Tommy Jarvis, tormented by the fear that maybe Jason isn't really dead, unwittingly resurrects the mass murderer for another bloody rampage.
Thom Mathews
Tommy Jarvis
Jennifer Cooke
Megan Garris
Darcy DeMoss
Nikki
Ann Ryerson
Katie
Renée Jones
Sissy
Temi Epstein
Little Girl
Michael Swan
Officer Pappas
David Kagen
Sheriff Garris
Kerry Noonan
Paula Mott
Cynthia Kania
Annette
C.J. Graham
Jason Vorhees
Tony Goldwyn
Darren
Vincent Guastaferro
Deputy Rick Cologne
Tom Fridley
Cort
Ron Palillo
Allen Hawes
Nancy McLoughlin
Lizbeth
Alan Blumenfeld
Larry
Matthew Faison
Stan
Whitney Rydbeck
Roy
Courtney Vickery
Nancy
Bob Larkin
Martin
Mike Nomad
Thornton
Wallace Merck
Burt
Roger Rose
Steven
Thomas Nowell
Tyen
Justin Nowell
Billy
Sheri Levinsky
Bus Monitor
Taras O'Har
Little Boy
Kimberly Beck
Trish (voice) (archive footage)
Melanie Kinnaman
Pam Roberts (archive footage)
Christopher Swift
Jason Voorhees (Opening Scene)
Brian Wade
Ambulance Attendant
Valentino Curati
Blind Man
Dan Bradley
Jason Voorhees (Paintball Scene)
Tom McLoughlin
Tommy's Opening Coffin Scene
John Shepherd
Tommy (archive footage)
Corey Feldman
Tommy (voice) (archive footage)
Director, Screenplay
Tom McLoughlin
January 15, 2017
6
Jason 6: Welcome To Camp Blood!
An absolute hoot of a addition to the Friday 13th franchise. As is often the way with the "Friday" sequels, you can talk to one horror fan and this is the worst of the bunch, talk to another and it's the best etc etc. There's a more airy touch here and it serves the formula well, which if the series' fans are honest, is a formula that was getting stale quite early in the chain, so any sort of new ideas or direction is most welcome.
After a glorious James Bond parody opens the credits sequence, accompanied by Harry Manfredini's superbly thunderous musical score, we get long running tormented character Tommy, here played by Thom Matthews, digging up Jason Voorhees' corpse so as to make sure the evil one is dead - oh and to kill him again. Enter a glorious Frankenstein homage (cheeky steal if you like) that sets us up for another round of stalk and dismember as Jason heads back to Camp Crystal Lake, which is now called Camp Forest Green!
The kills are not particularly inventive, but there's a real thud of humour about much of them. From an American Express Card to a bloody smiley face imprint, it's clear the makers have a glint in their eyes. We even get an early appearance from Tony Goldwyn, some four years before Ghost would make him a known name. Adding to the quality score, which BTW rattles around home cinema speakers lie a supernatural entity, is Jon Kranhouse's cinematography, which is gorgeous in colour lens selections. All that and you get an Alice Cooper soundtrack as well.
From joyful reanimation to a suitably watery finale, this part 6 delivers more than enough to almost make you rush out to rent part 7. Almost... 6.5/10