Jason ships out aboard a teen-filled "love boat" bound for New York, which he soon transforms into the ultimate voyage of the damned.
Jensen Daggett
Rennie Wickham
Sharlene Martin
Tamara Mason
Scott Reeves
Sean Robertson
Tiffany Paulsen
Suzi Donaldson
Alex Diakun
Deck Hand
Amber Pawlick
Rennie Wickham (young)
Kane Hodder
Jason Voorhees
Kelly Hu
Eva Watanabe
Todd Caldecott
Jim Miller
Peter Mark Richman
Charles McCulloch
Barbara Bingham
Colleen Van Deusen
Warren Munson
Admiral Robertson
Fred Henderson
Chief Engineer Jim Carlson
Saffron Henderson
J.J. Jarrett
Martin Cummins
Wayne Webber
David Longworth
Sanitation Engineer
Vince Cupone
Street Urchin
Tim Mirkovich
Jason Voorhees (young)
Gordon Currie
Miles Wolfe
Sam Sarkar
Holmes
Roger Barnes
Irish Cop
Michael Benyaer
JoJo
Peggy Hedden
New York Waitress
Vincent Craig Dupree
Julius Gaw
David Jacox
Other Boxer (uncredited)
Jasper Cole
Trainer (uncredited)
Ken Kirzinger
New York Cook (uncredited)
Director, Screenplay
Rob Hedden
January 29, 2017
5
Friday the 13th VIII: Jason Takes a Boat.
Jason Vorhees is once again brought back to life and goes on a kill crazy spree aboard a boat bound for Manhattan.
As is the norm with the "Friday 13th" sequels, this one garners scorn and praise in equal measure, so you roll the dice and take your chance really. By now the makers were trying to come up with new ideas to keep the series afloat, here the gimmick is to take Vorhees out of his Camp Crystal Lake "comfort" zone, and pitch him on a boat - a boat which naturally is full of ripe high schoolers who are ripe for killing in variously gruesome ways.
The presence of Manhattan in the title is not wholly accurate since three quarters of the pic is set on the said boat, with standard series rules applying, though Vorhees seems to have attained the dexterity of a paratrooper given that he remarkably appears in kill scenes where the time frame is impossible for him to do so. The sequences in Manhattan are fun, which only makes one lament that more time wasn't spent on this particular gimmick.
The acting is generally weak, while the effects work is standard fare - though the cinematography (Bryan England) is very impressive. So all told, it's another divisive "Friday" sequel, from breasts and butts, to blood and bone, and onto The Big Apple, part 8 you will either hate or think it's great. 6/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$5,300,000.00
Revenue:
$14,343,976.00