Not the original, mind you.
I always thought the mother culprit twist at the end was anticlimactic and cheap.
I preferred my “bad guy” to be Jason Voorhees, and Part 2 had Jason (impossibly but movie-plausibly) hiding out in the woods, wearing a burlap sack over his gross, deformed face. The hockey mask didn’t come until Part 3 (and the following nine in the franchise), but I found Part 2 to be the most disturbing. Before the inevitable exploitation of the camp setting + alcohol equation in every slasher of the 80s, Part 2 was still fresh. It literally doesn’t let up for the last 30 minutes, and that jump scare ending with the stupid little dog still holds the record for making me leap the highest off my couch.

Friday the 13th Part 2 represents all the horror movies I saw with my best friend in the basement while my parents were asleep, or when Mom was out of town, and Dad rented these plastic VHS tapes of fright for us. Our horror movie journey started in the fifth grade, and we continue our tradition every October for “Horror Night” at my place.
This is the spot on my list for Creepshow (1987), Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), and all the other Jason and Freddy movies that bleed into each other (pun intended).
Friday the 13th Part 2‘s cookie cutter slasher template is unsurprisingly much cheesier than I remember, but it still holds a nostalgic charm. The Connecticut town and lake are probably heavily polluted and overpopulated today (please tell me otherwise), so it is endearing to view the untainted innocence of Generation X. As per usual, the “acting” and 1980s wardrobe are atrocious but worthy of Jason’s mutilations.
If you’re a fan of horror movies, and Jason took your hand when you were young, I highly recommend the documentary series, Crystal Lake Memories: The Complete History of Friday the 13th (2013). Shout out to one of my favorite movie critics, FILM AUTHORITY, for digging up Jason Vorhees’s grave and reviewing this lengthy throwback for fanatics only.

To this day, my friend and I still joke about the “CH… ch… ch… ch… CHAH… chah… chah… chah…” film score, “Pillowcase Jason,” and how the brainless girlfriend of the character in the wheelchair searches for her paraplegic boyfriend upstairs in the cabin loft (!).
Without Jason hiding in the lake or in the backwoods, we wouldn’t enjoy the wonders of manufactured fear only horror movies do best. Most importantly, without horror movies, we wouldn’t have a reason to get together with a friend and hide behind the popcorn bowl on the couch. To good scares and my favorite horror serial killer, Jason, I give you Friday the 13th Part 2.
Reely Bernie Faves:
5. The Empire Strikes Back (1980)
6. The Godfather Part II (1974)
8. Mad Max 2: The Road Warrior (1981)
10. Nosferatu (1922)
11. Pollock (2000)
12. Kicking and Screaming (1995)
13. Jaws (1975)
14. Fargo (1996)
16. The Blair Witch Project (1999)
20. The Passion of Joan of Arc (1928)
23. King of Kong: A Fistful of Quarters (2007)
24. Raiders of the Lost Ark (1981)
25. Bambi (1942)
26. The Paradise Lost Trilogy (1996-2011)
27. Psycho (1960)
29. Swingers (1996)
30. Terminator 2: Judgment Day (1991)
31. The Diving Bell and the Butterfly (2007)
32. Smoke (1995)
33. Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981)
35. Edward Scissorhands (1990)
37. 1917 (2019)
42. If Beale Street Could Talk (2018)
43. The Greatest Showman (2017)
44. National Lampoon’s Vacation (1983)
45. The Florida Project (2017)
I wasn’t expecting this on the list either. Maybe I need to revisit this one…
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Oh, it’s bad, but it was my first horror with my best buddy, so it’s a fave of mine 🙂
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Wow! I can’t say I was expecting this on your list, but most movie fans have that one horror movie that they grew up with (for me it was Child’s Play). Friday the 13th Part 2 is good for introducing Jason as the killer, but I’m glad they ditched the burlap sack for his iconic hockey mask.
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I haven’t seen any Jason movies or ‘Evil Dead’. So, I’m definitely out of my depth on this and can’t jump to any conclusions like you guys did down in the basement lol. But your description of your experiences and the movie scenes were compelling to read..as always. Wishing you well Bernie and always love to read a post sent by you. It’s impressive considering how busy you are with work and your family. Cheers.
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Thanks, Matt! We are back at school with preliminary meetings, so my movie watching and reviewing freedom is dwindling! I hope to keep at it per week. Not sure when Colombia or US play next…?
Also, we all grow up on movies in different ways. I don’t regret my dad letting us watch horror movies that young, but I know my mom wouldn’t have preferred that, haha!
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Yeh, I reckon you’re done with watching movies for a while haha.
I hope you had a nice vacation and feeling recharged to kick some ass – in a metaphorical , umm…coach the young minds of tomorrow sense.
Regarding women’s football, I know Colombia will play in 5 days’ time against Jamaica.
Yeh, my parents were fairly liberal about letting us watch horror flicks. Sometimes we rented movies that were ‘R’ rated, but our parents were none the wiser
‘Yeh, Mum it’s called ‘First Blood – Rambo. It’s about a Vietnam vet with PTDS’. Tameless really.
– ‘Oh that’s nice dear’
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Hahaha! “Oh, that’s nice dear.”
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I liked the first ones… and yes I would get Halloween mixed up at times…although the music part of Halloween IS good.
I will have to watch this again soon to find the part that she “searches for her paraplegic boyfriend upstairs in the cabin loft” ….that is great! You can’t make this stuff up.
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Yeah, the formula and hockey mask get old after Part 3, but the older the better, I say! Yeah, some girlfriend! And, back then, they didn’t even have rampways to the first floor of the cabin!!!
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He must have had a levitation device like the Daleks had in Doctor Who.
Yes I agree…the older the better.
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Haha! Just for kicks, you should watch his quick demise and remember why it’s sometimes fun to turn off the brain and watch such things in the safety of our homes: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Sn8PvUELShA&pp=ygUeRnJpZGF5IHRoZSAxMyBwYXJ0IDIgd2hlZWxjaGFy
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LOL…you have to ask…how the hell did he get up there???? What a staircase! But then…like you said….turn the brain off.
The best jumpscare I’ve ever seen for me…was the ending of Carrie…when the hand came out of the grave. The way they filmed it with that foggy lense or whatever they used…I was scared to death as a kid.
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Aaaaaaagh! Love it! That’s my dad’s favorite shock ending too! He saw it in the theatre with a Catholic priest friend of the family, and it got him to cuss out loud! I can’t imagine seeing that for the first time in the theatre. Good on De Palma 🙂
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LOL…I love that story!
The foggy scene set it up nicely. You are floating along and then wham!
When I was around 9 (1976 or 77)… I remember our class went to see Charlotte’s Web….a poster of Carrie was up…I wanted to see it bad…but it would be a few years before I did.
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That’s the horror appeal in us, haha!
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