Jason boards the vessel, impaling Jim with a speargun and Suzi with said spear as they endeavor to flee. The resultant electricity proves enough to revive Jason Voorhees, still chained below after the events of the previous film. Aboard a houseboat for some at-seas intimacy, their anchor strikes an underwater cable. While audiences never got that, they at least got more Jason Voorhees courtesy of high school sweethearts Jim (Todd Caldecott) and Suzi (Tiffany Paulsen). He’d go into a Broadway play, even crawl onto the top of the Statue of Liberty and dive off.” Jason would go through department stores. There was going to be a tremendous scene on the Brooklyn Bridge. Director Rob Hedden remarked to GQ in 2018 “Everything about New York was going to be completely exploited and milked. Or, well, he takes a vessel en route to Manhattan, and then he mostly takes Vancouver. Ben and Kate in Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood It’s a tragic end to the franchise’s only self-aware couple. Lizbeth tries to flee, though she too is quickly dispatched by way of fencing. That shouldn’t be too terribly shocking, except for the fact that Sandra actor Marta Kober was underage, being only seventeen years old at the time of filming. Darren tries anyway, getting impaled with a fence post. Darren pulls out a gun, hoping to scare Jason away, to which Lizbeth rightfully points out that Darren isn’t Dirty Harry. As they make their way to camp in the itty-bittiest car known to man, they come across Jason Voorhees in the woods. They’re the couple that best conceptualizes Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives’ meta riff on the franchise. Instead, the unenviable honor goes to Darren (Tony Goldwyn, yes, that Tony Goldwyn) and Lizbeth (Nancy McLoughlin). While their death sequence is undoubtedly the coolest in the franchise, giving Jason Voorhees a distinctly cinematic moment as he stands atop a burning RV, Cort is too crude-too much of a cad-to warrant entry here. While I debated putting Cort (Tom Fridley) and Nikki (Darcy DeMoss) here, I couldn’t in good conscience recognize Cort in any capacity. The film stars Amy Steel, John Furey, Stu Charno, Lauren-Marie Taylor, Marta Kober, Tom McBride, Bill Randolph, Kirsten Baker, Russell Todd, Walt Gorney, Jack Marks, Cliff Cudney, Adrienne King.
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