Vendredi 13, chapitre 2 : Le Tueur du vendredi backdrop
Vendredi 13, chapitre 2 : Le Tueur du vendredi poster

VENDREDI 13, CHAPITRE 2 : LE TUEUR DU VENDREDI

Friday the 13th Part 2

1981 US HMDB
mai 1, 1981

Alors qu'on le croyait mort noyé au fond de Crystal Lake, Jason Vorhees revient se venger du sort réservé à sa mère. Après avoir assassiné Alice, seule survivante du premier opus, il massacre les innocents campeurs présents, puis doit faire face à Ginny, dotée de pouvoirs psychiques, et son ami Paul.

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Equipe

Production: Tom Gruenberg (Executive Producer)Lisa Barsamian (Executive Producer)Steve Miner (Producer)
Scenario: Ron Kurz (Screenplay)
Musique: Harry Manfredini (Original Music Composer)
Photographie: Peter Stein (Director of Photography)

CRITIQUES (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Cinq ans après le massacre survenu à Crystal Lake, certains jeunes décident d'établir un camp d'entraînement pour moniteurs de camping juste à côté du sinistre camp de sang. Mais immédiatement, les jeunes protagonistes deviennent les victimes de la furie meurtrière de Jason Voorhees, un psychopathe fou cru noyé à la suite d'un accident survenu vingt-cinq ans plus tôt, justement à Crystal Lake. Après le énorme succès public de "Vendredi 13", déjà un an plus tard, son suite arrive dans les salles, intitulé de manière inexplicable en Italie "L'assassino ti siede accanto". Cunningham cède le témoin de la réalisation à l'un des producteurs exécutifs du premier épisode, Steve Miner, qui désormais se consacrera plus souvent au genre horreur. Comme il était logique de prévoir, cette suite ne s'éloigne pas beaucoup du prototype, reprenant la même structure de film slasher et un intrigue presque identique, peut-être osant un peu plus sur les scènes de nudité et sur celles de sang. Les meurtres, déjà comme dans le premier film, sont plutôt imaginatifs (attention pourçà: un couple d'entre eux sont pratiquement identiques à ceux déjà vus dans "Réaction en chaîne" de Mario Bava!) et justement chorégraphiés, même si manque le toucher de Savini dans l'élaboration des prothèses. Élément fondamental de "L'assassino ti siede accanto" est l'introduction de Jason comme méchant de la saga, même si pas encore vêtu de son look célèbre, en effet ici à la place du masque de hockey caractéristique, il porte, pour couvrir le visage défiguré, un sac avec un seul trou pour voir et il est vêtu d'une salopette et d'une chemise à carreaux de bûcheron. De plus, une explication possible à la furie meurtrière de Jason est donnée: le massacreur de Crystal Lake est un enfant piégé dans le corps d'un adulte qui ne connaît pas la valeur de la vie et sa frontière avec la mort, donc pour lui tuer n'a pas une valeur tragique et irréversible, au point qu'il conserve la tête décapitée de sa mère dans un autel avec l'espoir de sa résurrection. "Vendredi 13 Partie 2" est une bonne suite, riche en tension et avec le mérite d'avoir porté à l'écran l'un des boogeymen les plus célèbres de l'histoire du cinéma.
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AVIS DE LA COMMUNAUTÉ (4)

Gimly

Gimly

6 /10

Friday the 13th creators couldn't have known what they were about to unleash in the now-infamous Jason Voorhees, and even though Part 2 is certainly not the strongest example of the character, it was the first time we got to really see him do his thing, and that's huge.

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

Wuchak

Wuchak

8 /10

Serious retread of the first film with some differences

I'm fan of the "Friday the 13th" franchise even though I’m not a gorehound and only occasionally watch slasher flicks. It has nothing to do with nostalgia since I didn't become a fan until I I saw 1985's "Friday the 13th Part V: A New Beginning" on TV one night. I think I like these movies because they typically involve young people in a fun camp-type environment in the woods; the presence of an unstoppable killer, who increasingly becomes a hideous monster over the course of the series, adds an air of danger and suspense. Include scores of gorgeous females and various filming locations around North America and you have a fabulously entertaining franchise.

Released in 1981, one year after the first film, "Part II" is basically a retread with different characters, a different killer and a different camp on the same lake, not far from "Camp Blood," i.e. Camp Crystal lake. In reality, the film was shot on an entirely different location; specifically Kent, Connecticut.

It's interesting how none of the films were shot at the same location even though, typically, the location in the story is the general vicinity of Camp Crystal Lake. The locations of the films in the series include northern New Jersey (I), Connecticut (II), Southern Cal (III, IV, V & IX), Georgia (VI), Alabama (VII), British Columbia (VIII & XI), New York City (VIII), Toronto (X & XI) and Texas (XII).

It's the camp-like settings of most of the franchise and the unrelenting monster that is Jason Voorhees that especially sets "Friday the 13th" apart from similar franchises.

Concerning the tone, the first two films are serious in nature with the expected antics of youths on vacation in the woods, but the series introduced a campy element in Part III, which plagued several subsequent entries (V, VI, IX & X) until the reboot in 2009. Not that I'm complaining much, as these films are only quasi-believable anyway; still, I prefer the serious tone. Speaking of which, the only thing questionable about the first film, as far as realism goes, is how the killer is able to throw an adult corpse through a window or hang a body from a door, etc. But I suppose these things can be attributed to the powerful psycho Voorhees gene (or the demon thing disclosed in 1993’s “Jason Goes to Hell”).

Many people find these films scary and shocking and the first two movies have some chilling atmospherics, some of the others as well, but, with the exception of the 2009 reboot, I don't find these movies particularly scary. They're sometimes creepy, sometimes suspenseful, sometimes exciting and always fun & entertaining, but not scary. In fact, I usually bust out laughing at the inevitable death scenes. There are numerous jump-scares, of course, but that's not what I'm talking about.

Part II doesn't overstay its welcome at a mere 87 minutes. It introduces the adult Jason Voorhees, but he's noticeably smaller in stature and more human than in later sequels. A couple of times the main protagonist, Ginny (Amy Steel), is able to deter him fairly easily (like opening a car door or kicking him in the groin). Speaking of Ginny, she's a fine heroine in the manner of Alice in the first film and Pam in Part V. Kirsten Baker plays the requisite hottie, Terry, and the filmmakers don’t fail to highlight her beauty. Unfortunately, the ambiguity of the ending is inexplicable.

GRADE: A-

(If you wonder why I rate a film like this so highly, I'm grading it according to what it is: a slasher flick. No genre is beyond redemption or above contempt and this one delivers the goods).

JPV852

JPV852

8 /10

Since I already watched the first film last month, decided in celebration of the day, re-watched Part 2 and still highly entertaining though pretty tame by today's standards. Thought the cast was also a bit better than the first. Still has scenes that make little sense (how exactly did Jason find Alice?) but was fun nevertheless. 3.75/5

CinemaSerf

CinemaSerf

5 /10

You'd have thought that after the antics of "Jason" first time around, the last thing anyone with a brain would want to do is open a new camp next door to that site! Well, yes - a mere five years later that's precisely what happens. A camp for trainee counsellors is established and it isn't long before there are a few too many meals going begging at the end of the day. Could "Jason" have survived? Is he back on his murderous trail again? Well sadly, that is the extent of the jeopardy here as the story now falls rather neatly into some rather predictable tram lines with a before, middle and ending - except the latter is clearly just a comma, rather than a full stop. The jump moments might have been more effective had the cast been more convincing, but all the yelling and hysteria - even in the dark and eerie woods - fails to engender any sense of peril, It's just annoying and the score from Harry Manfredi doesn't really help much either. Betsy Palmer reprises her role as "Mrs Voorhees" as does Adrienne King as "Alice" but they don't really add much and by the midpoint I was bored. This is just a sequel nobody really needed.

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