Freddy vs. Jason
review by Cynthia
Fuchs, 15 August 2003
Humpin'
your leg
Over
ten years in the conceiving, the showdown between New Line's most
persistent franchise players proffers much slashing of skin and
spurting of blood. In the plainly titled Freddy vs. Jason,
Freddy Krueger (Robert Englund) doesn't even begin to let on that
maybe he's met his undeadish match in Jason Voorhees (played this
time out by Ken Kirzinger). Indeed, Freddy sets up the challenge,
sort of on purpose. Feeling "forgotten" since his last
outing (in New Nightmare) nine years ago, he schemes to
rekindle fear in the 'hood, by digging Jason out of his deathly
slumber and sending him round to carve up some naïve teens.
A
notorious egomaniac ("You are all my children now!"),
Freddy's annoyed that the current Elm Street residents are
blissfully ignorant of his rep. This is because the authorities
(cops and doctors) grabbed up any young people whose dreams he has
visited and committed them to a psych ward many miles out of town.
Here the kiddies play checkers and loll about in hospital pajamas,
downing dream-suppressing drugs and trying not to rile the guards.
That is, until young Will (Jason Ritter, son of John) glimpses a TV
news report (on station KRGR -- cute) of a murder at the home of his
first love, Lori (awesomely bosomed Monica Keena), that is, Freddy's
old place.
Though
Will hasn't seen her since they were both fourteen, as he's been
institutionalized for four years, he's determined to warn her; so he
and his buddy Mark (Brendan Fletcher) break out (much like Michael
Myers of that other slasher franchise, not owned by New Line) and
roar into town. When they start issuing dire warnings ("Coffee:
make friends with it!"), Lori and her best friends -- Kia
(Kelly Rowland) and Gibb (Katharine Isabelle, last seen gnawing on
her dates in Ginger Snaps) -- are suitably horrified, having
been at the crime scene the night before, but most everyone else
thinks these boys are nuts, having bought the party line laid down
by the intransigent sheriff (Garry Chalk) and Lori's snivelly ad
(Tom Butler), that what you don't understand must be repressed.
And
so, these poor kids do like Nancy's mom (the unforgettable Ronee
Blakeley) used to -- they self-medicate. So that you don't miss this
detail, they go so far as to organize a rave in the local cornfield,
complete with glow sticks and pickup trucks and homemade booze. High
and promiscuous: clearly, they must be punished. Jason arrives with
his sword, hacking through the corn stalks, and soon enough, yet
another generation of Elm Street teens arrive at the grim
realization that adults are useless when it comes to serial killers,
or anything else.
Initially,
Freddy's plan swims along: Jason doggedly marauds and Freddy feels
increasingly "stronger," more and more able to get inside
kids' dreams and torture them with the sorts of personalized horrors
that are his trademark. (To be fair, Jason has an inventive moment
of his own, when one of the ravers douses him with alcohol and sets
him and his weapon ablaze, such that he cuts through torsos and
heads with fiery aplomb.) The tack Freddy takes with Lori is
especially foul, as, in between snaking his tongue at her, he makes
clear his special interest in abusing little girls.
Their
dreary lives at stake, the kids catch on to these machinations
quickly; they then proceed to explain it to each other about four
times. (On seeing Jason act out at the rave, a stoner named Freeman
[Kyle Labine, apparently modeling his performance on Silent Bob's
Jay] discerns, "Dude! That goalie was pissed about
something!") Organizing themselves into a core, in-the-know
crew that includes one semi-adult, the ineffectual Deputy Stubbs
(Lochlyn Munro), they endeavor to fight back. Little do they know
that their puny lives are mere bagatelle compared to the King Kong
vs. Godzilla-like face-off, which is set in motion when Jason
decides (as much as the Cro-Magnon-ish Jason decides anything) to
keep killing kids on control-freaky Freddy's turf.
Their
extended smackdown begins inside Jason's own nightmare (that is,
Freddy's domain) and climaxes several times at Camp Crystal Lake
(Jason's). The transition is helped along by the kids, who reinvent
the wheel that Nancy (the much-missed Heather Langenkamp) figured
out back in 1984, that you can bring Freddy out of your nightmare
into the physical world, where rules of gravity and blood loss apply
to him. The plan is surely convoluted: suffice it to say that Lori
wrestles valiantly with Freddy while Kia is left to give
mouth-to-mouth to a drowning-in-his-dream Jason. Here, it's actually
hard to say which is worse: facing Freddy's acrobatic tongue or
Jason's incredibly yucky mouth.
The
battle lurches from giddy to lumbering to literal (if digitized)
pinball. Director Ronny Yu's staging is wild and wireworky, with
limbs flying and bodies smashing into various basement, hospital,
and construction site props, gooshy penetrations and even a massive
action-movie-style explosion. Amid such spectacular mayhem, the
generic badinage is rather at a disadvantage. Yet Kia manages to
dunk a few, likening one nerdy boy to "one of those f*ckin'
froo-froo dogs that keeps humpin' your leg" and telling off
Freddy: "What kind of faggot runs around in a Christmas
sweater?"
What
kind indeed? The predominant metaphor in Freddy vs. Jason is,
not so imaginatively, disease. Namely, Freddy is one and the adults
are quarantining kids instead of seeking a cure, treatment, or
inoculation. In this, the film is like its predecessors, assuming
the teens' point of view -- wary, fearful, rowdy, and stubbornly
hopeful in the face of all contrary circumstances.
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Directed
by:
Ronny Yu
Starring:
Robert Englund
Monica Keena
Kelly Rowland
Jason Ritter
James Callahan
Ken Kirzinger
Lochlyn Munro
Joshua Mihal
Written
by:
Wes Craven
David S. Goyer
Victor Miller
Damian Shannon
Mark Swift
Rated:
R - Restricted.
Under 17 requires
parent or adult
guardian.
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