Product Details
Jason Goes to Hell

Jason Goes to Hell
From New Line Home Video

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Product Description

Scare yourself into purgatory as the body count continues. The relentless, hockey-masked killer Jason Voorhees returns for more bloody cranage in this ninth chapter of the frightfully successful Friday the 13th series. Year: 89 Director: Adam Marcus Starring: John D. LeMay, Kari Keegan, Erin Gray

DVD Features:
Audio Commentary
DVD ROM Features
Interactive Menus
Other
Theatrical Trailer


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #15755 in DVD
  • Brand: Jason
  • Released on: 2002-10-08
  • Rating: R (Restricted)
  • Aspect ratio: 1.85:1
  • Formats: Anamorphic, Closed-captioned, Color, DVD, Widescreen, Dolby, DTS Surround Sound, NTSC
  • Original language: English
  • Subtitled in: English
  • Number of discs: 1
  • Running time: 87 minutes

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
Blow mad killer Jason Voorhees to smithereens in the opening sequence of the movie? Sorry, folks, you have to do better than that. Jason's evil spirit finds its way into a series of host bodies, thus continuing the carnage at Crystal Lake, in Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday. Naturally, part 9 is not the final Friday the 13th movie (no big deal: part 4, you'll recall, was titled The Final Chapter). Jason confronts a long-lost sister at the lake, while the usual assortment of naked teens are dispatched. This one tries to vary the formula a bit but ends up with a story line every bit as nonsensical as those that came before. The final sequence tries to put Jason away for keeps and calls upon the demons of hell for support. The last shot is an outrageous joke, which is perhaps what this franchise deserves. --Robert Horton

DVD features
The DVD contains both the R-rated and unrated versions of the picture, plus a commentary track with director Adam Marcus and screenwriter Dean Lorey, during which the two friends chortle frequently about the movie. Among the revelations: series producer Sean S. Cunningham asked them to get rid of Jason's hockey mask once and for all. --Robert Horton


Customer Reviews

3 Stars for the movie itself, 4 Stars for the DVD4
Elizabeth Marcus (Julie Michaels) is being chased through the woods by Jason. Typical Friday The 13th movie, right? Wrong. A bunch of bright lights flash on, startling Jason. The FBI comes out of hiding and shoot Jason numerous times. In fact, Kane Hodder, as Jason, had the most squibs ever on an actor. Jason is then blown to smithereens, causing body parts to go flying. It's a pretty cool opening sequence, but how are they going to finish the movie?

Jason's tattered remains are being examined by a professional. The man is hypnotized by Jason's black heart so much so that he eats it (there's some interesting acting). This brings the spirit of Jason into him. He continues to go from body to body, searching for his living family members (his sister, his niece, and his niece's baby). If he can get one of them to host his spirit, he will be reborn with into his old body, complete with mask and all.

He switches bodies multiple times throughout the movie, which is kind of cool. The downside of this is that there aren't many scenes with Jason as Jason -- that is, Kane Hodder as Jason. This is his third of four times playing Jason in a row. Hodder does have a short appearance as an FBI agent, but he gets killed.

The ending is pretty lame with the 'heart creature' and the giant hands from Hell. However, the sequence right before the credits is very exciting. I won't spoil it for those who haven't seen it, but let's just say that there's a very special cameo.

Aside from the cameo I just mentioned, there are some other interesting appearances. The book in the old Voorhees house is the Book Of The Dead from the Evil Dead movies. Additionally, the dagger used to kill Jason was the same daggeer used in Evil Dead. This didn't have anything to do with the movie, but it was cool that they used the same props.

This movie leaves many unanswered questions. Why does a movie titled Jason Goes To Hell never have a scene in Hell? How did Jason come back from the ending of the eighth movie? If the bounty hunter has been chasing Jason for his entire life, why doesn't he show up until the eighth installment? How did he find out how to kill Jason? More importantly, why is he even after Jason? Why was Jason's family never mentioned before this? Oh well, it's a movie. It's bound to have some plot holes.

On the plus side, there is actually some character development here, which most Friday The 13th movies lack. People are actually in relationships and have lives until Jason interrupts.

It was interesting to see how New Line went in a different direction with this film. The didn't do the same 'campers getting killed in the woods' thing, although they did include a few camper deaths in the movie, which was a good idea on their part. Let's face it: people complained about the lack of that, but if they would have done the same old plot again, people would have complained about it being boring and unoriginal.

The DVD is pretty good for this movie. It has some cool special features. One of those is the funny commentary from director Adam Marcus and screenwriter Dean Lorey, both of whom play small roles in the movie. They poke fun and make jokes but also tell interesting facts, so it's entertaining. Other features include alternate scenes from the television version, the original theatrical trailer, and jump to a death. The only thing missing would be a cool 'making of' segment.

The best part about the DVD is that it contains both the R-rated version and an unrated director's cut. The R-rated version is the one you saw in theaters. It shows a lot of deaths off screen. Sure, that adds a sense of mystery, but if you're a gore hound like myself, you'll want to watch the unrated version. It has a lot of bloody deaths that were so bad, they couldn't be shown in theaters. It's much better than the original, in my personal opinion.

It's not the Final Friday, as the title states, but neither was the fourth one, which claimed to be 'The Final Chapter'. They will continue to make movies as long as they can get money out of it. At least this one isn't a bad movie, like the next to come.

Jason dies and is reborn into movie hell2
I have always been a fan of the Friday the 13th series. I'd seen each of the movies a dozen times, but had somehow missed this particular movie. I barely even remembered hearing about it.

I finally got to see it a few days ago and, wow... I mean, I honestly gave this movie a chance. I really did. This installment into the series is what PART 3 was to the HALLOWEEN series. Jason is barely in the movie. When you do see him, his makeup job is so weak that he becomes more comical than imposing or frightening. Now, I love Kane Hodder as Jason, but the acting in this movie is absolutely bottom shelf. There are a few decent visual effects, yet there are more than enough cheesy effects to counter and totally eclipse the good.

This is the 2nd "mulligan" of the series: along with part 5, fans will wish they could simply remove them from the series and forever forget them.

Probably the Worst of the Series1
At this point in the Friday the 13th series we really have some bad movies, but Jason Goes to Hell manages to be the worst on in my eyes. It was released four years after part 8 and was not distributed by Paramount Pictures. The title is of course as dishonest as the third sequel, The Final Chapter. Jason Goes to Hell was marketed as the final film and it wasn't.

Jason is back inexplicably and completely ignorant to his trials in that New York sewer, when he was evidently transformed back into a young boy. He apparently decided instead to stick with the decayed zombie look indefinitely. Jason chases a girl through the woods but he has been lured into a trap and is blown to smithereens by some FBI guys. All of his parts are brought to a morgue. The guy at the morgue decides it might be a good idea to begin eating Jason's heart. This of course means he is possessed by Jason. Jason's demon form is a fake looking snake with fangs and so forth and he goes from one host to the other, all the while killing folks. Then we find out through some fancy pretentious poetry by this really cheesy bounty hunter guy that Jason can be killed by a fellow Voorhees. Through this fortunate coincidence and for the benefit of a heavy handed death for Jason, our completely forgettable heroes managed to stumble upon a Voorhees. Meanwhile, we don't care. Jason dies and goes to hell, or just into the ground. His hockey mask remains but Freddy Kreuger's clawed hand takes it into the dirt with them both.

For horror fans there are two references to other classics besides the obvious Nightmare on Elm Street tie-in. One being "the Myers place" mentioned in some dialogue and the other being the unlikely appearance of the Necronomicon from the Evil Dead movies. If you're a hardcore fan of these movies and need to see or even own part 9, then I wouldn't recommend anything other than the unedited version. It includes a great murder scene that could not have been shown with an R-rating. Other than that this movie is awful.