We head to Austin, Texas for a look at Platinum Dunes latest horror remake
Here's the deal. It's a new
Friday the 13th. We've seen and spoken to Jason. Live and in person. It was a lot of fun. And we can't wait to share the bulk of our set visit with you. But for now, that information is under lockdown. So, we offer an excerpt from our upcoming coverage of this exciting new chapter in the Crystal Lake saga:
Last Friday, we were invited to the set of Marcus Nispel's new
Friday the 13th film, which is being produced by Brad Fuller and Andrew Form of Platinum Dunes. This is the same team that resurrected Leatherface for 2003's
The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, and they are now looking to put just the right spin on this legendary slasher flick. From the look of the mask, to the machete, to the script, this is going to be one of the best
Friday the 13ths ever committed to celluloid. And they have certainly picked the right performer to portray the vicious man-child that is Jason Voorhees. For the first time in his career, actor-turned-stuntman Derek Mears is donning that iconic hockey mask and taking to the woods for a little bit of his trademark teen chopping antics.
During our visit, we spoke with both Brad and Andrew and they seemed quite excited to share their ideas behind this new
Friday the 13th with us. What we saw looked super awesome. They wanted us to know that this isn't an origin story. It isn't a flat out remake of the first
Friday the 13th either. Its sort of a combination of the first four films all sewn together (sort of like Jason's Frankenstein jacket). Jason is grown, and mommy Pamela will only be appearing in flashbacks. Voorhees lives in the woods, feeding off of raccoons and using a series of underground tunnels to seemingly get ahead of his victims. He starts off the movie with a bag on his head, ala 1981's
Friday the 13th Part 2. He will later trade it up for the hockey mask. The how and why this happens is explained in great, gruesome detail throughout the course of the film's plot.
The tone here will be lighter than the previous Platinum Dunes offerings. While Jason doesn't torture his victims, he does kill them in gloriously brutal fashion. There will be thirteen on-screen deaths in all. And they are each new twists on old kills seen in the previous
Friday flicks. Both Andrew and Brad promised that this latest effort would end on a pretty sound note. Despite what has been said in the past, they are not trying to set it up as a franchise. Their
Friday the 13th comes to a logical conclusion that does not leave Jason tied to a chain at the bottom of Crystal Lake, or see him turning into a child that is flushed into the sewer system. If there is one film they could compare it to, it would be
First Blood. Because Jason comes on a lot like John Rambo, all Meta in the woods and ready to right the wrongs that have been forced upon his head.
About the "sex equals death" metaphoric scenario that is so much apart of this particular franchise's mythology? It's still here, but we won't see anyone getting knifed while they bone a pretty co-Ed. Apparently, sex and violence together in one go is something the MPAA frowns upon. So it will go something like this: Sex, death, drugs, beer, sex, death. The end. There are a lot of stoners in the movie. At this point in filming, they are all dead. I guess they couldn't pull themselves off the couch to save their skin. As Brad Fuller tells it, "We are doing everything we're not supposed to be doing here!" It's pretty obvious that they are going to break some of this particular genre's rules.
Friday the 13th will open February 13th, 2009. Stay tuned for our full on-set coverage. We saw Jason smash a guy's head through a window. You are not going to want to miss it.
64 Comments
This crap is killing me!
And writer/director David Koepp of "Secret Window" desperately wanted an 'R' rating to attract a larger audience, but the studio felt that since Depp had more of a teenage fanbase, that it should be age appropriate, which didn't please Koepp in the slightest. And it affected the overall box office turnout, hence the 'PG-13' rating. (but once again, still a great movie).
And good point about the "zombie" aspect of Jason Marcus. (though you said it a couple pages back [this story really took off fast!]) I too wouldn't like the movie to just be another 'zombified Jason' slicing & dicing stoners and lovers. THAT will DEFINITELY kill the already mostly bad series for me. Not that I care, since I wasn't a big fan to begin with.
on a side note
iamvidicated, i just wanted to say that im really diggin the new pic that shows all those cheesburgers and swiss cake rolls hanging over your belt.
Thank you for pointing out that I was using examples and probing ideas.
And I guess I'm a sucker for things that I'd like to see? lol okay? When I was in Jr. High, I talked about how they should make an X-Men movie with my friend, and we would basically cast the different characters who were fitting at the time etc. I remember saying 3 years ago I would die a happy man if they made these 4 movies...Bill & Ted 3, G.I. Joe, and Ghostbusters 3, and Transformers. So far one has been made and was my favorite movie of '07 (Transformers). And the other on it's way (G.I. Joe) even though some of the pics are sceptical, I'm still having high hopes lol. If they made giant alien robots look cool, G.I. Joe should have no excuses if the movie sucks lol.
Secondly it's spelled RASPBERRY, I've no idea what a Raseberry is.
Making Friday The 13th: The Legend Of Camp Blood
by David Grove
The definitive history of the world's most popular horror film franchise! Fresh light on a cinematic phenomenon that's still going strong a quarter of a century after its debut, this an exhaustive detailing of all eleven Friday the 13th films, including * detailed production histories of each film * rare anecdotes * scores of previously unseen photos from private collections * hundreds of rare interviews featuring, among others, Kevin Bacon, Wes Craven, Sean S. Cunningham, Robert Englund, Adrienne King, Betsy Palmer and Tom Savini * iconography, including Jason, the hockey mask, and a body count in the hundreds
This is just stupid!!!
The Re-make of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" was all about blood and guts and a silly back story on Leatherface which was just stupid....the "ORGINIAL" "Texas Chainsaw Massacre" didn't need all the blood and guts to tell a scary story....!!!!!!
I beileve I lost all respect for the Re-Make of "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" when the hitchiker commited sucide...that was by far the dumbest and most over-the-top moment in the whole film...besides the silly backstory of Leatherface!!
When you give a back-story you kill things that you can imagine or that you could invent which is more scary than seeing it sitting in your lap!!!
The Re-Make of "Halloween" was another joke onto itself!!! Worst film of 2007!! Rob Zombie should have gotton a Raseberry Award for "WORST" director!!!
Why must Hollywood continue to churn out these worthless remakes? Has Rob Zombie ever actually seen Halloween? I wish that I could find the words to describe how bad this film is. I really did try to get behind it, despite how much I hate remakes. I was let down. Hard.