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Vendredi 13

Original title: Friday the 13th
  • 1980
  • 16
  • 1h 35m
IMDb RATING
6.4/10
169K
YOUR RATING
POPULARITY
1,913
239
Vendredi 13 (1980)
Through 13 Watchlist picks, we resurrect the bloody roots of the prototypical summer camp slasher: 'Friday the 13th' (1980).
Play clip7:00
Watch Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
4 Videos
99+ Photos
B-HorrorSlasher HorrorSurvivalSuspense MysteryTeen HorrorWhodunnitHorrorMysteryThriller

A group of teenage camp counselors attempt to re-open an abandoned summer camp with a tragic past, but they are stalked by a mysterious, relentless killer.A group of teenage camp counselors attempt to re-open an abandoned summer camp with a tragic past, but they are stalked by a mysterious, relentless killer.A group of teenage camp counselors attempt to re-open an abandoned summer camp with a tragic past, but they are stalked by a mysterious, relentless killer.

  • Director
    • Sean S. Cunningham
  • Writers
    • Victor Miller
    • Ron Kurz
  • Stars
    • Betsy Palmer
    • Adrienne King
    • Jeannine Taylor
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.4/10
    169K
    YOUR RATING
    POPULARITY
    1,913
    239
    • Director
      • Sean S. Cunningham
    • Writers
      • Victor Miller
      • Ron Kurz
    • Stars
      • Betsy Palmer
      • Adrienne King
      • Jeannine Taylor
    • 976User reviews
    • 185Critic reviews
    • 22Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 6 nominations total

    Videos4

    Trailer
    Trailer 2:31
    Trailer
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Clip 7:00
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    Clip 7:00
    Bloody Beginnings of the Summer Camp Slasher
    IMDbrief: Who Owns Jason? LeBron James Eyes 'Friday the 13th' Reboot
    Clip 2:55
    IMDbrief: Who Owns Jason? LeBron James Eyes 'Friday the 13th' Reboot
    Friday the 13th: Somebody's There
    Clip 2:19
    Friday the 13th: Somebody's There

    Photos316

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    Top cast23

    Edit
    Betsy Palmer
    Betsy Palmer
    • Mrs. Voorhees
    Adrienne King
    Adrienne King
    • Alice
    Jeannine Taylor
    Jeannine Taylor
    • Marcie
    Robbi Morgan
    Robbi Morgan
    • Annie
    Kevin Bacon
    Kevin Bacon
    • Jack
    Harry Crosby
    Harry Crosby
    • Bill
    Laurie Bartram
    Laurie Bartram
    • Brenda
    Mark Nelson
    Mark Nelson
    • Ned
    Peter Brouwer
    Peter Brouwer
    • Steve Christy
    Rex Everhart
    Rex Everhart
    • The Truck Driver
    Ronn Carroll
    Ronn Carroll
    • Sgt. Tierney
    Ron Millkie
    Ron Millkie
    • Officer Dorf
    Walt Gorney
    Walt Gorney
    • Crazy Ralph
    Willie Adams
    Willie Adams
    • Barry
    Debra S. Hayes
    Debra S. Hayes
    • Claudette
    Dorothy Kobs
    Dorothy Kobs
    • Trudy
    Sally Anne Golden
    Sally Anne Golden
    • Sandy
    Mary Rocco
    Mary Rocco
    • Operator
    • Director
      • Sean S. Cunningham
    • Writers
      • Victor Miller
      • Ron Kurz
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews976

    6.4169.1K
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    Summary

    Reviewers say 'Friday the 13th' faced mixed to negative reviews initially but is now a revered 80s horror classic. Despite criticism for its derivative plot and clichéd characters, the film's atmospheric tension, Savini's gory effects, and Manfredini's score are highly praised. Notable performances by Palmer and King stand out. Its commercial success, grossing nearly $60 million, led to a prolific franchise. The film's impact on the slasher genre is significant, establishing a template for future horror movies.
    AI-generated from the text of user reviews

    Featured reviews

    Jane FlamE

    A Classic, genre defining

    Without a doubt, the work of Cunningham and Carpenter during 1978 & 1980 rocked the world of the horror genre. Friday the 13th is one of the films that to this day still has repercussions. It demonstrated the importance of setting the tone in horror movies, making the audience themselves feel as if they too were being stalked. Cunningham also was one of the few directors to introduce the idea of a possible female serial killer.

    Without this film, Scream's Randy would have never uttered those famous words, 'There are certain rules to surviving a horror movie..' This film combined with Carpenter's Halloween, firmly etched the rules in stone. The creepy music, the infamous "ch-ch-ch-ha-ha-ha", the crude photography and the graphic depiction of the murders of the counsellors all blend together to give a classic piece of film history. It scared the hell out of multitudes of teenagers who, in many instances could see themselves in the victims of the stalker. These weren't bad people getting killed, these were just your typical average American kids, having a good time, getting picked off.

    That is what makes this film so defining, that is why, for all its crude and harsh imagery, this is a classic. This is why alot of recent attempts at horror don't measure up. It's not the effects or the blood necessarily, it's the atmosphere and the familiarity that bring it home.It is more frightening to think, "That could be me"
    7sddavis63

    "Then He's Still Out There"

    I'll concede right off that it's very hard to be objective in reviewing this movie. The truth is I've never seen it until today, but it's spawned so many sequels and become such a part of popular culture (for better or worse) that it's stamped into your mind whether you've seen it or not. Trying to be objective I'd say - it's not bad. It's not as good as what I would consider to be the classic of the slasher movies (1978's Halloween) but it has some moments of pretty good suspense and somewhat surprisingly to me I found that it wasn't a "gore-fest." There's violence and blood but the murders, while they're portrayed, tend to be shown quickly and the movie moves on fairly quickly. The setting is used pretty well to create atmosphere - the movie is set in a remote camp about to be re-opened after being closed for over 20 years following the murders of two counsellors in 1958. Those murders kick off the movie. There's some decent camera-work, as the camera serves as the eyes of the killer, and at times that effect is used when the camera isn't being used as the eyes of the killer, so there's a bit of uncertainty for the viewer. It is a bit of a chuckle that this movie uses as its setting the classically bad opening of terrible novels ("it was a dark and stormy night.")

    The performances were OK, if a little bit forced and artificial at times. Adrienne King did a good job near the end of the movie as the terrified Alice. Kevin Bacon had a role in this as Jack, but it wasn't the lead role, and aside from him no one from the movie rose to any significant stature in Hollywood and there was certainly no Jamie Lee Curtis (see Halloween) among the female leads, although there were many shots of young and cute women in various stages of undress!

    Strange to say, but in some ways knowing the basic outline of how the series progresses adds to the suspense at the end of the movie as to the identity of the killer, and does get you wondering how the heck this is going to lead to sequels - or at least to the sequels it led to, although Alice's last line ("then he's still out there") clearly establishes that those responsible for the movie were already looking ahead to the sequels. Not having been really interested in the series before this, I will confess that, having seen the first instalment, I now have a certain curiosity to see how the second instalment is constructed. 7/10
    7TheLittleSongbird

    Freaky Friday

    'Friday the 13th' may have been panned by critics when first released but since then it is one of the most famous and influential horror films, the franchise containing one of horror's most iconic villains. The film is popular enough to become a franchise and spawn several sequels of varying quality and generally inferior to the one that started it all of.

    Is 'Friday the 13th' an original film in terms of overall story? No, having been, and still is, compared to 'Halloween' (released two years earlier). One can see why somewhat, it is derivative in a way but to me it didn't come over as a direct rip off. 'Friday the 13th' is far from the best when it comes to acting, excepting Betsy Palmer (very good) and Adrienne King (charming). The others are average at best, though it was interesting to see Kevin Bacon in an early role pre-stardom.

    Nor is it the best when it comes to dialogue. Much of it is very crude and cheesy. Or character development, while the characters are actually still easy to sympathise with to some extent they are stereotypes that we don't know an awful lot about generally.

    However, while it may not be a "great" film, 'Friday the 13th' is great guilty pleasure fun and it is very easy to understand its popularity and influence. It's very gory and gruesome, though not pointlessly so, but it is also very frightening and suspenseful.

    This is apparent in the deaths, which couldn't have been more creative or shocking, and the hauntingly eerie music score. 'Friday the 13th' is assuredly directed and moves along at a lively pace. The late reveal is for the better and works very well. The climax is a long way from a petering out one, instead the film goes out on a very strong bang, right up to the unexpected and freaky final jolt clearly inspired by 'Carrie'.

    Overall, good fun and very scary even if not exactly classified as great. 7/10 Bethany Cox
    5TedStixonAKAMaximumMadness

    Strangely boring and sometimes toothless in retrospect, the original "Friday the 13th" is really only notable for starting off a long-running and much beloved franchise.

    I'll always have a soft-spot in my heart for the "Friday the 13th" franchise. Especially as an 80's baby/90's kid who grew up in a pop- culture environment where the psychotic hockey-masked killer Jason was known and loved by pretty much everyone... even kids like me who didn't see the films until we were older and only vaguely knew what they were about thanks to the whisperings and hints of our older siblings who were actually allowed to see the movies. (Usually renting them 2 or 3 at a time on trusty old VHS from the local Video King to watch after we younger brothers and sisters went to bed.)

    At the time this review is being posted, the franchise has been running strong for well over 35 years. Boasting 10 films in its original continuity, the fabulously entertaining (and dopey as heck) cross- over spin-off "Freddy VS Jason", a somewhat underrated reboot in 2009 and a planned new film due out sometime within the next year or two.

    But even a franchise so huge has to start with a small, humble beginning. Before the fame. Before the recognition. Before the birth of the pop-culture idol that the series spawned.

    Yes, it all started with a teeny-tiny production back in 1980- the original "Friday the 13th."

    It's almost impossible to really discuss this film critically without delving into spoiler territory (which I try to avoid in my reviews), though I will try my hardest to do so.

    The film revolves around a group of young Camp Counselors who are prepping the infamous Camp Crystal Lake for a reopening about 20 years after a mysterious double-murder and a tragic drowning involving a young child. However, it appears someone isn't exactly a happy camper and doesn't want Crystal Lake back in business, and this mysterious figure begins to pick off our protagonists one-by- one until a tense climax reveals the dreaded truth...

    It's no surprise at all that the film is essentially a glorified rip-off of the iconic slasher-horror that is John Carpenter's "Halloween." Director/Producer Sean S. Cunningham has been pretty candid about essentially wanting to create his own "roller-coaster" version of the Carpenter Classic with this film. Heck, they had ads and posters in the paper before the script was even written.

    But the problem I really have with the film is that it all feels so routine. Even often boring and sometimes toothless. While it may not be fair to judge it by modern standards, even for its time, it just doesn't have that much going for it. (Especially as the very same year of release, such classics as "The Shining" and the underrated "The Changeling" were chilling audiences to the bone.) It's a very aimless, meandering film, with sloppy plotting and far too much focus placed on seemingly-pointless sequences for it to attain the "roller-coast" feeling the director was going for. The first half of the film is just too much a chore to slog through. And once the horror finally kicks in, it's just the same rinse-and-repeat formula scene-after-scene, with really only a few gruesome deaths here and there to pique audience interest. All those old clichés and tropes that even at the time had become slightly predictable.

    Now, I know what you're saying- those are the things people love about these flicks. The clichés and the gore-galore. But it's so slowly paced and messy in this movie, it's hard to really get into it. It really isn't until the plethora of sequels that the formula is established and the pacing is tightened enough for those clichés and tropes to finally become fun and entertaining.

    As it stands, "Friday the 13th" does have its place in horror royalty. But I firmly believe it's more for spawning the long- running franchise that followed and less for the quality of the film itself.

    Oh, and I guess it's also kinda famous for introducing some guy named Kevin Bacon as a supporting character... but I'm not sure if he actually went anywhere after this.

    (Please appreciate the obvious sarcasm there. I loves the Bacon!)

    "Friday the 13th" gets a middle-of-the-road 5 out of 10 from me. It's worth seeing because of its important part in the history of the overall franchise. But it's one of the weaker entries and lacks the style and entertainment seen in later films.
    7Coventry

    A slasher-star is born !!

    Friday the 13th must be one of the biggest mysteries in cinema. Although it's a long way from being a good movie, its success and influence is unnameable ( and even unbelievable ). Don't get me wrong...I'm not at all saying that Friday the 13th is a terrible film or not even worth a watch but - let's face it - the plot idea is pretty dumb, the acting and directing are far below average and they haven't fully used the options of setting and location they had. The make-up effects ( by the master Tom Savini himself ) are excellent, but that alone isn't really enough to create a legendary horror movie in my opinion. Some of the later sequels ( Episode 6 : Jason Lives is the perfect example ) and even a few of the numberless rip-offs are superior to the production.

    I suppose the story is pretty much known by everyone know and I even think the identity of the "mysterious killer" of this episode isn't that much of a mystery anymore. Anyway, in case you don't know it, I won't spoil the fun so see for yourself. Although my thoughts on it aren't that high, I do think it's must-see stuff for horror fans. Without any shame, I even admit that Friday the 13th and ALL its sequels are a guilty pleasure of mine. I'll never reckon them as good - or even decent - efforts in the genre, but I'm always up for a little bit of brainless gore slashing. And that's what these series are made for...pure entertainment !! So, in a way, they succeeded after all. They never try to give a thoughtful message to the viewer or something. There are just dumb-looking teenagers being slaughtered...the more the merrier.

    Favorite "rewind"-scene : A young and horny Kevin Bacon being brutally killed in one of his first memorable roles.

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    Thriller

    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      The movie was filmed at Camp No-Be-BoSco in Blairstown, New Jersey. It is a Boy Scout Camp that is still in operation, and it has a wall of Friday the 13th (1980) memorabilia to honor that the movie was set there.
    • Goofs
      (at around 40 mins) When Brenda rolls the dice to start the strip Monopoly game, she says she rolls double sixes and gets to roll again, but you can clearly see the 1 and 2 she actually rolled. The same for the guy, who clearly rolled a 10, though it's said that he rolled an 8.
    • Quotes

      Mrs. Voorhees: Did you know a young boy drowned the year before those two others were killed? The counselors weren't paying any attention... They were making love while that young boy drowned. His name was Jason. I was working the day that it happened. Preparing meals... here. I was the cook. Jason should've been watched. Every minute. He was... he wasn't a very good swimmer. We can go now, dear.

    • Crazy credits
      We see giant letters proclaiming 'Friday the 13th' moving toward the screen, and crashing into and smashing a pane of glass.
    • Alternate versions
      As of the 11/09/2003, the BBFC passed "Friday the 13th" completely uncut, and Warner Bros. has restored the original gory version for release on Region-2 DVD with a total of 34 seconds of footage restored. Much of the extra running time comprises different opening logos and about 11 seconds of gore has been restored to the death scenes of Annie, Marcie, Jack, and Pamela Voorhees.
    • Connections
      Edited into Le Tueur du vendredi (1981)
    • Soundtracks
      Sail Away, Tiny Sparrow
      (uncredited)

      Written by Harry Manfredini and John R. Briggs

      Performed by Angela Rotella

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    FAQ22

    • How long is Friday the 13th?Powered by Alexa
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    • Is "Friday the 13th" based on a book?
    • Why does Camp Crystal Lake have such a bad reputation?

    Details

    Edit
    • Release date
      • February 11, 1981 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United States
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Viernes 13
    • Filming locations
      • Camp Nobebosco - 11 Sand Pond Road, Blairstown, New Jersey, USA(Camp Crystal Lake)
    • Production companies
      • Paramount Pictures
      • Georgetown Productions Inc.
      • Sean S. Cunningham Films
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

    Edit
    • Budget
      • $550,000 (estimated)
    • Gross US & Canada
      • $39,754,601
    • Opening weekend US & Canada
      • $5,816,321
      • May 11, 1980
    • Gross worldwide
      • $39,920,998
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      • 1h 35m(95 min)
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Mono
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

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