Vendredi 13, chapitre 6 : Jason le mort-vivant backdrop
Vendredi 13, chapitre 6 : Jason le mort-vivant poster

VENDREDI 13, CHAPITRE 6 : JASON LE MORT-VIVANT

Jason Lives - Friday the 13th Part VI

1986 US HMDB
août 1, 1986

Tommy Jarvis avait 10 ans lorsqu'il vint à bout de Jason, le meurtrier sanglant de Crystal Lake. À peine sorti de l'asile avec son ami Oz, il n'a qu'une obsession : récupérer le corps au cimetière et l'incinérer. Sous un violent orage, ils déterrent le cadavre, mais la foudre vient frapper le barreau de clôture que Tommy a plantée dans le corps de Jason suite à une crise de folie. En conséquence, Jason revient à la vie et tue Oz. Tommy court à la police pour les prévenir que Crystal Lake va basculer à nouveau dans la terreur car Jason est en marche... Le tueur, mangé par les vers, entreprend à nouveau de causer des ravages à Crystal Lake.

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Equipe

Production: Don Behrns (Producer)
Scenario: Tom McLoughlin (Screenplay)
Musique: Harry Manfredini (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Jon Kranhouse (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Plusieurs années après les événements survenus à Crystal Lake, Tommy Jarvis, celui qui a tué Jason Voorhees lorsqu'il était enfant, est encore hanté par l'idée que le monstre au masque de hockey ne soit pas vraiment mort ; ainsi, accompagné d'un ami, il se rend au cimetière de Crystal Lake pour s'assurer que le corps de Jason y est bien enterré. Mais un éclair frappe justement le corps en décomposition du tueur et le ramène à la vie. Ce sera de nouveau à Tommy de stopper la furie meurtrière de Jason. Le sixième volet de "Vendredi 13" voit le retour du légendaire Jason Voorhees après son absence dans l'épisode précédent. Une petite pause qui l'a rendu assurément plus énergique qu'avant, en effet ce sixième volet est celui qui consacre Jason à la véritable star du cinéma d'horreur, le rend immortel et le célèbre comme véritable icône pop des années 80 : il suffit de voir l'ouverture au style 007, avec Jason au centre d'un viseur, et la belle chanson d'Alice Cooper "The man behind the mask" qui accompagne le générique de fin, dédiée à notre héros. Pourtant, "Jason vit" est aussi le volet le plus maigre, stérile et narrativement simple de toute la saga : tout le film n'est qu'une succession de meurtres, liés à la course contre la montre de Tommy pour arrêter sa némésis Jason. Le personnage de Tommy, ici à sa dernière apparition, en plus d'être interprété par un autre acteur (le Tom Matthews de "Le Retour des morts-vivants"), a perdu toute dimension psychologique qu'il avait acquise entre le quatrième et le cinquième film : aucun trouble émotionnel, aucune ambiguïté de caractère, il apparaît simplement comme un jeune homme un peu obtus troublé par les charmes de la blonde, et bien trop éveillée, fille d'un shérif. La réalisation et le scénario (?) sont de l'anonyme Tom McLoughlin et les effets de maquillage semblent de bonne facture. En définitive, "Vendredi 13 Partie 6" est fluide et divertissant, mais aussi l'épisode qui démontre de manière plus explicite que cette saga est une pure opération commerciale visant à exploiter jusqu'à la moelle un personnage à succès comme Jason, sans même avoir besoin d'un scénario bien structuré. Adapté uniquement aux fans les plus acharnés de la série.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (4)

John Chard

John Chard

6 /10

Jason 6: Welcome To Camp Blood!

An absolute hoot of a addition to the Friday 13th franchise. As is often the way with the "Friday" sequels, you can talk to one horror fan and this is the worst of the bunch, talk to another and it's the best etc etc. There's a more airy touch here and it serves the formula well, which if the series' fans are honest, is a formula that was getting stale quite early in the chain, so any sort of new ideas or direction is most welcome.

After a glorious James Bond parody opens the credits sequence, accompanied by Harry Manfredini's superbly thunderous musical score, we get long running tormented character Tommy, here played by Thom Matthews, digging up Jason Voorhees' corpse so as to make sure the evil one is dead - oh and to kill him again. Enter a glorious Frankenstein homage (cheeky steal if you like) that sets us up for another round of stalk and dismember as Jason heads back to Camp Crystal Lake, which is now called Camp Forest Green!

The kills are not particularly inventive, but there's a real thud of humour about much of them. From an American Express Card to a bloody smiley face imprint, it's clear the makers have a glint in their eyes. We even get an early appearance from Tony Goldwyn, some four years before Ghost would make him a known name. Adding to the quality score, which BTW rattles around home cinema speakers lie a supernatural entity, is Jon Kranhouse's cinematography, which is gorgeous in colour lens selections. All that and you get an Alice Cooper soundtrack as well.

From joyful reanimation to a suitably watery finale, this part 6 delivers more than enough to almost make you rush out to rent part 7. Almost... 6.5/10

Gimly

Gimly

5 /10

Jason Lives is the Friday the 13th movie that starts injecting comedy into the franchise, which after 5 movies of more or less the same tone, is understandable. Prior entires have still had fun, but Part VI has multiple, actual jokes. This bugs a lot of people, but me? Not so much. It's definitely not the high point of the franchise, but I still would never skip this one during a marathon.

Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole.

Wuchak

Wuchak

7 /10

Jason lives again as a horrific zombie, plus Megan (Jennifer Cooke)

Released in 1986, "Jason Lives: Friday the 13th Part VI" is notable for being the premiere of the zombie Jason as his rotting corpse is resurrected in the prologue indirectly through the actions of Tommy Jarvis and a friend who recently got out of a mental institution. This prologue also shows that Tommy didn't murder Pam at the end of Part V and that he was simply experiencing hallucinations from his trauma with the diabolic Voorhees spirit. Another difference with Part VI is that we finally get to see a busload of kids, children, at Crystal Lake, although they changed the name to Forest Green. Tommy runs to the local police to inform them that Jason has been resurrected but the sheriff, of course, doesn't believe him (would you?). His hot daughter, Megan, is attracted to Tommy and, when the bloody body count rises, the sheriff realizes that Jason is indeed alive.

Tommy Jarvis is played by Thom Mathews rather than John Shepherd, who was excellent in Part V. Thom is a worthy replacement, but I prefer Shepherd's brooding charisma.

The film features one of the best Friday girls in Megan, played by Jennifer Cooke, although Pam from the previous film is my favorite. Other than that, though, the females in Part VI are rather weak, although the redhead in the Volkswagen is notable (Nancy McLoughlin).

The campiness of Part III and Part V returns for this installment, particularly with the goofy paintball warriors and the graveyard caretaker. But “Jason Lives” is noticeably superior to Part III and shares the kinetic vibe of Part V.

As far as locations go, Part VI returns to the East for filming, being shot roughly 40 miles East of Atlanta in Covington & Rutledge .

BOTTOM LINE: You either like the Friday the 13th series or you don't. Part VI is another retread of the same Friday formula with the entertaining spirit of Part V and the distinction of Jason now being totally inhuman, a horrific zombie; not to mention the addition of children at the camp. It also has a better story than parts III and IV with the sheriff and his daughter & Tommy going after Jason, plus Megan is one of the top Friday girls in the series.

The film runs 91 minutes and the cut version 86 minutes.

GRADE: B/B-

JPV852

JPV852

6 /10

Going through the F13 franchise again, skipping Part V since I just watched an online review (and remembered not caring for it much), and this one was... odd. Went full on with the cheese which makes sense since Jason is brought back to life through the dumb ass decision by Tommy Jarvis to not only dig up the grave but stabbing the corpse with an iron post, he was just asking for trouble (and running into the sheriff's office yelling like a psycho didn't help). I did like the female lead but everyone else, including Thom Matthews, was a bit bland. 2.75/5

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