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Jason X
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Directed by James Isaac.
Popular bogeymen Jason Voorhees terrorizes a group of nubile astronauts five centuries into the future in this sci-fi update of the Friday the 13th franchise. Early in the 21st century, Jason (actor/stunt man Kane Hoddar, filling the role for a fourth time) is experimented upon by army technocrats who hope to turn his supernatural invulnerability into a military application. Most of them meet a swift and bloody end -- except Rowan (Lexa Doig), a beautiful functionary, who traps the killer in a cryogenic stasis chamber. Unfortunately, she takes a machete blow in the process, gets frozen herself, and wakes up on a spaceship in the year 2455. The earth has long since been rendered uninhabitable, but the survivors include a group of archaeological students headed by Professor Lowe (Jonathan Potts), who hopes to make a quick buck by selling the corpse of the historical serial killer. The kids re-animate Rowan with the help of nanotechnology. Little do they know that a mere thaw job is enough to resuscitate Jason and reawaken his bloodthirst. Soon, the comely students and their space-marine protectors are being dispatched one by one. Help arrives in the form of a holographic chamber and an android named Kay-Em 14 (Lisa Ryder). Soon, though, Jason himself gets an upgrade -- just as the spaceship is getting ready to self-destruct. The tenth installment in the long-running horror series, Jason X was the first new entry to appear in almost a decade. In fact, the previous film, 1993's Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday, was one of two installments whose titles erroneously contained the word "final." ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
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notkevinbaconnotkevinbacon Re: Re-makes.......
by notkevinbacon in HORROR MOVIES 101
disliked it.
"I agree that a majority of remakes suffer from uninspired thinking and lack of creativity. With horror movies (see also sci-fi, action, comedy) there is the abilty to create a brand. Brands in dramas are rarer but they exist (i.e. Godfather Trilogy) Most of these remakes we see now I can only assume were brewed in some cavernous boardroom with movie producers bargaining and bidding on horses named "Texas Chainsaw Franchise"and "Halloween Money Machine." It becomes soley a business deal. They are buying likeliness and iconic horror villians with familar stories. Now, for me to say that this is an unethical practice that rips the artistic rug out from beneath fright flicks would be ridiculous. Even though they aren't all winners I love the Friday the 13th movies (OK, well Part 8 and Jason X are both hard to watch because they're just awful), same goes for Nightmare on Elm street, Hellraiser, etc. Even though I am not the biggest fan of the Saw franchise... I saw a preview ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Worst of 2002
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"Let's pretend for a moment that movies such as Snow Dogs and The Hot Chick don't exist. The Washington City Paper tried to this year, devoting coverage to films that seemed a little more worthy, a little less my-cousin-in-law wrote-a-script-ish, and therefore spared me hours of boredom. But just as parents can't ever fully protect their kids from the bad people of the world, my editors couldn't save me from all of the bad movies of 2002. Here's an abbreviated list of bottom-scrapers that Oscar will snub for a bunch of very good reasons: Rollerball: There's a subtext of international conspiracy and a point at which things inexplicably go green--though you might assume it's just your reaction to watching two-years-running worst-of-lister Chris Klein. Big Trouble: A Get Shorty wannabe with airport bombs, a Martha Stewart-headed dog, and not a trace of Dave Barry's humor--which is odd, given that it's based on a Dave Barry novel. Slackers: High-sc ... " [More]
MovieBabeMovieBabe Jason X
by MovieBabe in MovieBabe Blog
hasn't rated it.
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"The most horrifying part of Jason X, which takes place way in the post-Voyager future, is the mention that hockey was outlawed in the year 2024--just one of Jason's many unfunny jokes and yet another reason why I hated this tedious, not at all scary, stupid stupid movie. Let me be clear: Jason X is not so bad it's good. (If you and your friends are looking for quality cheap slasher entertainment, rent Bones.) Instead, this sequel too quickly falls into a dull formula of lather, rinse, repeat (and repeat, and repeat, and repeat) that can be summarized with three phrases: "You're perfectly safe," whenever J seems to be contained; "Get outta here!" spoken breathily from current victim to panicked next; and "My God, what now?" after the ever-dwindling assembled think once again that they're rid of the lumbering, zombified "killing machine" but then find evidence otherwise. The story behind this 10th chapter is that serial killer Jason Voorhees (Kane Hodder, but does it ... " [More]
Review by All Movie Guide
All Movie Guide
disliked it.
Like any business, a B-grade horror franchise needs occasional investment in its infrastructure in order to stem the tide of ever-lessening returns. And so, following the success of Halloween: H20, the Friday the 13th series gets its own renovation. With a splashy-enough concept and ad campaign to lure big audiences the week before Spider-Man took summer 2002 by storm, Jason X is certainly a far cry better than most of the pitiable late-'80s installments in the series. But in its willingness to poke fun at both itself and the other movies from which it cribs, the flick isn't a whole lot different from 1993's Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday. The best sequences are therefore the jokiest, and also, coincidentally, the most indebted to Star Trek. In the first, a female Mr. Spock/Data hybrid suddenly sprouts bondage gear and Charlie's Angels attitude. In the second, Jason, trapped on an imitation Holodeck, gets to party like it's 1980 at the expense of retro-bimbo phantasms. Elsewhere, it's all bland teen sex-comedy rejects in sub-Lost in Space costumes getting sliced and diced with ruthless efficiency. Despite the presence of a character named Dallas, the film never achieves a single moment of actual Alien-style terror. As for enjoyable gore, there are some inventive assassinations, such as the use of liquid nitrogen to render a human head into a blood Popsicle. Aside from the intentional laughs, there are some accidental ones, including an android beheading too cheap to make use of even a single digital FX shot to make it look convincing. It's as if, having blown their entire budget on post-Seven opening credits and Resident Evil character concepts, the producers had to scrimp when it came to the actual movie. Still, a thoroughly slick Friday the 13th just wouldn't gel with the rest of the series; it's enough to know that someone somewhere was willing to put enough time and money into a Jason flick to infuse it with even a modicum of cool. ~ Brian J. Dillard, All Movie Guide
 



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