Think we're off base? Sound off at the new Michigan I Daily website, and tell us what you think of us. www.michigandaily.com Tuesday April 30, 2002 Funny, gory Jason X' delivers exactly what it intends to 'Friday' star believes Jason rules in space By Lyle Henretty Daily Arts Editor Certain movies must be judged by different standards, as they are trying to elicit a reaction from a specific niche within the public, and not create cinematic history or even a quality film. If a comedy is truly funny, then it is a success. If the tenth installment of a tired hor- ror franchise that was nothing more than a rip-off of another tired hor- ror franchise is enjoyable and gory, than it is a success. "Jason X," the latest installment of the "Friday the 13th" series, is a success. It wallows in its own exploitive, low-budget, gore-as- pornography glory, taking every opportunity to thrust long metal objects through the supple flesh of whoever happens to be in the area. It is self-conscious and obnoxious, and it holds no pretense of being anything but an awful movie, which it is. But for all the right reasons. While the previous installment (1993s "Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday") saw villainous pro- tagonist Jason Voorhees (Kane Hodder) destroyed "once and for all," it is quickly revealed that Jason survived that and sev- eral other encoun- ter s with the reaper. The avid viewer meets upW with the hockey-masked hero in 2000, the year the movie was fin- ished and ready for release, and finds him chained up in a cryo- genic laboratory awaiting his own government-sanctioned deep freeze. This is all spoiled by a creepy doctor (cult director David Cronen- berg in a cameo), who shows up in courtesy of New Lne Cinema the dead of night (when most gov- Does this make sense? Does it matter? ernment-sanctioned cryogenic research is performed, I'm told) Ultimately, theirs a few hot chicks, and attempts to take Jason for one of them "the sarcastic one," research. Long story short, Jason another a kick-ass robot. None of kills everyone except the beautiful them were hired for their prior Doctor Rowan (Lexa Doig), and Shakespearian experience. the two accidentally end up freez- Once on the ship, the plot ing one another, only to be roused becomes sub-"Alien" garbage, with in the year 2455. the crew accidentally destroying a That's right, like his space station, and Jay- erstwhile fellow slash- -N bird slowly moving ers Pinhead and The through (or pushing Leprechaun, Jason I ** drills through) each leaves behind his old character. The joy of stomping ground of JASONX the movie is in the out just how claustro- At Showcase and director James Isaac phobic he can make a moves the film from sp a c e s h i p New Line Cinema one spectacularly bru- feel. tal kill to the next. C o n v e n i e n tl y, Since Jason began slaying sala- there are lots of cious teens in the early '80s, he has neo-halter-top- always been the most extreme of wearing young the "Halloween" rip-offs. He walks space coeds and and stalks just like John Carpen- a n o n y m o u s 1 y ter's Michael Myers, and his face- attractive solders less mask is even less expressive for Jason to eat than the backwards prosthesis of through in his first Captain Kirk. Yet where the Hal- few minutes of re- loween films (which gets another animation. The treatment later this summer with ships inhabitants "Halloween: Resurrection") have are the students clung to the notion that they can of Prof. Lowe, replicate the success of the origi- (J o n a t h a n nal, the "Friday" folks have decid- Potts) and the ed to embrace the bizarre. mii i t a r y Ever since Jason got out of the cohorts of woods and into Manhattan in the Sergeant eighth installment, the filmmakers Brodski, (including Sean S. Cunningham, b u t director of the original and execu- n o n e tive producer on this installment) of this have understood that Jason, as a really concept, has gone from a premiere mat- bogeyman to camp of Liza Minelli ters. preportions. The reason that "Jason X" works is not because it's a good movie but quite the opposite, because, like an old-fashioned exploitation movie, it gives the audience what it wants: Blood, gore, terrible one-liners and attractive astronauts not afraid to get down and dirty, even if it Courtesy of New Lne Cinema results in decapitation. By Lyle Henretty Daily Arts Editor Kane Hodder cuts to the chase. "We set a record for kills in this one. Twen- ty-eight, seven in the first two-and-a- half minutes." Actor/stuntman Hodder has played Jason Voorhees for the past four "Fri- day the 13th" films, more than any other actor. About playing the '80s hor- ror icon again in the current "Jason X" an enthusiastic Hodder spoke with The Daily. "This is defiantly the best one that I've done. Even though it takes place in space, it's the same Jason." Hodder, who has worked on films as diverse as "Se7en" and "A Night at the Roxbery," claimed he originally landed the role simply because his "size was conducive for playing Jason." For his latest run as the titular machete-wield- ing baddie, director James Isaac gave Hodder sway over his character. "Any scene having anything to do with Jason had to do with my input. All of the violent scenes." Of which, the actor promises, will be more spec- tacularly gruesome than ever. "Yeah, we put more into this one, more money." After doing stunts on more than fifty films and appearing behind a hockey mask for his most famous act- ing role, Hodder is ready for a little credit. "Ideally, I'd like to act and not have to do stunts. It's nice to get your face on camera." Hodder scoffs at actors that claim to do all of their own stunts, stating how annoying it is when big names claim credit for his work. "None of them do their own stunts," Hodder gives a gruff chuckle, "Write that in all caps, NONE OF THEM." Hodder said he enjoys playing Jason and feels that the unique approach taken by New Line Cinema, who acquired the rights to the character two films ago "breathes new life into the character. Hodder is currently working oppo- site Ben Affleck in Mark Steven John- son's big-screen working of blind comic-book hero "Daredevil." The man behind the mask. Headaches? M ichigan Head*Pain & Neurological Institute is conducting a research study evaluating a potential treatment for migraine. Participants must be 18 to 65 years old and experience at least 4 headaches per month. Study-related medical care and compensation for time and travel are provided. Please call our Research Staff for more information. Michigan Head*Pain & Neurological Institute Joel R. Saper, M.D., FA.C.P., Director 3120 Professional Drive Ann Arbor, MI 48104 www.MHNI.com For more information, contact Jane Mayer, R.N., at (734) 677-6000, ext. 4