Vendredi 13, chapitre 5: Une nouvelle terreur
Titre original : Friday the 13th: A New Beginning
Toujours hanté par son passé, Tommy Jarvis, qui a tué Jason Voorhees, se demande si le tueur en série est lié à une série de meurtres brutaux survenus autour de la maison isolée où il vit ma... Tout lireToujours hanté par son passé, Tommy Jarvis, qui a tué Jason Voorhees, se demande si le tueur en série est lié à une série de meurtres brutaux survenus autour de la maison isolée où il vit maintenant.Toujours hanté par son passé, Tommy Jarvis, qui a tué Jason Voorhees, se demande si le tueur en série est lié à une série de meurtres brutaux survenus autour de la maison isolée où il vit maintenant.
- Prix
- 2 nominations au total
Bob DeSimone
- Billy
- (as Bob De Simone)
- …
Jere Fields
- Anita
- (as Jeré Fields)
Miguel A. Núñez Jr.
- Demon
- (as Miguel A. Nunez Jr.)
Histoire
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesFriday the 13th producer Frank Mancuso Jr. didn't get on with the films director Danny Steinmann. Mancuso called Steinmann a pervert and called the film a soft core porn sex movie rather than a slasher horror film
- Gaffes(at around 1h 10 mins) When Pam is running through the woods, her sweater disappears then reappears.
- Autres versionsThere is an alternate version of the film which runs 91 minutes and contains several small and mostly inconsequential differences. These are:
- "Version 2" is in the lower right hand corner throughout the movie.
- There is no close-up of Jason pulling the machete out of Neil's stomach during the opening sequence.
- Duke's (the paramedic) line is altered when he sees Joey's body. In the original version he says "Bunch of pussies..." while in Version 2 he says "I'll be damned...".
- There is a different angle briefly used in Pete's death.
- The scene in which Ethel yells at Junior as he is eating his stew is re-edited to remove the profanity, and uses some different angles.
- When Demon is about to open the outhouse door, an alternate camera angle is used and some of the profanity he uses is cut from the scene.
- After Junior is decapitated there is an alternate angle of Ethel in the kitchen, and her dialog is slightly altered.
- The scene of Robin going to bed is re-edited to exclude some of her nudity and some dialog.
- Before the above scene is a scene of Violet in her room which originally was part of a scene which occurred a few minutes later. When the scene happens a few minutes later, the footage that was previously used is not present.
- When Pam fights off Roy with the chainsaw, she hits him twice in shoulder. Only the second hit appears in the original version.
- When Roy dies, the camera stays on Pam, Tommy and Reggie instead of showing Roy falling on the spikes.
- ConnexionsEdited from Vendredi 13: Le chapitre final (1984)
- Bandes originalesThe Drowning - Part I
Written by Daniele Amfitheatrof
Commentaire en vedette
'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.
The fifth film in the series 'A New Beginning' is the most maligned 'Friday the 13th' film by critics and fans, although it has garnered a cult following and its fair share of defence over time. To me, 'A New Beginning' is better than its reputation and that it tries to do something different is laudable. Also do not think it's the worst 'Friday the 13th' film. Having said that, the disappointment is understandable. There are good merits here, but it also did fall short to me.
Starting with 'A New Beginning's' strengths, the best things about it are the as ever haunting music score and the terrific performance, both disturbing and moving, of John Shepherd. There are a few darkly funny moments, a few creepy ones and some of the death scenes are creative.
The nightmare sequences are stylish and as nightmarish as one would hope. It's a pretty decent looking film, not cinematic art (but in all honesty that can never be expected from a 'Friday the 13th' film) but not amateurish.
However, there are things that work against 'A New Beginning'. From my understanding, It is not that the film is different in the lack of Jason (this didn't bother me at all and is an insignificant issue), the more tongue-in-cheek tone and the idea it tried to introduce that irked fans, but the generally misguided way it was executed.
More problematic are the problems as a standalone. The acting is not good (Shepherd is the sole exception), Melanie Kinnaman being awful, and the clumsy and far too simple dialogue, that slips more into vulgar camp than darkly tongue-and-cheek, and the mostly annoying and dull stereotypes passing for characters fare worse (the only one to be interesting and get proper development is Tommy).
'A New Beginning' has the highest body count, and while there are some creative and unsettling deaths (others less so, hurt by gratuity and predictability) it was almost as if there were too many death scenes that gives one not that much time to compose themselves after each one. There is not enough suspense, the creepiness is too far and between and the story is thin and very hackneyed, with one of the series' silliest endings. The mystery elements don't work, being far too obvious, and neither does the identity of the killer, the killings committed by somebody that is not in it much in their real guise and doesn't have much presence.
In summation, not that bad and not deserving of its black sheep reputation but a long way from being great. 5/10 Bethany Cox
The fifth film in the series 'A New Beginning' is the most maligned 'Friday the 13th' film by critics and fans, although it has garnered a cult following and its fair share of defence over time. To me, 'A New Beginning' is better than its reputation and that it tries to do something different is laudable. Also do not think it's the worst 'Friday the 13th' film. Having said that, the disappointment is understandable. There are good merits here, but it also did fall short to me.
Starting with 'A New Beginning's' strengths, the best things about it are the as ever haunting music score and the terrific performance, both disturbing and moving, of John Shepherd. There are a few darkly funny moments, a few creepy ones and some of the death scenes are creative.
The nightmare sequences are stylish and as nightmarish as one would hope. It's a pretty decent looking film, not cinematic art (but in all honesty that can never be expected from a 'Friday the 13th' film) but not amateurish.
However, there are things that work against 'A New Beginning'. From my understanding, It is not that the film is different in the lack of Jason (this didn't bother me at all and is an insignificant issue), the more tongue-in-cheek tone and the idea it tried to introduce that irked fans, but the generally misguided way it was executed.
More problematic are the problems as a standalone. The acting is not good (Shepherd is the sole exception), Melanie Kinnaman being awful, and the clumsy and far too simple dialogue, that slips more into vulgar camp than darkly tongue-and-cheek, and the mostly annoying and dull stereotypes passing for characters fare worse (the only one to be interesting and get proper development is Tommy).
'A New Beginning' has the highest body count, and while there are some creative and unsettling deaths (others less so, hurt by gratuity and predictability) it was almost as if there were too many death scenes that gives one not that much time to compose themselves after each one. There is not enough suspense, the creepiness is too far and between and the story is thin and very hackneyed, with one of the series' silliest endings. The mystery elements don't work, being far too obvious, and neither does the identity of the killer, the killings committed by somebody that is not in it much in their real guise and doesn't have much presence.
In summation, not that bad and not deserving of its black sheep reputation but a long way from being great. 5/10 Bethany Cox
- TheLittleSongbird
- 6 janv. 2018
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Friday the 13th Part 5: A New Beginning
- Lieux de tournage
- sociétés de production
- Consultez plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
Box-office
- Budget
- 2 200 000 $ US (estimation)
- Brut – États-Unis et Canada
- 21 930 418 $ US
- Fin de semaine d'ouverture – États-Unis et Canada
- 8 032 883 $ US
- 24 mars 1985
- Brut – à l'échelle mondiale
- 21 930 418 $ US
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By what name was Vendredi 13, chapitre 5: Une nouvelle terreur (1985) officially released in India in English?
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