son frère Tommy et leur mère ; tandis que dans une maison voisine s'est installée une communauté de jeunes en vacances, prêts à faire la fête. Tous seront juste de la chair à canon entre les mains de Jason. "Vendredi 13 - Chapitre final" (sous-titre malin imposé par la distribution pour attirer un plus grand nombre de fans au box-office) commence exactement là où le troisième film s'était terminé : le cadavre de Jason est étendu dans le grenier avec une hache plantée dans le crâne. Ainsi, ce film, en tant que bon membre de la saga slasher la plus célèbre au monde, ne fait rien d'autre que donner aux fans de Jason ce qu'ils veulent, c'est-à-dire des garçons et des filles en pleine tempête hormonale, des bains nocturnes mortels dans le lac et une série de meurtres sanglants et brutaux à l'arme blanche. Malheureusement, pourtant, arrivés au quatrième chapitre, on a l'impression d'avoir assisté quatre fois au même film : des victimes toutes similaires d'épisode en épisode ; le même décor pour chaque film ; toujours une belle fille blonde comme seule survivante. Les producteurs auront certainement pensé que "l'équipe qui gagne ne se change pas", mais il faut aussi considérer que ce quatrième épisode est en quelque sorte un "Chapitre final", puisque, à partir du n°5, on tentera d'apporter des innovations à la saga, bien que avec peu de succès. Cette fois, à la réalisation, on trouve l'inconnu Joseph Zito, tandis que les effets de maquillage reviennent, après une absence de deux épisodes, au maître Tom Savini. Parmi le casting, on peut reconnaître un très jeune Corey Feldman, véritable bébé star des années 1980 (parmi ses films les plus connus "Les Garçons perdus" et "Les Goonies"), dans le rôle de Tommy et Crispin Glover (la trilogie "Retour vers le futur" ; "Charlie's Angels" ; "Willard") dans les habits d'une des victimes. "Vendredi 13 Partie 4" est peut-être le chapitre qui commence à montrer la faiblesse de la saga de Jason, se révélant trop similaire aux trois films précédents ; pourtant, pour chaque fan des exploits du géant avec le masque de hockey, il reste toujours un film savoureux.
👍 👎 🔥 🧻 👑

Commentaires

Commentaires (0)

Où Regarder

Streaming

Paramount Plus Paramount Plus
Paramount+ Amazon Channel Paramount+ Amazon Channel

Louer

Apple TV Apple TV
Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies

Acheter

Apple TV Apple TV
Amazon Video Amazon Video
Google Play Movies Google Play Movies

AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (4)

John Chard

John Chard

4 /10

You got the curse?

Well we all thought Jason was dead, as he is here taken to the morgue after being mortally killed... But of course he revives and sets about establishing that he is in fact an indestructible killing machine. I wouldn't want to be living near Camp Crystal Lake right now...

In truth it's a good old 1980s slasher pic, but that doesn't necessarily make it worthy to anyone outside of the hardiest of hardest Friday13th franchise fans. The kills and gore quotient are high, bloody and gooey, with the kills not lacking for invention, but plot formula is tired and weary. Crispin Glover makes for something of a curio appearance in the piece, whilst a young Corey Feldman rocks up for a bit of Damien Thorn channelling.

Some series fans love it whilst others abhor it. Question is? We know it wasn't to be the final chapter after all, so how does it hold up against the others that would follow it down the bloody intestine strewn path?

Gimly

Gimly

6 /10

Doesn't divert much from the formula of the first three films, but does add two new elements which I actually enjoyed. I am curious though, when they made this one, did they actually think that this was going to be the final chapter, or where they fully aware they were gonna keep beating that horse for decades to come?

Final rating:★★★ - I liked it. Would personally recommend you give it a go.

Wuchak

Wuchak

6 /10

Another entertaining sequel, better than Part III

The first two films are serious in nature with the expected antics of youths at camp, but the franchise introduced a campy element with Part III, which pretty much plagued the rest of the series until the reboot in 2009.

Released in 1984, "Part IV: The Final Chapter" is an exception as it thankfully omits the cartoonish elements of "Part III" and serves up another take on the same basic story. This time several youths go out to their parents' vacation home on Crystal Lake to party where they meet the sister & brother from a nearby house, Trish & Tommy Jarvis (Kimberly Beck and Corey Feldman). Then Jason attacks! There’s also someone at the lake hunting Jason for vengeance.

Like Part III, this film was shot on the West Coast instead of the East Coast, specifically Santa Clarita, CA, and nearby Topanga Canyon, which is 30 minutes south of Santa Clarita, as well as Zaca lake, about 150 miles northwest. The geography is obviously dryer and an all-around contrast to the first two films, but this won’t matter to most viewers.

As usual, the film features a nice assortment of females. This time out, there are no "minorities" like the previous movie; the ladies consist of five white girls and a winsome petite mother. Trish is my favorite, the best heroine yet (until the next film that is), followed by Samantha; but they all have their points of interest.

BOTTOM LINE: Despite its title, Part IV is far from the "Final Chapter." There would be four more sequels before the 80s even ran out! In any case, this is another entertaining segment in the series with a fresh assortment of characters and a new female protagonist. This sequel is notable for introducing the character of Tommy Jarvis and hinting at the lingering diabolic Voorhees spirit.

Like its predecessor, Part IV was shot in dry Southern Cal and Jason, with his iconic mask, is bigger and more imposing than in Part II. While the movie is a step up from Part III it's not as effective as the first two films, largely because of the uneventful mid-section and the rather lame portrayal of Jason in the last act, although his unmasked face is great.

The film runs 9l minutes and the uncut version 97 minutes.

GRADE: B-

JPV852

JPV852

7 /10

Liked this one a bit more than the last time I saw it, a bit slow at times but, at least compared with Part III, better characters, but has some good and gnarly kills (one in particular when Jason comes out of the water). The biggest knock is the bad editing (one scene has Jason killing Crispin Glover in the kitchen and later the girl Glover slept with in the bedroom before a shot back in the kitchen) and poor continuity (the appearance of the family's dog was most noticeable). However, still found this entry entertaining enough. 3.25/5

Avis fournis par TMDB