And so we continue our adventure through the Friday the 13th franchise.
We have a new director at the helm, Steve Miner who would direct both this movie and the next one and would eventually go on to direct one episode of The Gates, a show I really enjoyed so of course it got cancelled, amongst many other things.
It wasn't quite the box office smash that the original was but it was still a hit. What it was however, was even more panned by critics. Mainly for just how generic and clichéd this film was apparently. The critics claimed that Friday the 13th just wasn't doing anything new any more. I guess that doesn't matter to me though, I love the slasher genre, clichés and all. So what did I think? Well let's dig in!
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You see, it's hard for me to express my point without clips but this a text review, not a video review so I'll try my best to explain. While in practice Part 2 is just one long retread of the first movie, in narrative however it has a lot of world building and development for the Friday the 13th universe. Most of this is told through dialogue and not really shown, which is where the messy comes in, because take away those lines of dialogue you basically have the same movie again, add them back in and you have a proper sequel, so it's weird. We learn that Jason's body was never recovered, so no one can truly say if he really drowned or not leading to urban legends of him living in the woods as some kind of monster, eventually seeing his mother beheaded and going on a warpath for vengeance - the characters discuss the reality of all this, if Jason was real what would he be like? And this goes by slasher real, rather than reality real, it is still an interesting bit of depth added, this sense of reality gives the film bigger impact.
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Our new final girl is Ginny...I knew so little about her by the end of the movie...I can't really say anything about her. Once again though we learn enough to know she isn't your classic final girl. She is once again not 'virginal', she joins in with everyone else (although admittedly to a limited degree) and she is once again pretty feminine. At least the slasher is a man this time, so we can talk about the whole gender crisis thing or whatever - well you can, I do enough of that crap in my lectures and essays.
Part 2 is much more about the atmosphere, than it is about the gory kills - which is probably for the best since the kills don't look much better than they did in the first movie, despite having a year on that film and twice the budget. However I do recognise that this will probably put off more hardcore slasher fans, I mean Part 2 certainly has slasher elements but it isn't as much as a by the numbers slasher like the original was.
Part 2 has drastically improved pacing, this time there is really a sense at all times that a killer is stalking our protagonists which actually gives that sense of rising dread the first film lacked. Even when nothing is happening, here you know the killer is out there, waiting for strays to break away from the pack so they can pick them off. It doesn't feel nearly as random this time, it feels planned out. And yes, the characters in the film may catch up to the audience later than Alice did in the first film but here so many characters are still alive at this point, it doesn't feel like they catch up right at the last minute.
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The larger cast of characters sadly isn't in the films favour however, it tries to define and develop some of them but this is largely just window dressing, a way to pad out the film and waste our time. Very few of the characters do anything of value or have anything of depth about them and this wouldn't be a problem but the film doesn't seem to want to admit or accept that 99% of the cast are just there to die. There is a surprising amount of character development in this movie but it all amounts to be completely pointless because the cast is much too big to give both them and the slasher a chance to do something. Maybe if the film was longer this'd give the deaths more impact because I'd know the people dying but instead I just start to learn about them and then they die and that doesn't work, it just wastes time. Slashers always work better with a smaller cast, who are able to each have a direct impact on the story and still be there to be ultimately killed off.
So do I recommend it? Part 2 is a frustrating film, because it both fixes all the problems I had with the first film but then brings a load of new ones of its own. Honestly if they had made the cast smaller and not tried to overcomplicate everything this could have been a great movie, as it stands it's certainly better than the original but is still only really a 'good movie'. I mean there is nothing wrong with that but I don't know...I guess I just expected more from this 'classic' franchise, it isn't impressing me yet, not really.
Think About It!
-Locke
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