Monday, September 27, 2010

Not Your Typical Friday Night

This is the first real post on REELapse. First of all, welcome. Kick your shoes off, crack a beer, and relax. This is how it will work. Until I decide to change it, which is likely. Each week I'll cover two films through two separate posts. Post One will examine the characters and their particular traits. Specifically, what do these personality traits and actions say about the times the films were made? Nudity and violence are covered here too. Post Two will cover themes and tone. What is the film trying to say and how is it saying it?

His Name Was (and still is) Jason...
This week REELapse tackles Friday the 13th. (1980 & 2009)Since Sean Cunningham's original Friday hit theaters Jason has returned to Crystal Lake 11 more times. And one field trip to Springwood, OH. Released nearly thirty years apart, there is much disparity in these films. Let's ask Jason and see what he has to say about those generations.

The last person to get an interview, Asian reporter Trisha Takanawa.
There Once Was a Little Boy
It all started with a little boy, a special boy, enjoying a swim in a lake. Jason couldn't swim and soon went down. So, too, did the lifeguard... on another horny teen counselor. Jason's mother returns and seeks vengeance by hacking up any teen with a taste for lust. Not true, though, in the new Friday. That story is no more than a quick flashback. A legend. A time long past. It's as if this generation didn't care for a story and skipped right to the cool gimmicky shit: Hockey mask (Part 3 in the Original series), Sack mask (part 2), machete (part 3), and basically admit Jason is undead. (part 5: Jason Lives) It's a sad time in film when so little is thought of the audience that the film is nearly void of story and filled with shadow figures and standard archetypes.

Blood and Boobs
Standard in a horror film. Friday the 13th owns it. Oddly enough, the reboot is much less sexual. More gratuitous, sure. The sexual connection between characters is lost to shallow sex intended for vengeance or out of boredom. In the 80's, Friday showed intimate scenes of summer love and crushes. At least then we were thinking about the characters, relating to them. Now it's hard to relate to the animals displayed on screen, just wandering around the woods and fucking until Jason hacks them up. The focus now becomes violence. In the original, the story included violence. Now the story is simply a vehicle for it. An exploitative gorefest.

So What's Good About the Remake?
Believe it or not, there are good things going on in the remake. Stay tuned for part 2 and a reason to grab a date, shut off the lights, and take a stroll through the new (and in some ways improved!) Camp Crystal Lake.

2 comments:

  1. Great tone. Nicely compartmentalized. Good foreshadow. I'm ready to roll with you on this one.

    BTW: check out your sidebar. It looks whacked. Also, consider offering a permanent link to your introductory post. Quick answers to "what the hell is this?" are important.

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  2. This is tight, love the imagery and the headlines are great as well. I Look forward to reading future posts as the month of October rolls in.

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