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{{short description|Film by Sean S. Cunningham}}
{{Infobox Film
{{pp-sock|small=yes}}
| name = Friday the 13th
{{Use mdy dates|date=August 2018}}
| image = Friday_the_thirteenth_movie_poster.jpg
{{Infobox film
| caption = Original U.S. theatrical poster
| name = Friday the 13th
| director = [[Sean S. Cunningham]]
| image = Friday the 13th (1980) theatrical poster.jpg
| producer = Sean S. Cunningham
| caption = Theatrical release poster by [[Alex Ebel]]
| writer = [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]]
| director = [[Sean S. Cunningham]]
| starring = [[Betsy Palmer]] <br> [[Adrienne King]]<br>[[Harry Crosby (actor)|Harry Crosby]]<br>Laurie Bartram<br>Mark Nelson<br>[[Jeannine Taylor]]<br>[[Robbi Morgan]]<br>[[Kevin Bacon]]
| producer = Sean S. Cunningham
| writer = [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]]
| starring = {{plainlist|
* [[Betsy Palmer]]
* [[Adrienne King]]
* [[Harry Crosby (businessman)|Harry Crosby]]
* [[Laurie Bartram]]
* [[Mark Nelson (actor)|Mark Nelson]]
* [[Jeannine Taylor]]
* Robbi Morgan
* [[Kevin Bacon]]
}}
| music = [[Harry Manfredini]]
| cinematography = Barry Abrams
| cinematography = Barry Abrams
| editing = Bill Freda
| editing = Bill Freda
| studio = Georgetown Productions Inc.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=314}}
| music = Harry Manfredini
| distributor = [[Paramount Pictures]]<br>[[Warner Bros.]]
| distributor = {{plainlist|
* [[Paramount Pictures]] (United States)
| released = [[May 9]], [[1980]]
* [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]] (International)
| runtime = 95 min.
}}
| country = {{filmUS}}
| released = {{Film date|1980|5|9|United States}}
| language = English
| runtime = 95 minutes
| budget = $550,000 (est.)<ref name="report"/>
| country = United States
| gross = $39,700,000 (US) $59,700,000 (Worldwide)
| language = English
| followed_by = ''[[Friday the 13th Part 2]]''
| budget = $550,000
| gross = $59.8 million<ref>{{Cite web |title=Friday the 13th (1980) - Financial Information |url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Friday-the-13th-(1980) |access-date=2023-08-14 |website=The Numbers |archive-date=January 8, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210108234009/https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Friday-the-13th-(1980) |url-status=live}}</ref>
}}
}}


'''''Friday the 13th''''' is a [[1980 in film|1980]] [[Cinema of the United States|American]] [[independent film|independent]] [[horror film]] [[film director|directed]] by [[Sean S. Cunningham]] and written by [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]]. The film stars [[Betsy Palmer]], [[Adrienne King]], [[Harry Crosby (actor)|Harry Crosby]] and [[Kevin Bacon]] in one of his earliest roles. The film concerns a group of teenagers who re-open an abandoned [[camp site]] years after a young boy drowned in a lake located nearby. One by one, the teens fall victim to a mysterious killer.
'''''Friday the 13th''''' is a 1980 American [[independent film|independent]] [[slasher film]] produced and directed by [[Sean S. Cunningham]], written by [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]], and starring [[Betsy Palmer]], [[Adrienne King]], [[Harry Crosby (businessman)|Harry Crosby]], [[Laurie Bartram]], [[Mark Nelson (actor)|Mark Nelson]], [[Jeannine Taylor]], Robbi Morgan, and [[Kevin Bacon]]. The plot follows a group of teenage camp counselors who are murdered one by one by an unknown killer while they are attempting to reopen an abandoned [[summer camp]] with a tragic past.


Prompted by the success of [[John Carpenter]]'s ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'' (1978), director Cunningham put out an advertisement to sell the film in ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' in early 1979, while Miller was still drafting the screenplay. After casting the film in New York City, filming took place in [[New Jersey]] in the summer of 1979, on an estimated budget of $550,000. A bidding war ensued over the finished film, ending with [[Paramount Pictures]] acquiring the film for domestic distribution, while [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]] secured international distribution rights.
''Friday the 13th'', inspired by the success of [[John Carpenter|John Carpenter's]] ''[[Halloween (film)|Halloween]]'',<ref name="F1 insp"/> was made on an estimated budget of $550,000.<ref name="report"/> Released by Paramount Pictures in the United States, and Warner Bros. internationally, the film was poorly received by [[film criticism|film critics]], but grossed over $39.7 million at the [[box office]] in the United States,<ref name="F1 take">Grove, David, pg.60</ref> and went on to become one of the most profitable [[slasher films]] in cinema history. It was also the first movie of its kind to secure distribution in the USA by a major studio, [[Paramount Pictures]].<ref name="bookref1">{{cite book|author=McCarty, John|title=Splatter Movies: Breaking the Last Taboo of the Screen|month=July | year=1984|publisher=St. Martin's Press|page=2|isbn=0312752571}}</ref> The film's box office success led to [[Friday the 13th (franchise)|a long series of sequels]], [[Freddy vs. Jason|a crossover]] with [[Freddy Krueger]] and [[Friday the 13th (2009 film)|a series reboot]] released on February 13, 2009.


Released on May 9, 1980, ''Friday the 13th'' was a major box office success, grossing $59.8 million worldwide. Critical response was divided, with some praising the film's cinematography and score, while numerous others derided it for its depiction of graphic violence. Aside from being the first [[independent film]] of its kind to secure distribution in the U.S. by a major studio, its box office success led to [[Friday the 13th (franchise)|a long series of sequels]], [[Freddy vs. Jason|a crossover]] with the [[A Nightmare on Elm Street (franchise)|''A Nightmare on Elm Street'' film series]], and [[Friday the 13th (2009 film)|a 2009 series reboot]]. A direct sequel, ''[[Friday the 13th Part 2]]'', was released one year later.
==Plot==
The movie begins in 1958 as two [[summer camp]] counselors at Camp Crystal Lake sneak away from a campfire sing-along to have [[sex]]. Before they can completely undress, an unseen assailant sneaks into the room and murders them both.


== Plot ==
The film then moves forward to Friday, June 13, 1980 in the present day; a young woman named Annie ([[Robbi Morgan]]) enters a small diner and asks for directions to Camp Crystal Lake, much to the shock of the restaurant's patrons and staff. A strange old man named [[List of characters in the Friday the 13th series#Crazy Ralph|Ralph]] ([[Walt Gorney]]) reacts to the news of the camp's reopening by warning Annie that they are "all doomed". Enos ([[Rex Everhart]]), a truck driver from the diner, agrees to give Annie a lift halfway to the camp. During the drive, he warns her about the camp, informing her that a young boy drowned in Crystal Lake in 1957, one year before the double murders occurred. After Enos lets her out, Annie hitches another ride in a Jeep. The second driver, whose face is never seen, murders Annie by slashing her throat with a large hunting knife after her futile efforts of running.
In 1958, at Camp Crystal Lake, two counselors sneak inside a cabin to have sex, where an unseen assailant murders them. In present day, camp counselor and cook Annie Phillips is driven halfway to the reopened Camp Crystal Lake by truck driver Enos. Enos warns her about the camp's troubled past, beginning when a young boy drowned in Crystal Lake in 1957. After being dropped off at the halfway point, Annie hitches another ride from an unseen person, who eventually slashes her throat.


At the camp, counselors Ned, Jack, Bill, Marcie, Brenda, and [[Alice (Friday the 13th)|Alice]], along with owner Steve Christy, refurbish the cabins. As a thunderstorm approaches, Steve leaves for supplies. Ned sees someone walk into a cabin and follows. While Jack and Marcie have sex, they are unaware of Ned's dead body above them. When Marcie leaves for the bathroom, Jack's throat is pierced with an arrow. The killer kills Marcie next with an axe. Brenda hears a little boy's voice calling for help and ventures outside, where the lights turn on. Brenda screams.
At the camp, the other counselors, Ned (Mark Nelson), Jack ([[Kevin Bacon]]), Bill ([[Harry Crosby (actor)|Harry Crosby]]), Marcie ([[Jeannine Taylor]]), Brenda (Laurie Bartram), [[List of characters in the Friday the 13th series#Alice Hardy|Alice]] ([[Adrienne King]]) and the camp's owner, [[List of characters in the Friday the 13th series#Steve Christy|Steve Christy]] (Peter Brouwer), are refurbishing the cabins and facilities. As a violent storm closes in on the horizon, Steve leaves the campgrounds to get more supplies. The unidentified killer begins to isolate and murder the counselors. Later that evening, Steve returns from town and is also murdered, apparently familiar with his attacker. Alice informs Bill that she saw the lights turn on at the archery range and that she thinks she heard Brenda screaming. Bill and Alice leave the cabin to investigate, and find a bloody axe in Brenda's bed. Attempting to phone the police, they discover the phones are dead and that the cars won't start when they try to leave. When the lights go out all over the camp, Bill goes to check on the power generator. Alice heads out looking for Bill when he doesn't return; she finds his body pinned to a door by several arrows. Now alone, Alice flees back to the main cabin and hides. After a few moments of silence, Brenda's corpse is hurled through the window.


Worried by their friends' disappearances, Alice and Bill investigate. They find the axe in Brenda's bed and the phones disconnected. Steve returns and recognizes the unseen killer who stabs him. When the power goes out, Bill goes to check on the generator. Alice finds his body pinned with arrows to the door. She flees to the main cabin, where Brenda's body is thrown through the window.
Alice hears a vehicle outside the cabin and, thinking it to be Steve, runs out to warn him. Instead, she finds a middle-aged woman who introduces herself as [[Pamela Voorhees|Mrs. Voorhees]] ([[Betsy Palmer]]), stating that she is an "old friend of the Christys". Alice hysterically tries to tell her about the murders. Mrs. Voorhees expresses horror at the sight of Brenda's body, but she soon reveals herself to be the mother of the boy who drowned in the lake in 1957, and that today is his birthday. Talking mostly to herself, she blames her son [[Jason Voorhees|Jason]]'s drowning on the fact that two counselors were having sex and were unaware of Jason struggling in the lake. Mrs. Voorhees suddenly turns violent and pulls out a knife, rushing at Alice. A lengthy chase ensues, during which Alice flees her attacker and finds Steve and Annie's bodies in the process. Alice and Mrs. Voorhees have multiple confrontations, each time with Alice believing she has finally beaten Mrs. Voorhees. During their final fight, Alice manages to [[Decapitation|decapitate]] Mrs. Voorhees with her own [[machete]].


[[Pamela Voorhees|Mrs. Voorhees]], a middle-aged woman who claims to be a friend of Steve, arrives. She reveals that her son, [[Jason Voorhees|Jason]], was the young boy who drowned in 1957 and she blames his death on neglect by the counselors because they were having sex instead of supervising him. Revealing herself as the killer, she attempts to kill Alice. At the shore, they struggle until Alice is able to decapitate her with a machete. Exhausted, Alice falls asleep inside a canoe that floats out on Crystal Lake. When she awakes, Jason's decomposing corpse emerges from the lake and drags her underwater, at which point she awakens in a hospital, surrounded by a police sergeant and medical staff. The sergeant says there was no sign of a boy at the lake, to which Alice says, "Then he's still there."
Afterwards, Alice boards a canoe and floats to the middle of the lake. As the sun rises, the decomposing "corpse" of Pamela's son, Jason (Ari Lehman), attacks Alice while she waits for help in a canoe. Just as she is dragged under water Alice awakens in a hospital, where a police officer tells her that they pulled her out of the lake. Alice is informed that everyone is dead; when she asks about Jason, the officer informs her they never found any boy, which leaves her with the impression that he is still at the lake.

==Cast==
{{main|List of Friday the 13th characters}}
{{cast listing|
* [[Betsy Palmer]] as [[Pamela Voorhees|Mrs. Voorhees]]
* [[Adrienne King]] as [[Alice (Friday the 13th)|Alice]]
* [[Harry Crosby (businessman)|Harry Crosby]] as Bill
* [[Jeannine Taylor]] as Marcie
* [[Laurie Bartram]] as Brenda
* [[Kevin Bacon]] as Jack
* [[Mark Nelson (actor)|Mark Nelson]] as Ned
* Robbi Morgan as Annie
* Peter Brouwer as Steve Christy
* [[Rex Everhart]] as The Truck Driver
* [[Ronn Carroll]] as Sgt. Tierney
* [[Walt Gorney]] as Crazy Ralph
* Willie Adams as Barry
* Debra S. Hayes as Claudette
* Sally Anne Golden as Sandy
* [[Ari Lehman]] as [[Jason Voorhees|Jason]]
}}


==Production==
==Production==
===Development===
===Development===
[[Image:F13Variety.jpg|thumb|upright|''Friday the 13th'' did not even have a completed script when Sean S. Cunningham took out this ad in ''Variety'' magazine.]]
[[File:F13Variety.jpg|thumb|upright|''Friday the 13th'' did not have a completed script when Sean S. Cunningham took out this advertisement in ''Variety'' magazine]]
''Friday the 13th'' was produced and directed by [[Sean S. Cunningham]], who had previously worked with filmmaker [[Wes Craven]] on the film ''[[The Last House on the Left]]''. Cunningham, inspired by [[John Carpenter|John Carpenter's]] ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'', and films by [[Mario Bava]], wanted ''Friday the 13th'' to be shocking, visually stunning, and "[make] you jump out of your seat." Wanting to distance himself from ''The Last House on the Left'', Cunningham wanted ''Friday the 13th'' to be more of a "roller-coaster ride".<ref name="F1 insp">{{cite book|last=Grove|first=David|title=Making Friday the 13th: The Legend of Camp Blood|publisher=FAB Press|month=February | year=2005|location=United Kingdom|pages=11–12|isbn=1903254310}}</ref>
''Friday the 13th'' was produced and directed by [[Sean S. Cunningham]], who had previously worked with filmmaker [[Wes Craven]] on the film ''[[The Last House on the Left (1972 film)|The Last House on the Left]]''. Cunningham, inspired by [[John Carpenter]]'s ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'',{{sfn|Grove|2005|pp=11–12}} wanted ''Friday the 13th'' to be shocking, visually stunning and "[make] you jump out of your seat."{{sfn|Grove|2005|pp=11–12}} Wanting to distance himself from ''The Last House on the Left'', Cunningham wanted ''Friday the 13th'' to be more of a "roller-coaster ride".{{sfn|Grove|2005|pp=11–12}}


This film was intended to be "a real scary movie" and at the same time make the audience laugh. ''Friday the 13th'' began its life as nothing more than a title. Initially, "Long Night at Camp Blood" was the working title during the writing process, but Cunningham believed in his "Friday the 13th" moniker, and quickly rushed out to place an [[advertising|ad]] in ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]''. Worried that someone else owned the rights to the title and wanting to avoid potential lawsuits, Cunningham thought it would be best to find out immediately. He commissioned a New York advertising agency to develop his concept of the ''Friday the 13th'' logo, which consisted of big block letters bursting through a pane of glass.<ref name="production">Grove, David, pp.15–16</ref> In the end, Cunningham believed there were "no problems" with the title, but distributor George Mansour stated, "There was a movie before ours called ''Friday the 13th: The Orphan''. Moderately successful. But someone still threatened to sue. I don't know whether Phil [Scuderi] paid them off, but it was finally resolved."<ref>{{cite book|last=Bracke|first=Peter|title=Crystal Lake Memories|publisher=Titan Books|date=2006-10-11|location=[[United Kingdom]]|page=17|isbn=1845763432}}</ref>
The original screenplay was tentatively titled ''A Long Night at Camp Blood''.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=18}} While working on a redraft of the screenplay, Cunningham proposed the title ''Friday the 13th'', after which Miller began redeveloping.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=18}} Cunningham rushed out to place an advertisement in ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' using the ''Friday the 13th'' title.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=17}} Worried that someone else owned the rights to the title and wanting to avoid potential lawsuits, Cunningham thought it would be best to find out immediately. He commissioned a New York advertising agency to develop his concept of the ''Friday the 13th'' logo, which consisted of big block letters bursting through a pane of glass.{{sfn|Grove|2005|pp=15–16}} In the end, Cunningham believed there were "no problems" with the title, but distributor George Mansour stated, "There was a movie before ours called ''Friday the 13th: The Orphan''. It was moderately successful. But someone still threatened to sue. Either Phil Scuderi paid them off, but it was finally resolved."{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=17}}


The screenplay was completed in mid-1979{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=18}} by [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]], who later went on to write for several television [[soap opera]]s, including ''[[Guiding Light]]'', ''[[One Life to Live]]'' and ''[[All My Children]]''; at the time, Miller was living in [[Stratford, Connecticut]], near Cunningham, and the two had begun collaborating on potential film projects.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=17}} Miller delighted in inventing a serial killer who turned out to be somebody's mother, a murderer whose only motivation was her love for her child. "I took motherhood and turned it on its head and I think that was great fun. Mrs. Voorhees was the mother I'd always wanted—a mother who would have killed for her kids."<ref name=miller/> Miller was unhappy about the filmmakers' decision to make Jason Voorhees the killer in the sequels. "Jason was dead from the very beginning. He was a victim, not a villain."<ref name=miller>{{cite web |last=Miller |first=Victor |title=Frequently Asked Questions |url=http://www.victormiller.com/faq.php |work=Victor Miller Official Site |access-date=June 25, 2017 |quote=I have a major problem with all of them because they made Jason the villain. I still believe that the best part of my screenplay was the fact that a mother figure was the serial killer—working from a horribly twisted desire to avenge the senseless death of her son, Jason. Jason was dead from the very beginning. He was a victim, not a villain. |archive-date=September 24, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170924054710/http://victormiller.com/faq.php |url-status=live }}</ref>
===Writing===

The script was written by [[Victor Miller (writer)|Victor Miller]], who has gone on to write for several television [[soap opera]]s, including ''[[Guiding Light]]'', ''[[One Life to Live]]'' and ''[[All My Children]]''. Miller delighted in inventing a serial killer who turned out to be somebody's mother, a murderer whose only motivation was her love for her child. "I took motherhood and turned it on its head and I think that was great fun. Mrs. Voorhees was the mother I'd always wanted - a mother who would have killed for her kids." Miller was unhappy about the filmmakers' decision to make Jason Voorhees the killer in the sequels. "Jason was dead from the very beginning. He was a victim, not a villain."<ref>Interview with Victor Miller [http://www.victormiller.com/faq/index.html#q11 Victor Miller.com]; last accessed [[December 11]], [[2006]].</ref> The idea of Jason appearing at the end of the film was initially not used in the original script, and was actually suggested by makeup designer [[Tom Savini]]. Savini stated that "The whole reason for the cliffhanger at the end was I had just seen ''[[Carrie (1976 film)|Carrie]]'', so we thought that we need a 'chair jumper' like that and I said, 'let's bring in Jason.'"<ref>Interview with Tom Savini [http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/story/462246p-388901c.html New York Daily News]; last accessed [[December 11]], [[2006]].</ref>
The idea of Jason appearing at the end of the film was initially not used in the original script; in Miller's final draft, the film ended with Alice merely floating on the lake.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=20}} Jason's appearance was actually suggested by makeup designer [[Tom Savini]].{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=20}} Savini stated that "The whole reason for the cliffhanger at the end was I had just seen ''[[Carrie (1976 film)|Carrie]]'', so we thought that we need a 'chair jumper' like that, and I said, 'let's bring in Jason'".<ref>{{cite news|title=Jason Voorhees: From mama's boy to his own man|url=http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/story/462246p-388901c.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061114062638/http://www.nydailynews.com/entertainment/movies/story/462246p-388901c.html|archive-date=November 14, 2006 |work=[[New York Daily News]]|access-date=December 11, 2006 |date=October 19, 2006|url-status=dead}}</ref>

===Casting===
A New York-based firm, headed by Julie Hughes and Barry Moss, was hired to find eight young actors to play the camp's staff members. Cunningham admits that he was not looking for "great actors", but anyone that was likable, and appeared to be a responsible camp counselor.{{sfn|Grove|2005|pages=21–28}} The way Cunningham saw it, the actors would need to look good, read the dialogue somewhat well, and work cheap. Moss and Hughes were happy to find four actors, [[Kevin Bacon]], [[Laurie Bartram]], Peter Brouwer, and [[Adrienne King]], who had previously appeared on [[soap operas]].{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}} The role of [[Alice (Friday the 13th)|Alice Hardy]] was set up as an open casting call, a publicity stunt used to attract more attention to the film. The producers originally wanted [[Sally Field]] for the role of Alice, but realized that they could not afford an established high-profile actress and went for unknowns instead. According to Adrienne King. "originally, [the producers] were looking really hard for a name actress to play Alice. They finally realized that even if they could find somebody like that who was willing to do it, they wouldn't be able to afford her, so they decided to go with new talent instead."<ref>{{cite magazine | magazine=[[Fangoria]] | issue=83 | title=The Women of Crystal Lake Part One | author=Marc Shapiro | date=June 1989 | pages=18–21}}</ref> King earned an audition primarily because she was the friend of someone working in Moss and Hughes's office, and Cunningham felt she embodied the qualities of Alice.{{sfn|Norman|2014|p=84}} After she auditioned, Moss recalls Cunningham commenting that they saved the best actress for last.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}} As Cunningham explains, he was looking for people that could behave naturally, and King was able to show that to him in the audition.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}}
{{quote box
| quote = I didn't even really think of this movie as a horror film. To me, this was a small independent film about carefree teenagers who are having a rip-roaring time at a summer camp where they happen to be working as counselors. Then they just happen to get killed.
| source =—Jeannine Taylor on how she viewed ''Friday the 13th''{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}}
| align = left
| bgcolor = #C2DFFF
| width = 28em
| salign = right
}}

With King cast in the role of lead heroine Alice, Laurie Bartram was hired to play Brenda. Kevin Bacon, [[Mark Nelson (actor)|Mark Nelson]] and Jeannine Taylor, who had known each other prior to the film, were cast as Jack, Ned, and Marcie respectively. It is Bacon and Nelson's contention that, because the three already knew each other, they already had the specific chemistry the casting director was looking for in the roles of Jack, Ned, and Marcie.{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}} Taylor has stated that Hughes and Moss were highly regarded while she was an actress, so when they offered her an audition she felt that, whatever the part, it would "be a good opportunity."{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}}

''Friday the 13th'' was Nelson's first feature film, and when he went in for his first audition, the only thing he was given to read were some comedic scenes. Nelson received a call back for a second audition, which required him to wear a bathing suit, which, Nelson acknowledges, made him start to wonder if something was off about this film. He did not fully realize what was going on until he got the part and was given the full script to read. Nelson explains, "It certainly was not a straight dramatic role, and it was only after they offered me the part that they gave me the full script to read and I realized how much blood was in it."{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}} Nelson believes that Ned used humor to hide his insecurities, especially around Brenda, whom the actor believes Ned was attracted to. Nelson recalls an early draft of the script stating that Ned suffered from [[Poliomyelitis|polio]], and his legs were deformed while his upper body was muscular.{{Sfn|Grove|2005|pages= 36–39}} Ned is believed to have given birth to the "practical joker victim" of horror films.{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=41}} According to author David Grove, there was no equivalent character in [[John Carpenter]]'s ''[[Halloween (1978 film)|Halloween]]'', or [[Bob Clark]]'s ''[[Black Christmas (1974 film)|Black Christmas]]'' before that. He served as a model for the slasher films that would follow ''Friday the 13th''.{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=41}}
{{quote box
| quote = I went in to audition for [Moss and Hughes] for something else. They said, "You know, Robbi, you're not really right for this, but there's a movie called ''Friday the 13th'' and they need an adorable camp counselor."
| source =—Robbi Morgan on how she obtained the role of Annie{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}}
| align = right
| width = 30em
| bgcolor=#C2DFFF
| salign = right
}}

The part of Bill was given to [[Harry Crosby (businessman)|Harry Crosby]], son of [[Bing Crosby]].<ref name=freaky/> Robbi Morgan, who played Annie, was not auditioning for the film when she was offered the role; while in her office, Hughes looked at Morgan and proclaimed, "You're a camp counselor." The next day, Morgan was on the set.{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}} Morgan only appeared on set for a day to shoot all her scenes. [[Rex Everhart]], who portrayed Enos, did not film the truck scenes with Morgan, so she had to either act with an imaginary Enos, or exchange dialogue with Taso Stavrakis—Savini's assistant—who would sit in the truck with her.{{sfn|Grove|2005|pages=34–35}} It was Peter Brouwer's girlfriend that helped him land a role on ''Friday the 13th''. After recently being written off the show ''[[Love of Life]]'', Brouwer moved back to Connecticut to look for work. Learning that his girlfriend was working as an [[assistant director]] for ''Friday the 13th'', Brouwer asked about any openings. Initially told casting was looking for big stars to fill the role of Steve Christy, it was not until Sean Cunningham dropped by to deliver a message to Brouwer's girlfriend, and saw him working in a garden, that Brouwer was hired.{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}}

[[Estelle Parsons]] was initially asked to portray the film's killer, Mrs. Voorhees, but declined with her agent citing that the film was too violent, and did not know what kind of actress would play such a part. [[Shelley Winters]] was also offered the part, but turned it down.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url = https://ew.com/article/2013/11/22/friday-the-13th-kevin-bacon/|title = 'On Location in Blairstown: The Making of Friday the 13th': Author Q&A|magazine = [[Entertainment Weekly]]|access-date = July 7, 2021|archive-date = November 17, 2020|archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20201117173807/https://ew.com/article/2013/11/22/friday-the-13th-kevin-bacon/|url-status = live}}</ref> Hughes and Moss sent a copy of the script to Betsy Palmer, in hopes that she would accept the part. Palmer could not understand why someone would want her for a part in a horror film, as she had previously starred in films such as ''[[Mister Roberts (1955 film)|Mister Roberts]]'', ''The Angry Man'', and ''[[The Tin Star]]''. Palmer only agreed to play the role because she needed to buy a new car, even when she believed the film to "be a piece of shit."{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}} Stavrakis subbed for Betsy Palmer as well, which involved Morgan's character being chased through the woods by Mrs. Voorhees, although the audience only sees a pair of legs running after Morgan. Palmer had just arrived in town when those scenes were about to be filmed, and was not in the physical shape necessary to chase Morgan around the woods. Morgan's training as an [[Acrobatics|acrobat]] assisted her in these scenes, as her character was required to leap out of a moving jeep when she discovers that Mrs. Voorhees does not intend to take her to the camp.{{sfn|Grove|2005|pages=34–35}} Betsy Palmer explains how she developed the character of Mrs. Voorhees:

{{blockquote|Being an actress who uses the [[Stanislavski's system|Stanislavsky method]], I always try to find details about my character. With Pamela ... I began with a class ring that I remember reading in the script that she'd worn. Starting with that, I traced Pamela back to my own high school days in the early 1940s. So it's 1944, a very conservative time, and Pamela has a steady boyfriend. They have sex—which is very bad of course—and Pamela soon gets pregnant with Jason. The father takes off and when Pamela tells her parents, they disown her because having ... babies out of [[Marriage|wedlock]] isn't something that good girls do. I think she took Jason and raised him the best she could, but he turned out to be a very strange boy. [She took] lots of odd jobs and one of those jobs was as a cook at a summer camp. Then Jason drowns and her whole world collapses. What were the counselors doing instead of watching Jason? They were having sex, which is the way that she got into trouble. From that point on, Pamela became very psychotic and puritanical in her attitudes as she was determined to kill all of the immoral camp counselors.{{sfn|Grove|2005|pages=49–50}}}}

Cunningham wanted to make the Mrs. Voorhees character "terrifying", and to that end he believed it was important that Palmer not act "over the top." There was also the fear that Palmer's past credits, as more of a wholesome character, would make it difficult to believe she could be scary.{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=52}} Palmer was paid $1000 per day for her ten days on set.<ref name=freaky>{{cite news|work=Pittsburgh Post-Gazette|pages=D–1, {{URL|https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22938843/pittsburgh_postgazette/|D-5}}|author=Vancheri, Barbara|location=Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|date=February 13, 2009|via=Newspapers.com|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22938812/pittsburgh_postgazette/|title=Freaky Friday|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819182217/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22938812/pittsburgh_postgazette/|url-status=live}}</ref> Ari Lehman, who had previously auditioned for Cunningham's ''Manny's Orphans'', failing to get the part, was determined to land the role of Jason Voorhees. According to Lehman, he went in very intense and afterward Cunningham told him he was perfect for the part.{{sfn|Grove|2005 |pages=21–28}} In addition to the main cast, [[Walt Gorney]] came on as "Crazy Ralph", the town's [[Oracle|soothsayer]]. The character of Crazy Ralph was meant to establish two functions: foreshadow the events to come, and insinuate that he could actually be the murderer. Cunningham has stated that he was apprehensive about including the character, and is not sure if he accomplished his goal of creating a new suspect.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pages=19–21}}

===Filming===
[[File:Boat at NoBeBoSco 07162018.jpg|thumb|[[Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco]]]]
The film was shot in and around the townships of [[Hardwick, New Jersey|Hardwick]], [[Blairstown, New Jersey|Blairstown]], and [[Hope Township, New Jersey|Hope]], in [[Warren County, New Jersey|Warren County]], [[New Jersey]] in September 1979. The camp scenes were shot on a working [[Boy Scouts of America|Boy Scout camp]], [[Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco]] which is located in Hardwick.<ref name=telegraph>{{cite web|work=The Telegraph|title=Friday the 13th: nine things you didn't know about the movie|author=Hawkes, Rebecca|date=October 13, 2017|url=https://www.telegraph.co.uk/films/2016/05/13/friday-the-13th-nine-things-you-never-knew/|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819182122/https://www.telegraph.co.uk/films/2016/05/13/friday-the-13th-nine-things-you-never-knew/|url-status=live}}</ref> The camp is still standing and still operates as a summer camp.<ref>{{cite web|author=Cummins, Emily|date=May 5, 2014|url=http://www.nj.com/warrenreporter/index.ssf/2014/05/the_historic_blairstown_theatr_1.html|title=Blairstown Theatre to screen latest horror film by local director|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160313131806/http://www.nj.com/warrenreporter/index.ssf/2014/05/the_historic_blairstown_theatr_1.html |archive-date=March 13, 2016|work=[[NJ.com]]}}</ref><ref name="Blairstown Theater Festival">{{cite web|url=http://blairstowntheaterfestival.com/friday_the_13th_connection.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070712120123/http://www.blairstowntheaterfestival.com/friday_the_13th_connection.htm|archive-date= July 12, 2007|title=Blairstown Theater Festival|publisher=Blairstown Theater|access-date=March 2, 2008}}</ref>

[[Tom Savini]] was hired to design the film's special effects based upon his work in [[George A. Romero]]'s ''[[Dawn of the Dead (1978 film)|Dawn of the Dead]]'' (1978).<ref name=freaky/> Savini's design contributions included crafting the effects of Marcie's axe wound to the face, the arrow penetrating Jack's throat, and Mrs. Voorhees's decapitation by the machete.<ref name=freaky/> The [[cinematography]] in the film employs recurrent [[point-of-view shot]]s from the perspective of the villain.{{sfn|Dimare|2011|p=186}} A live snake was killed during filming as part of a scene where Alice discovers it in her cabin.<ref>{{Cite web |last1=Wilhelmi |first1=Jack |last2=Lealos |first2=Shawn S. |date=2023-09-13 |title=Friday The 13th Controversy: Did They Kill A Real Snake? |url=https://screenrant.com/friday-the-13th-movie-controversy-real-snake-death/#:~:text=Summary,like%20PETA%20at%20the%20time. |access-date=2023-10-14 |website=Screen Rants |archive-date=January 3, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210103200944/https://screenrant.com/friday-the-13th-movie-controversy-real-snake-death/#:~:text=Summary,like%20PETA%20at%20the%20time. |url-status=live }}</ref>

During the filming of the fight sequences between King and Palmer's characters, Palmer suggested rehearsing the scene based on her theater training: "I said to Adrienne that night, 'Why don't we rehearse this scene, I have to slap you,' because on stage when you slap somebody, you slap them."<ref name=telegraph/> While rehearsing, Palmer slapped King in the face, and she began crying: "She collapsed to the floor, crying, 'Sean! [Cunningham] She hit me.' I said, 'Well, of course I hit her, we were rehearsing the scene.' He said, 'No, no, no Betsy, we don't hit people in movies. We miss them.'"<ref name=telegraph/>


===Music===
===Music===
{{Infobox album
When Harry Manfredini began working on the [[Sheet music|musical score]], the decision was made to only play the music alongside the killer so it would not "manipulate the audience" into thinking the killer was present when they were not.<ref name="slash">{{cite web|url=http://www.slasherama.com/features/harry.HTML|title=Slasherama interview with Harry Manfredini|publisher=Slasherama|accessdate=2007-10-28}}</ref> Manfredini pointed out the lack of music for certain scenes: "There's a scene where one of the girls […] is setting up the archery area of the film. One of the guys shoots an arrow into the target and just misses her. It's a huge scare, but if you notice, there's no music. That was a choice."<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini also noted that when something ''was'' going to happen, the music would cut off so that the audience would relax a bit, and the scare would be that much more effective.
| name = Friday the 13th
| type = soundtrack
| artist = [[Harry Manfredini]]
| cover =
| alt =
| released = January 13, 2012
| recorded = 1980
| venue =
| studio =
| genre = [[Film score]]
| length = {{duration|m=43|s=41}}
| label = [[Gramavision Records]]<br />La-La Land Records
| producer =
| prev_title =
| prev_year =
| next_title =
| next_year =
}}
When [[Harry Manfredini]] began working on the musical score, the decision was made to only play music when the killer was actually present so as to not "manipulate the audience".<ref name="slash">{{cite web|url=http://www.slasherama.com/features/harry.HTML|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060511052302/http://www.slasherama.com/features/harry.HTML|archive-date=May 11, 2006|title=Slasherama interview with Harry Manfredini|work=Slasherama|access-date=October 28, 2007}}</ref> Manfredini pointed out the lack of music for certain scenes: "There's a scene where one of the girls ... is setting up the archery area ... One of the guys shoots an arrow into the target and just misses her. It's a huge scare, but if you notice, there's no music. That was a choice."<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini also noted that when something was going to happen, the music would cut off so that the audience would relax a bit, and the scare would be that much more effective.{{citation needed|date=June 2018}}


Since Mrs. Voorhees, the killer in the original ''Friday the 13th'', does not show up until the final reel of the film, Manfredini had the job of creating a score that would represent the killer in her absence.<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini was inspired by the 1975 film ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'', where the shark is not seen for the majority of the film but the motif created by [[John Williams]] cued the audience on when the shark was present during scenes when you could not see it.<ref name="Man">Bracke, Peter, pg. 39</ref> Sean S. Cunningham sought a chorus, but the budget would not allow it. While listening to a [[Krzysztof Penderecki]] piece of music, which contained a chorus with "striking pronunciations", Manfredini was inspired to recreate a similar sound. He came up with the sound "ki ki ki, ma ma ma" from the final reel when Mrs. Voorhees arrives and is reciting "Kill her, mommy!" The "ki" comes from "kill", and the "ma" from "mommy". To achieve the unique sound he wanted for the film, Manfredini spoke the two words "harshly, distinctly and rhythmically into a microphone" and ran them into an echo [[reverberation]] machine.<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini finished the original score after a couple of weeks, and then recorded the score in a friend's basement.<ref name="Man"/> Victor Miller and assistant editor Jay Keuper have commented on how memorable the music is, with Keuper describing it as "iconographic". Manfredini says, "Everybody thinks it's cha, cha, cha. I'm like, 'Cha, cha, cha? What are you talking about?"<ref name="ReturntoCrystalLake">{{cite video|people=Victor Miller, Jay Keuper, Harry Manfredini|title="Return to Crystal Lake: Making of Friday the 13th" ''Friday the 13th'' DVD Special Features)|medium=DVD (Region 2)|location=United States|publisher=WB|year=1980}}</ref>
Because the killer, Mrs. Voorhees, appears onscreen only during the final scenes of the film, Manfredini had the job of creating a score that would represent the killer in her absence.<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini borrows from the 1975 film ''[[Jaws (film)|Jaws]]'', where the shark is likewise not seen for the majority of the film but the motif created by [[John Williams]] cued the audience to the shark's invisible menace.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=39}} [[Sean S. Cunningham]] sought a chorus, but the budget would not allow it. While listening to a [[Krzysztof Penderecki]] piece of music, which contained a chorus with "striking pronunciations", Manfredini was inspired to recreate a similar sound. He came up with the sound "ki ki ki, ma ma ma" from the final reel when Mrs. Voorhees arrives and is reciting "Kill her, mommy!" The "ki" comes from "kill", and the "ma" from "mommy". To achieve the unique sound he wanted for the film, Manfredini spoke the two words "harshly, distinctly and rhythmically into a microphone" and ran them into an echo reverberation machine.<ref name="slash"/> Manfredini finished the original score after a couple of weeks, and then recorded the score in a friend's basement.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=39}} Victor Miller and assistant editor Jay Keuper have commented on how memorable the music is, with Keuper describing it as "iconographic". Manfredini says, "Everybody thinks it's cha, cha, cha. I'm like, 'Cha, cha, cha? What are you talking about?'"<ref name="ReturntoCrystalLake">{{cite video |last1=Miller |first1=Victor |last2=Keuper |first2=Jay |last3=Manfredini |first3=Harry |author-link3=Harry Manfredini |title="Return to Crystal Lake: Making of Friday the 13th" ''Friday the 13th'' DVD |medium=DVD – region 2 |location=United States |publisher=[[Warner Bros.]] |date=1980}}</ref>

In 1982, [[Gramavision Records]] released an [[LP record]] of selected pieces of Harry Manfredini's scores from the first three Friday the 13th films.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=94}} On 13 January 2012, La-La Land Records released a limited edition 6-CD boxset containing Manfredini's scores from the first six films. It sold out in less than 24 hours.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://lalalandrecords.com/F13.html |title=LA LA LAND RECORDS, Friday the 13th |work=lalalandrecords.com |access-date=June 25, 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120115052539/http://www.lalalandrecords.com/F13.html |archive-date=January 15, 2012 }}</ref>


==Release==
==Release==
===Box office===
===Distribution===
A bidding war over distribution rights to the film ensued in 1980 between [[Paramount Pictures]], [[Warner Bros. Pictures|Warner Bros.]], and [[United Artists]].{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=134}} Paramount executive Frank Mancuso, Sr. recalled: "The minute we saw ''Friday the 13th'', we knew we had a hit."{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=134}} Paramount ultimately purchased domestic distribution rights for ''Friday the 13th'' for $1.5 million.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=134}} Based on the success of recently released horror films (such as ''Halloween'') and the low budget of the film, the studio deemed it a "low-risk" release in terms of profitability.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|pages=135–137}} It was the first [[independent film|independent]] slasher film to be acquired by a major motion picture studio.{{sfn|McCarty|1984|p=2}} Paramount spent approximately $500,000 in advertisements for the film, and then an additional $500,000 when the film began performing well at the box office.{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=59}}
Paramount bought ''Friday the 13th's'' distribution rights for $1.5 million, after seeing a screening of the film. They spent approximately $500,000 in advertisements for the film, and then an additional $500,000 when the film began performing well at the box office.<ref>Grove, David, pg.59</ref> ''Friday the 13th'' opened theatrically on [[May 9]],[[1980]] across the [[United States]] in 1,100 theaters. It took in $5,816,321 in its opening weekend, before finishing domestically with $39,754,601. The film finished as the eighteenth highest grossing film of 1980.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?yr=1980&p=.htm |title=Friday the 13th domestic box office |publisher=Box Office Mojo |accessdate=2008-03-10}}</ref> ''Friday the 13th'' was released internationally, which was unusual for an [[independent film]] with, at the time, no well-recognized or bankable actors.<ref>{{cite book|author=Adam Rockoff|title=Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film|location=[[Jefferson, North Carolina]]|publisher=McFarland and Company|year=2002|page=18|isbn=0786412275}}</ref> The film would take in approximately $20 million in international box office receipts.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/1980/0FF1.php|title=Friday the 13th international|publisher=The-Numbers|accessdate=2008-03-10}}</ref> Not factoring in international sales, or the cross-over film with ''[[A Nightmare on Elm Street (franchise)|A Nightmare on Elm Street's]]'' [[Freddy Kreuger]], the original ''Friday the 13th'' is the highest grossing film of the ten film series.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/franchises/chart/?id=fridaythe13th.htm |title=Comparison to other ''Friday the 13th'' sequels|publisher=Box Office Mojo|accessdate=2008-03-10}}</ref> To provide context with the box office gross of films in 2008, the cost of making and promoting ''Friday the 13th''—which includes the $550,000 budget and the $1 million in advertisement—is approximately $4.4 million. With regard to the domestic box office gross, the film would have made $112,915,537 in adjusted 2008 dollars.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.halfhill.com/inflation1.html|title=Tom's Inflation Calculator|publisher=HalfHill.com|accessdate=2008-03-10}}</ref> In terms of recent box-office performance, ''Friday the 13th'' would be the highest grossing horror film of 2008 using the adjusted figures.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?yr=2008&p=.htm|title=U.S. Box Office Rankings for 2008|publisher=Box Office Mojo|accessate=2008-03-10}}</ref> On July 13, 2007, ''Friday the 13th'' was screened for the first time on Blairstown's Main Street in the very theater which appears shortly after the opening credits.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://blairstowntheaterfestival.com/friday_the_13th_connection.htm|title=Blairstown Theater Festival|publisher=Blairstown Theater|accessdate=2008-03-02}}</ref> Overflowing crowds forced the [[Blairstown Theater Festival]], the sponsoring organization, to add an extra screening at 11:00 PM. The event was covered by local media and New York City's Channel 11.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://video.cw11.com/global/video/popup/pop_playerLaunch.asp?clipid1=1586158&at1|title=Blairstown Theater screens ''Friday the 13th''|publisher=The CW 11|accessdate=2008-06-21}}</ref>


===Reception===
===Marketing===
A full one-sheet poster, featuring a group of teenagers imposed beneath the silhouette of a knife-wielding figure, was designed by artist [[Alex Ebel]] to promote the film's U.S. release.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=139}} Scholar Richard Nowell has observed that the poster and marketing campaign presented ''Friday the 13th'' as a "light-hearted" and "youth-oriented" horror film in an attempt to draw interest from America's prime theater-going demographic of young adults and teenagers.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|pages=145–147}} Warner Bros. secured distribution rights to the film in international markets.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=134}}<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Nowell|first1=Richard|title="The Ambitions of Most Independent Filmmakers": Indie Production, the Majors, and Friday the 13th (1980)|journal=Journal of Film and Video|date=2011|volume=63|issue=2|pages=28–44|doi=10.5406/jfilmvideo.63.2.0028|s2cid=194097731}}</ref>
{{Expand-section|date=April 2008}}
Upon release, ''Friday the 13th'' was panned by critcs. Its most vocal detractor was [[Gene Siskel]] who in his review called Cunningham "one of the most despicable creatures ever to infest the movie business".<ref>Bracke pg. 45</ref> He also published Betsy Palmer's home address and encourage fellow detractors to write to her and express their contempt for the film.<ref>Bracke. 46</ref> Siskel and [[Roger Ebert]] spent a whole episode berating the film because they felt it would make audiences root for the killer.<ref>{{cite news|title=Freddy V Jason|author=Chris Hewitt, Adam Smith|work=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]|date=March 2009|pages=97}}</ref> ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'' claimed the film was "[l]owbudget in the worst sense - with no apparent talent or intelligence to offset its technical inadequacies - ''Friday the 13th'' has nothing to exploit but its title."<ref>[http://www.variety.com/review/VE1117791118.html?categoryid=31&cs=1&p=0 Excerpt of the 1980 ''Variety'' review]</ref>


=== Home media ===
The film came in at #31 on [[Bravo (television network)|Bravo]]'s ''100 Scariest Movie Moments'' for the ending sequence,<ref>[http://www.bravotv.com/The_100_Scariest_Movie_Moments/index.shtml 100 Scariest Moments in Movie History]</ref> and was voted #15 in [[Channel 4]]'s ''100 Greatest Scariest Moments''.<ref>[http://www.channel4.com/film/newsfeatures/microsites/S/scary/results_20-11_2.html 100 Greatest Scariest Moments]</ref>
''Friday the 13th'' was first released on [[DVD]] in the United States by [[Paramount Home Entertainment]] on October 19, 1999.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=314}} The disc sold 32,497 units.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=314}} On February 3, 2009, Paramount released the film again on DVD and [[Blu-ray]] in an unrated uncut, for the first time in the United States (previous [[VHS]], [[LaserDisc]] and DVD releases included the R-rated theatrical version).<ref name=uncut>{{cite web|work=DVD Talk|title=Friday the 13th: Uncut Deluxe Edition (1980)|date=February 3, 2009|access-date=August 18, 2018|author=McGaughy, Cameron|url=https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/36148/friday-the-13th-uncut-deluxe-edition-1980/|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819051312/https://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/36148/friday-the-13th-uncut-deluxe-edition-1980/|url-status=live}}</ref> The uncut version of the film contains approximately 11 seconds of previously unreleased footage.<ref name=uncut/>


In 2011, the uncut version of ''Friday the 13th'' was released in a 4-disc DVD collection with the first three sequels.<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/product.asp?sku=D83927 |title=Buy Movies at Movies Unlimited - The Movie Collector's Site |work=moviesunlimited.com |access-date=June 25, 2017 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150414210057/http://www.moviesunlimited.com/musite/product.asp?sku=D83927 |archive-date=April 14, 2015 }}</ref> It was again included in two Blu-ray sets: ''Friday the 13th: The Complete Collection'', released in 2013 and ''Friday the 13th: The Ultimate Collection'', in 2018.<ref>{{cite web|work=[[Bloody Disgusting]]|url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/home-video/3472385/new-friday-13th-blu-ray-collection-coming-next-year-full-details/|title=New 'Friday the 13th' Blu-ray Collection Coming Next Year; Full Details|author=Squires, John|date=November 30, 2017|access-date=August 18, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180701132008/https://bloody-disgusting.com/home-video/3472385/new-friday-13th-blu-ray-collection-coming-next-year-full-details/|archive-date=July 1, 2018}}</ref> Paramount's Blu-ray was re-released as a ''40th Anniversary Limited Edition'' steelbook in 2020.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/home-video/3604477/paramount-releasing-friday-13th-40th-anniversary-steelbook-blu-ray-may/|title=Paramount Releasing 'Friday the 13th' 40th Anniversary Steelbook Blu-ray in May|last=Squires|first=John|work=Bloody Disgusting|access-date=February 11, 2020|archive-date=February 12, 2020|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200212143402/https://bloody-disgusting.com/home-video/3604477/paramount-releasing-friday-13th-40th-anniversary-steelbook-blu-ray-may/|url-status=live}}</ref> In 2020, to celebrate the film's 40th anniversary, [[Shout! Factory]] released a 4K scan of the original film, as well as parts 2-4, in a complete series box set.{{citation needed|date=January 2024}} The film grossed $868,529 in DVD and Blu-Ray home sales.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Friday the 13th Franchise Box Office History |url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movies/franchise/Friday-the-13th |access-date=2024-06-27 |website=The Numbers}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Friday the 13th (1980) - Financial Information |url=https://www.the-numbers.com/movie/Friday-the-13th-(1980) |access-date=2024-06-27 |website=The Numbers}}</ref>
==Related works==
===Sequels===
{{Main|Friday the 13th (franchise)}}
As of 2009, ''Friday the 13th'' has spawned ten sequels, including [[Freddy vs. Jason|a crossover film]] with ''[[A Nightmare on Elm Street]]'' villain [[Freddy Kruger]]. Cunningham did not direct any of the film's sequels, though he did act as producer on the later installments; he initially did not want [[Jason Voorhees]] to be resurrected for the sequel.{{Fact|date=March 2008}} ''[[Friday the 13th Part 2]]'' (1981) introduced Jason Voorhees, the son of Mrs. Voorhees, as the primary antagonist, which would continue for the remaining sequels and related works. Most of the sequels were filmed on larger budgets than the original. In comparison, ''Friday the 13th''' had a budget of $550,000, while the first sequel was given a budget of $1.25 million.<ref name="report">Bracke, Peter, pp. 314–315</ref> At the time of its release, ''[[Freddy vs. Jason]]'' had the largest budget, at $25 million.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=freddyvsjason.htm|title=Freddy vs. Jason (2003)|publisher=Box Office Mojo|accessdate=2007-06-12}}</ref> All of the sequels repeated the premise of the original, so the filmmakers made tweaks to provide freshness. Changes involved an addition to the title—as opposed to a number attached to the end—like "The Final Chapter" and "[[Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan|Jason Takes Manhattan]]", or filming the movie in [[3-D film|3-D]], as Miner did for ''[[Friday the 13th Part 3]]'' (1982).<ref name="part3">Bracke, Peter, pp.73–74</ref> One major tweak that would affect the entire film series was the addition of Jason's [[hockey]] mask in the third film; this mask would become one of the most recognizable images in popular culture.<ref name="ABC">{{cite news|author=Gary Kemble|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/arts/articulate/200601/s1546063.htm|title=Movie Minutiae: the Friday the 13th series (1980-?)|publisher=[[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]]|date=2006-01-13|accessdate=2007-05-21}}</ref>


==Reception==
A [[Friday the 13th (2009 film)|reboot to ''Friday the 13th'']] came to theaters in [[February]] [[2009]], with ''Freddy vs. Jason'' writers Damian Shannon and Mark Swift hired to script the new film.<ref name="Shan/Swif">{{cite news|author=Borys Kit|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3ia426500233e132c71ea0487278b5bbb3|title=Duo pumps new blood into 'Friday the 13th'|publisher=The Hollywood Reporter|date=2007-10-02|accessdate=2007-10-21}}</ref> The film is reported to focus on Jason Voorhees, and that he will keep his trademark hockey-mask.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.bloody-disgusting.com/news/10058|title=Platinum Confirmations: Near Dark, Friday the 13th Remakes|publisher=Bloody-Disgusting|work=The Hollywood Reporter|date=2007-10-03|accessate=2007-10-21}}</ref> The film is being produced by [[Michael Bay]], Andrew Form, and Brad Fuller through Bay's production company Platinum Dunes, for New Line Cinema.<ref name="Shan/Swif"/> In November 2007, [[Marcus Nispel]], director of the 2003 remake of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003 film)|The Texas Chainsaw Massacre]]'', was hired to direct.<ref>{{cite news|author=Borys Kit|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ib4d95be28520da0db0f10edad41c0123|title=Nispel scores a date with next 'Friday'|publisher=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|date=2007-11-14|accessdate=2007-11-14}}</ref> The film will have its United States release on Friday, February 13, 2009.<ref name="release">{{cite web|url=http://www.fearnet.com/MCNewsDetailPage.aspx?catid=30&mid=14390|title=Young Jason Cast in Friday the 13th remake|publisher=FearNet|date=[[2008-05-15]]|accessdate=2008-05-28}}</ref>
=== Box office ===
''Friday the 13th'' opened theatrically on May 9, 1980, across the United States, ultimately expanding its release to 1,127 theaters.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=314}} It earned $5,816,321 in its opening weekend, before finishing domestically with $39,754,601,{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=60}} with a total of 14,778,700 admissions.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=314}} It was the 18th highest-grossing film that year, facing competition from other high-profile horror releases such as ''[[The Shining (film)|The Shining]]'', ''[[Dressed to Kill (1980 film)|Dressed To Kill]]'', ''[[The Fog]]'', and ''[[Prom Night (1980 film)|Prom Night]]''.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|pages=199–202}} The worldwide gross for the film was $59,754,601.<ref name="numbers">{{cite web|url=https://the-numbers.com/movie/Friday-the-13th#tab=summary|title=Box Office Information for ''Friday the 13th''|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160305192106/https://the-numbers.com/movie/Friday-the-13th#tab=summary |archive-date=March 5, 2016|work=[[The Numbers (website)|The Numbers]]|access-date=August 19, 2018}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?yr=1980&p=.htm |title=1980 |work=[[Box Office Mojo]] |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-date=June 14, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170614022934/http://www.boxofficemojo.com/yearly/chart/?yr=1980&p=.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> Of the seventeen films distributed by Paramount in 1980, only one, ''[[Airplane!]]'', returned more profits than ''Friday the 13th''.{{sfn|Nowell|2010|p=138}}


''Friday the 13th'' was released internationally, which was unusual for an [[independent film]] with, at the time, no well-recognized or bankable actors; aside from well-known television and movie actress [[Betsy Palmer]].{{sfn|Rockoff|2002|p=18}} The film would take in approximately $20 million in international box office receipts.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://the-numbers.com/movies/1980/0FF1.php |title=Friday the 13th - Box Office Data, DVD Sales, Movie News, Cast Information |work=the-numbers.com |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-date=December 24, 2013 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224110845/http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/1980/0FF1.php |url-status=live }}</ref> Not factoring in international sales, or the cross-over film with ''[[A Nightmare on Elm Street (franchise)|A Nightmare on Elm Street]]''{{'}}s [[Freddy Krueger]], the original ''Friday the 13th'' is the highest-grossing film of the franchise.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://boxofficemojo.com/franchises/chart/?id=fridaythe13th.htm |title=Friday the 13th Movies at the Box Office |work=Box Office Mojo |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-date=June 10, 2007 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070610003522/http://boxofficemojo.com/franchises/chart/?id=fridaythe13th.htm |url-status=live }}</ref>
===Adaptations===
In 1987, seven years after the release of the motion picture, Simon Hawke adapted a [[novelization]] of ''Friday the 13th''.<ref name="Part 1 novel">{{cite book|last=Hawke|first=Simon|title=Friday the 13th|publisher=Signet|year=1987|location=New York|isbn=0451150899}}</ref> One of the few additions to the book was Mrs. Voorhees begging the Christy family to take her back after the loss of her son; they agreed. <ref>Hawk, Simon, pg.164-168</ref> Another addition in the novel is more understanding in Mrs. Voorhees' actions. Hawke felt the character had attempted to move on when Jason died, but her psychosis got the best of her. When Steve Christy reopened the camp, Mrs. Voorhees saw it as a chance that what happened to her son could happen again. Her murders were against the counselors, because she saw them all as responsible for Jason's death.<ref>Grove, David, pg.50</ref> Hawke had previously written the novelization of ''[[Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives]]'' in 1986, and would go on to write the novelizations for ''Part 2'' and ''Part 3''.<ref name="Part 6 novel">{{cite book|last=Hawke|first=Simon|title=Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives|publisher=Signet|year=1986|location=New York|isbn=0451146417}}</ref><ref name="Part 2 novel">{{cite book|last=Hawke|first=Simon|title =Friday the 13th Part 2|publisher=Signet|year=1988|location=New York|isbn=0451153375}}</ref><ref name="Part 3 novel">{{cite book|last=Hawke|first=Simon|title =Friday the 13th Part 3|publisher=Signet|year=1988|location=New York|isbn=0451153111}}</ref> All four novels were originally published by [[New American Library|Signet]], but are currently [[Out-of-print book|out-of-print]].


To provide context with the box office gross of films in 2014, the cost of making and promoting ''Friday the 13th''—which includes the $550,000 budget and the $1 million in advertisement—is approximately $4.5 million. With regard to the US box office gross, the film would have made $177.72 million in adjusted 2017 dollars.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.halfhill.com/inflation_js.html|title=Tom's Inflation Calculator|website=Halfhill.com|access-date=June 26, 2017|archive-date=July 7, 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170707024600/http://www.halfhill.com/inflation_js.html|url-status=live}}</ref> On July 13, 2007, ''Friday the 13th'' was screened for the first time on Blairstown's Main Street in the very theater which appears shortly after the opening credits.<ref name="Blairstown Theater Festival"/> Overflowing crowds forced the [[Blairstown Theater Festival]], the sponsoring organization, to add an extra screening. A 30th Anniversary Edition was released on March 10, 2010.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://dreadcentral.com/news/35616/fantastic-friday-13th-anniversary-item-coming|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20131224115852/https://dreadcentral.com/news/35616/fantastic-friday-13th-anniversary-item-coming|archive-date=December 24, 2013|author=Serafini, Matt|date=January 29, 2010|title=Fantastic Friday the 13th Anniversary Item Coming |work=Dread Central |access-date=August 18, 2018}}</ref> A 35th-anniversary screening was held in the [[Griffith Park Zoo]] as part of the Great Horror Campout on March 13, 2015.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://dreadcentral.com/news/90753/great-horror-campout-launches-movie-night-under-the-stars-march-13th-in-los-angeles/ |title=Great Horror Campout Launches Movie Night Under the Stars March 13th in Los Angeles|author=Moore, Debi|date=February 23, 2015|work= Dread Central|access-date=December 22, 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180205000812/https://dreadcentral.com/news/90753/great-horror-campout-launches-movie-night-under-the-stars-march-13th-in-los-angeles/|archive-date=February 5, 2018}}</ref>
==Uncut DVD and Blu-ray Releases==

On February 3, 2009, ''Friday the 13th'' received an uncut home video release for the first time in the US. It is available on both DVD and Blu-ray Disc.
=== Critical response ===
====Original theatrical reviews====
Linda Gross of the ''[[Los Angeles Times]]'' referred to the film as a "silly, boring, youth-geared horror movie", though she praised Manfredini's "nervous musical score", the cinematography, as well as the performances, which she deemed "natural and appealing", particularly from Taylor, Bacon, Nelson, and Bartram.<ref>{{cite news|work=[[Los Angeles Times]]|page=7|title='Friday the 13th': Encamped in Gore|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929125/the_los_angeles_times/|via=Newspapers.com|author=Gross, Linda|date=May 15, 1980|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082833/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929125/the_los_angeles_times/|url-status=live}}</ref> ''[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]]'', however, deemed the film "low budget in the worst sense—with no apparent talent or intelligence to offset its technical inadequacies—''Friday the 13th'' has nothing to exploit but its title."<ref>{{cite journal |title=Friday the 13th |url=https://variety.com/1979/film/reviews/friday-the-13th-1117791118/ |journal=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |access-date=June 25, 2017 |date=December 31, 1979 |archive-date=April 14, 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180414011028/https://variety.com/1979/film/reviews/friday-the-13th-1117791118/ |url-status=live }}</ref> ''[[The Miami News]]''{{'}}s Bill von Maurer praised Cunningham's "low-key" direction, but noted: "After building terrific suspense and turning over the audience's stomachs, he doesn't quite know where to go from there. The movie begins to sag in the middle and the expectations he has built up begin to sour a bit."<ref>{{cite news|work=[[The Miami News]]|location=Miami, Florida|title='Friday the 13th' will scare the bejabbers out of you|author=Von Maurer, Bill|page=8A|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988147/fridaythe13thwillscarethebejabbers/|via=Newspapers.com|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819051133/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988147/fridaythe13thwillscarethebejabbers/|url-status=live}}</ref> Lou Cedrone of ''[[The Baltimore Sun|The Baltimore Evening Sun]]'' referred to the film as "a shamelessly bad film, but then Cunningham knows this. This is sad."<ref>{{cite news|work=[[The Baltimore Sun|The Baltimore Evening Sun]]|location=Baltimore, Maryland|date=May 14, 1980|page=8A|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929897/the_evening_sun/|via=Newspapers.com|author=Cedrone, Lou|title=Adams is good for laughs; '13th' is good for nothing|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082759/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929897/the_evening_sun/|url-status=live}}</ref>

Many critics compared the film unfavorably against John Carpenter's ''Halloween'', among them Marylynn Uricchio of the ''[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]'', who added: "''Friday the 13th'' is minimal on plot, suspense, and characterization. It's not very original or very scary, but it is very low-budget."<ref>{{cite news|work=[[Pittsburgh Post-Gazette]]|location=Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania|author=Uricchio, Marylynn|title='Friday the 13th': Unlucky Day for Moviegoers|via=Newspapers.com|page=16|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988209/friday13thunluckydayformoviegoers/|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819051136/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988209/friday13thunluckydayformoviegoers/|url-status=live}}</ref> Dick Shippy of the ''[[Akron Beacon Journal]]'' similarly suggested that Carpenter's ''Halloween'' played "like [[Alfred Hitchcock|Hitchcock]] when compared to Cunningham's dreadful tale of butchery."<ref>{{cite news|work=[[Akron Beacon Journal]]|date=May 15, 1980|page=F6|via=Newspapers.com|author=Shippy, Dick|title=Sex and slaughter in wholesale doses|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14970260/sexandslaughterinwholesaledosesf/|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819051150/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14970260/sexandslaughterinwholesaledosesf/|url-status=live}}</ref> ''[[The Burlington Free Press]]''{{'}}s Mike Hughes wrote that the film "copies everything, that is, except the quality" of ''Halloween'', concluding: "The lowest point of the movie comes near the end, when it exploits the genuine grief and madness of the villain. By then, things simply aren't fun anymore."<ref>{{cite news|page=4D|work=[[The Burlington Free Press]]|location=Burlington, Vermont|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14969717/thrillerbadlycopieshalloweenfridayt/|via=Newspapers.com|author=Hughes, Mike|title=Thriller Badly Copies 'Halloween'|date=May 20, 1980|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819051158/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14969717/thrillerbadlycopieshalloweenfridayt/|url-status=live}}</ref> Ron Cowan of the ''[[Statesman Journal]]'' noted the film as a "routine 'endangered teenagers' [[Exploitation film|exploitation]] movie", adding that "Cunningham betrays a rather plodding approach to suspense for most of the film, sometimes allowing his camera to act as the killer, sometimes as the victim. And the victims, of course, deliberately put themselves in peril."<ref name=cowan>{{cite news|work=[[Statesman Journal]]|location=Salem, Oregon|title='Friday the 13th' bodes bad luck|author=Cowan, Ron|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988122/fridaythe13thbodesbadluck/|via=Newspapers.com|page=5C|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082746/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/14988122/fridaythe13thbodesbadluck/|url-status=live}}</ref>

A significant number of reviews criticized the film for its depiction of violence: ''[[The Hollywood Reporter]]'' derided the film, writing: "Gruesome violence, in which throats are slashed and heads are split open in realistic detail, is the sum content of ''Friday the 13th'', a sick and sickening low budget feature that is being released by Paramount. It's blatant exploitation of the lowest order."<ref>{{cite web|work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]]|title='Friday the 13th': THR's 1980 Review|author=''The Hollywood Reporter'' Staff|date=November 1, 2014|orig-year=1980|access-date=August 19, 2018|url=https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/friday-13th-read-thrs-scathing-745573|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082900/https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/friday-13th-read-thrs-scathing-745573|url-status=live}}</ref> Michael Blowen of ''[[The Boston Globe]]'' similarly referred to the film as "nauseating", warning audiences: "Unless your idea of a good time is to watch a woman have her head split by an ax or a man stuck to a door with arrows, you should stay away from ''Friday the 13th''. It's bad luck."<ref>{{cite news|work=[[The Boston Globe]]|title=Bloody 'Friday' is nauseating|author=Blowen, Michael|page=12|url=https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929383/the_boston_globe/|via=Newspapers.com|location=Boston, Massachusetts|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082813/https://www.newspapers.com/clip/22929383/the_boston_globe/|url-status=live}}</ref> The film's most vocal detractor was [[Gene Siskel]], who in his review called [[Sean S. Cunningham|Cunningham]] "one of the most despicable creatures ever to infest the movie business."{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=45}} He also published the address for [[Charles Bluhdorn]], the chairman of the board of [[Gulf+Western]], which owned Paramount, as well as [[Betsy Palmer]]'s home city and encouraged fellow detractors to write to them and express their contempt for the film. Attempting to convince people not to see it, he even gave away the ending.<ref>{{cite news |first=Gene |last=Siskel |title='Friday the 13th': More bad luck |page=A3 |date=May 12, 1980 |work=Chicago Tribune |location = Chicago, Illinois }}</ref> Siskel and [[Roger Ebert]] spent an entire episode of [[Sneak Previews|their TV show]] berating the film (and other slasher films of the time) because they felt it would make audiences root for the killer.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Freddy V Jason |last1=Hewitt |first1=Chris |last2=Smith |first2=Adam |journal=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]] |issue=March 2009}}</ref> [[Leonard Maltin]] initially awarded the film one star, or 'BOMB', but later changed his mind and awarded the film a star and-a-half "simply because it's slightly better than ''Part 2''" and called it a "gory, cardboard thriller...That younger viewers made it a box-office juggernaut is one more clue as to why SAT scores keep declining. Still, any movie that spawns this many sequels must have done ''something'' right".{{sfn|Maltin|2000|p=491}}

====Contemporary====
On the [[review aggregator]] website [[Rotten Tomatoes]], ''Friday the 13th'' holds an approval rating of 66% based on 59 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critics' consensus reads: "Rather quaint by today's standards, ''Friday the 13th'' still has its share of bloody surprises and a '70s-holdover aesthetic to slightly compel."<ref name="rottomatoes">{{cite web |title=Friday the 13th (1980) |url=https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/friday_the_13th_part_1/ |work=[[Rotten Tomatoes]] |publisher=Flixer |access-date=June 17, 2018 |archive-date=November 27, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171127044015/https://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/friday_the_13th_part_1/ |url-status=live }}</ref> On [[Metacritic]], it has a [[weighted arithmetic mean|weighted average score]] of 22 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".<ref>{{cite web |title= Friday the 13th (1980) Reviews |url= https://www.metacritic.com/movie/friday-the-13th-1980 |website= [[Metacritic]] |access-date= October 31, 2020 |archive-date= October 28, 2020 |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20201028000815/https://www.metacritic.com/movie/friday-the-13th-1980 |url-status= live }}</ref> It was nominated for [[Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Picture|Worst Picture]] at the [[1st Golden Raspberry Awards]], and Palmer was nominated for [[Golden Raspberry Award for Worst Supporting Actress|Worst Supporting Actress]].<ref>{{Cite web|last=Fitz-Gerald|first=Sean|title=7 Worst-Picture Razzie Contenders That Are Actually Good|url=https://www.thrillist.com/entertainment/nation/razzie-awards-worst-picture-actually-good-movies|access-date=2021-04-10|website=Thrillist|date=February 24, 2017 |language=en|archive-date=April 10, 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210410192200/https://www.thrillist.com/entertainment/nation/razzie-awards-worst-picture-actually-good-movies|url-status=live}}</ref>

Bill Steele of [[IFC (U.S. TV channel)|IFC]] ranked the film the second-best entry in the series, after ''[[Friday the 13th Part 2]]'' (1981).<ref>{{cite web|work=[[IFC (U.S. TV channel)|IFC]]|title=Every Friday the 13th Movie Ranked|url=https://www.ifc.com/2016/07/friday-the-13th-ranking|author=Steele, Bill|access-date=August 18, 2018|date=July 29, 2016|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160904005838/https://www.ifc.com/2016/07/friday-the-13th-ranking|archive-date=September 4, 2016}}</ref> Critic [[Kim Newman]], in a 2000 review, awarded the film two out of five stars, referring to it as "a pallid ''Halloween'' rip-off, with a mediocre shock count and a botched ending... As the bodies pile up amongst this testy crowd of horny teens, there remains a vacant hole were [sic] someone scary should be. In a strange way, this film stands unique amongst all slasher films as one where the killer is nearly intangible."<ref>{{cite web|work=[[Empire (magazine)|Empire]]|title=Friday the 13th|author=Newman, Kim|author-link=Kim Newman|date=January 1, 2000|access-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20161229063935/https://www.empireonline.com/movies/friday-13th/review/|archive-date=December 29, 2016|url=https://www.empireonline.com/movies/friday-13th/review/}}</ref> Jeremiah Kipp of ''[[Slant Magazine]]'' reviewed the film in 2009, noting "a kind of [[minimalism]] at work, eschewing anything special in terms of mood, pacing, character, plot, and tension."<ref name=slant>{{cite web|work=[[Slant Magazine]]|title=Friday the 13th|author=Kipp, Jeremiah|date=February 4, 2009|access-date=August 19, 2018|url=https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/friday-the-13th|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819082922/https://www.slantmagazine.com/film/review/friday-the-13th|url-status=live}}</ref> Further commenting on the revelation of the killer's identity, Kipp observed:

{{blockquote|The murderer turns out to be a middle-aged woman named Mrs. Voorhees (Betsy Palmer) with a butch haircut and a gigantic bulky sweater, whose line readings are akin to nails on a chalkboard ("They were making love while that boy drowned! His name was Jason!") and a predilection for speaking to herself in the mincing voice of her dead child ("Kill her, Mommy! Kill her!"). It's only in this last 20-minute appearance of this scene-stealing harpy (not to mention the memorable cameo by her rotting zombie son) that Friday the 13th becomes memorable as [[camp (style)|high camp]].<ref name=slant/>}}

{{quote box|align=right|width=25em|bgcolor =#C2DFFF|quote=Why did it make such a splash? Theories abound, but here's mine: ''Friday the 13th'' succeeded because it was brazen enough to steal so many tricks from the many brilliant horror films that came before it.|source=—Critic Scott Meslow on the film's legacy<ref name=meslow/>}}

In 2012, Bill Gibron of ''[[PopMatters]]'' wrote of the film: "This movie feels at least twice as long as its 90-minute running time and not always in a good way. There are far too many pointless pauses between the bloodletting. On the positive side, Tom Savini's make-up work is flawless, and Betsy Palmer's turn as big bad Pamela V. has to go down in history as one of the meanest 'mothers' in the entire horror genre. For those who think it's a classic{{en dash}}think again. Of a type? Absolutely. Of faultless movie macabre? No way."<ref>{{cite web|work=[[PopMatters]]|title=Dissecting the 'Friday the 13th' Franchise|date=July 13, 2012|access-date=August 19, 2018|author=Gibron, Bill|url=https://www.popmatters.com/160963-95174-dissecting-the-friday-the-13th-franchise1-2495833218.html|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819114437/https://www.popmatters.com/160963-95174-dissecting-the-friday-the-13th-franchise1-2495833218.html|url-status=live}}</ref>

Scott Meslow of ''[[The Week]]'' reviewed the film in 2015, assessing its original critical reception in a contemporary context: "Before it became an absurdly prolific franchise, ''Friday the 13th'' was a cynical, one-off attempt to make a fast buck on a sleazy slasher movie that accidentally ended up spawning a decades-spanning, multimillion-dollar phenomenon... What's most striking about ''Friday the 13th'' is how little regard anyone but its fans seem to have for it."<ref name=meslow>{{cite web|work=[[The Week]]|author=Meslow, Scott|date=June 14, 2015|title=How Friday the 13th accidentally perfected the slasher movie|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180805051143/https://theweek.com/articles/446191/how-friday-13th-accidentally-perfected-slasher-movie|archive-date=August 5, 2018|url=https://theweek.com/articles/446191/how-friday-13th-accidentally-perfected-slasher-movie|access-date=August 19, 2018}}</ref>

===Analysis===
====Teen sexuality====
Film scholar Williams views ''Friday the 13th'' as "symptomatic of its era", particularly [[Presidency of Ronald Reagan|Reagan-era]] America, and part of a trajectory of films such as ''[[The Texas Chain Saw Massacre]]'' (1974) and ''[[Race with the Devil]]'' (1975), which "exemplify a particular apocalyptic vision moving from disclosing family contradictions to self-indulgent [[nihilism]]."{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=185}} The film's recurring use of [[point-of-view shot]]s from the killer's perspective have been noted by scholars such as Philip Dimare as "inherently [[voyeurism|voyeuristic]]".{{sfn|Dimare|2011|p=186}} Dimare regards the film as a "cautionary tale that succeeds in warning against the sexual impropriety even as it fetishizes violent transgression."{{sfn|Dimare|2011|p=186}}

Film critic Timothy Shary notes in his book ''Teen Movies: American Youth on Screen'' (2012) that while ''Halloween'' introduced a "more subtle sexual curiosity within its morbid moral lesson," films such as ''Friday the 13th'' "capitali[zed] on the reactionary aspect of teen sexuality, slaughtering wholesale those youth who deigned to cross the threshold of sexual awareness."{{sfn|Shary|2012|p=54}} Commenting on the film's violence and sexuality, film scholar David J. Hogan notes that, "throughout the film, teenage boys are hideously dispatched, but not with the same buildup and attention to detail that Cunningham and makeup wiz [[Tom Savini]] reserved for nubile young girls."{{sfn|Hogan|2016|p=254}}

====Gender of villain====
The film has spurred critical discussion in regard to its villain being female, a plot point examined at length by film scholar [[Carol J. Clover]] in her book ''[[Men, Women, and Chainsaws]]''. Clover notes the revelation of Pamela Voorhees as the killer as "the most dramatic case of pulling out the gender rug" in horror film history.{{sfn|Clover|1993|p=56}} Commenting on the first-person point-of-view shots from the killer, Clover writes: "'We' [the audience] stalk and kill a number of teenagers over the course of an hour of movie time without even knowing who 'we' are; we are invited, by conventional expectation and by glimpses of 'our' own bodily parts{{em dash}}a heavily booted foot, a roughly gloved hand{{em dash}}to suppose that 'we' are male, but 'we' are revealed, at the film's end, as a woman."{{sfn|Clover|1993|p=56}}

On the killer's identity, Dimare has noted:

{{blockquote|Because Cunningham avoids revealing anything about the psychotic killer beyond the fact that the figure is dressed in men's gloves and boots, the audience assumes the slayer is a man... &nbsp; Cunningham sustains the eerie indeterminacy of the killer's age, social status, and gender deep into his film. The use of this cinematic process of abstraction allows the film to linger over the ambiguous nature of evil until 'sits [sic] climactic last act.{{sfn|Dimare|2011|p=186}}}}

===Legacy===
[[File:RoysHallCrowd.jpg|thumb|Crowds attending a revival screening of the film in Blairstown, New Jersey, where it was filmed.]]
Contemporary scholars in [[film criticism]], such as Tony Williams, have credited ''Friday the 13th'' for initiating the subgenre of the "stalker" or [[slasher film]].{{sfn|Williams|2015|p=185}} Cultural critic Graham Thompson also considers the film as a template, along with John Carpenter's ''Halloween'' (1978), that "instigated a rush" of films of its type, in which young people away from supervision are systematically stalked and murdered by a masked villain.{{sfn|Thompson|2007|p=102}} While critical reception of the film has been varied in the years since its release, it has attained a significant [[cult following]].{{sfn|Hills|2007|p=236}} In 2017, ''[[Complex (magazine)|Complex]]'' ranked the film ninth in a list of the best slasher films of all time.<ref>{{cite web|work=[[Complex (magazine)|Complex]]|url=https://www.complex.com/pop-culture/best-slasher-movies-of-all-time/madman|title=The Best Slasher Films of All Time|author=Barone, Matt|date=October 23, 2017|access-date=August 20, 2018|archive-date=August 20, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180820105907/https://www.complex.com/pop-culture/best-slasher-movies-of-all-time/madman|url-status=live}}</ref>

Film scholar Matt Hills wrote of the film's legacy: "''Friday the 13th'' has not just been critically positioned as intellectually lacking, it has been othered and devalued in line with the conventional aesthetic norms of the academy and official film culture, said to lack originality and artfulness, to possess no nominated or recognized [[auteur]], and to be grossly sensationalist in its focus on Tom Savini's gory special effects."{{sfn|Hills|2007|p=232}} The film was nominated in 2001 for [[AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills]].<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.afi.com/Docs/100Years/thrills400.pdf |title=List of top 400 heart-pounding thrillers |publisher=[[American Film Institute]] |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-date=January 6, 2016 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160106154010/https://www.afi.com/Docs/100Years/thrills400.pdf |url-status=live }}</ref>

In April 2018, Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco, where the film was shot, held "Crystal Lake Tours", an event dedicated to the making of the film which brought attendees to nine of the filming locations on the property.<ref name=camp>{{cite web|work=Bloody Disgusting|title=We Spent Friday the 13th at the Real Camp Crystal Lake in New Jersey|author=Squires, John|date=April 17, 2018|access-date=August 18, 2018|url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/editorials/3493967/spent-friday-13th-real-camp-crystal-lake-new-jersey/|archive-date=August 19, 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180819150048/https://bloody-disgusting.com/editorials/3493967/spent-friday-13th-real-camp-crystal-lake-new-jersey/|url-status=live}}</ref> The event was attended by actress Adrienne King, who recounted the making of the film to fans.<ref name=camp/>

==Other media==
===Sequel and franchise===
{{further|Friday the 13th (franchise)}}
As of 2018, ''Friday the 13th'' has spawned ten sequels, including [[Freddy vs. Jason|a crossover film]] with ''[[A Nightmare on Elm Street (franchise)|A Nightmare on Elm Street]]'' villain [[Freddy Krueger]].{{sfn|Robinson|2012|p=201}} ''[[Friday the 13th Part II]]'' introduced [[Jason Voorhees]], the son of Mrs. Voorhees, as the primary antagonist, which would continue for the remaining sequels (with exception of the fifth movie) and related works.{{sfn|Kendrick|2017|p=325}} Most of the sequels were filmed on larger budgets than the original. For comparison, ''Friday the 13th'' had a budget of $550,000, while the first sequel was given a budget of $1.25 million.{{sfn|Bracke|2006|pp=314–15}} At the time of its release, ''[[Freddy vs. Jason]]'' had the largest budget, at $30 million.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=freddyvsjason.htm |title=Freddy Vs. Jason (2003) |work=Box Office Mojo |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-date=June 27, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170627044120/http://www.boxofficemojo.com/movies/?id=freddyvsjason.htm |url-status=live }}</ref> All of the sequels repeated the premise of the original, so the filmmakers made tweaks to provide freshness. Changes involved an addition to the title—as opposed to a number attached to the end—like "[[Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter|The Final Chapter]]" and "[[Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan|Jason Takes Manhattan]]", or filming the movie in [[3-D film|3-D]], as Miner did for ''[[Friday the 13th Part III]]'' (1982).{{sfn|Bracke|2006|p=73–74}} One major addition that would affect the entire film series was the addition of Jason's [[Goalie mask|hockey mask]] in the third film; this mask would become one of the most recognizable images in popular culture.<ref name="ABC">{{cite news|author= Kemble, Gary|url=http://www.abc.net.au/news/arts/articulate/200601/s1546063.htm|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060115102105/http://www.abc.net.au/news/arts/articulate/200601/s1546063.htm|archive-date=January 15, 2006|title=Movie Minutiae: the Friday the 13th series (1980-?)|publisher=[[Australian Broadcasting Corporation|ABC]]|date=January 13, 2001}}</ref>

A [[Friday the 13th (2009 film)|reboot to ''Friday the 13th'']] was released theatrically in February 2009, with ''Freddy vs. Jason'' writers Damian Shannon and Mark Swift hired to script the new film.<ref name="Shan/Swif">{{cite web |last=Kit |first=Borys |url=https://hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3ia426500233e132c71ea0487278b5bbb3 |title=Duo pumps new blood into 'Friday the 13th' |work=[[The Hollywood Reporter]] |date= October 2, 2007 |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20071011092956/https://hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/film/news/e3ia426500233e132c71ea0487278b5bbb3 |archive-date = October 11, 2007}}</ref> The film focused on Jason Voorhees, along with his trademark hockey mask.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/news/10058 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121004212933/https://bloody-disgusting.com/news/10058/ |archive-date=October 4, 2012 |title=Platinum Confirmations: Near Dark, Friday the 13th Remakes |work=The Hollywood Reporter |date= October 3, 2007 |access-date=June 25, 2017}}</ref> The film was produced by [[Michael Bay]], Andrew Form and Brad Fuller through Bay's production company [[Platinum Dunes]], for [[New Line Cinema]].<ref name="Shan/Swif"/> In November 2007, [[Marcus Nispel]], director of the 2003 remake of ''[[The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (2003 film)|The Texas Chainsaw Massacre]]'', was hired to direct.<ref>{{cite news |last=Kit |first=Borys |url=https://hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ib4d95be28520da0db0f10edad41c0123 |title=Nispel scores a date with next 'Friday' |work=The Hollywood Reporter |date= November 14, 2007 |access-date=June 25, 2017 |archive-url =https://web.archive.org/web/20081122145427/https://hollywoodreporter.com/hr/content_display/news/e3ib4d95be28520da0db0f10edad41c0123 |archive-date=November 22, 2008 }}</ref> The film had its United States release on February 13, 2009.<ref name="release">{{cite web|url=http://www.fearnet.com/MCNewsDetailPage.aspx?catid=30&mid=14390|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081219023637/http://www.fearnet.com/news/b10917_young_jason_cast_in_friday_13th_remake.html|archive-date=December 19, 2008|title=Young Jason Cast in Friday the 13th remake|publisher=FearNet|date=May 15, 2008}}</ref>

===Novelization===
In 1987, seven years after the release of the motion picture, Simon Hawke produced a novelization of ''Friday the 13th''. One of the few additions to the book was [[Pamela Voorhees|Mrs. Voorhees]] begging the Christy family to take her back after the loss of her son; they agreed.{{sfn|Hawke|1987|pp=164–168}} Another addition in the novel is more understanding in Mrs. Voorhees' actions. Hawke felt the character had attempted to move on when Jason died, but her psychosis got the best of her. When Steve Christy reopened the camp, Mrs. Voorhees saw it as a chance that what happened to her son could happen again. Her murders were against the counselors, because she saw them all as responsible for Jason's death.{{sfn|Grove|2005|p=50}}

===Comic books===
A number of scenes from the film were recreated in ''Friday the 13th: Pamela's Tale'', a two-issue comic book prequel released by [[WildStorm]] in 2007. In 2016, the book ''On Location in Blairstown: The Making of Friday the 13th'' was released detailing the planning and filming of the movie.<ref>{{cite book|title=Weird New Jersey. issue 46.|date=April 2016|page=50}}</ref>

===Video game===
In 2007, Xendex released game-adaptation movie ''Friday the 13th'' for [[mobile phone]]s. In the game, the player plays as Annie Phillips (but unlike in the film she doesn't die), one of the counselors at Camp Crystal Lake. While the staff is preparing the camp for its first summer weekend, an "unknown stalker" begins murdering each of them. The player must discover the truth and escape the camp alive.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.xendex.com/index.php?page=0&categoryid=1&gameid=144&PHPSESSID=669c6a00cab6d2858b4ba5a9b47ee008|title=Friday the 13th (mobile phone game)|publisher=Xendex.com|access-date=2009-04-03|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080613203806/http://www.xendex.com/index.php?&page=0&categoryid=1&gameid=144|archive-date=2008-06-13|url-status=live}}</ref>

===''Crystal Lake'' prequel series===
On October 31, 2022, a ''Friday the 13th'' prequel streaming series was announced, titled ''Crystal Lake''. It will be written and executive produced by [[Bryan Fuller]] and Victor Miller, along with executive producers [[Marc Toberoff]] and Rob Barsamian. [[A24]] will serve as the studio behind the series and will air on [[Peacock (streaming service)|Peacock]].<ref>{{cite web |last=Otterson |first=Joe |title='Friday the 13th' Prequel Series 'Crystal Lake' From Bryan Fuller Ordered at Peacock |url=https://variety.com/2022/tv/news/friday-the-13th-prequel-series-crystal-lake-peacock-bryan-fuller-1235418509/ |website=[[Variety (magazine)|Variety]] |access-date=October 31, 2022 |date=October 31, 2022}}</ref> In January 2023, [[Adrienne King]] was cast in a recurring undisclosed role. She previously portrayed Alice Hardy in the 1980 original film and its 1981 sequel where her character was killed off during the opening of the film.<ref name="BD1">{{Cite web |last=Squires |first=John |date=2023-01-14 |title="Crystal Lake" – Kevin Williamson and Adrienne King Involved in Peacock's 'Friday the 13th' Series! |url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/tv/3747065/crystal-lake-kevin-williamson-and-adrienne-king-involved-in-peacocks-friday-the-13th-series/ |access-date=2023-01-24 |website=[[Bloody Disgusting]]}}</ref> Writing for the series was slated to begin in late January 2023 with [[Kevin Williamson (screenwriter)|Kevin Williamson]] writing one episode for season one.<ref name="BD1"/> On May 6, 2024, unconfirmed reports stated that the series was no longer happening. However, the following day, [[Bloody Disgusting]] confirmed that the series was still happening but was going through a retooling process.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://bloody-disgusting.com/tv/3811041/crystal-lake-a24-has-not-pulled-the-plug-on-their-friday-the-13th-tv-series-exclusive/?fbclid=IwZXh0bgNhZW0CMTEAAR18Pf6X_zGUfm6__le9fbH40p5qPtuxmXX-ywTDU4nXkMirc1318x9taHo_aem_ATGrKfxnWFGWLfKI9TQ3D1ek9-kW_2fU5MaVuivyrsXhOGhpK4Y8G-TIKq8Y6XdXHSw_Go697wAL5l3IKQzfKgmk|title="Crystal Lake" – A24 Has NOT Pulled the Plug on Their 'Friday the 13th' TV Series [Exclusive]|date=May 7, 2024|website=iHorror|access-date=May 7, 2024}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|2}}
{{Reflist}}


==External links==
==Sources==
{{Refbegin|30em}}
*{{imdb title|id=0080761|title=Friday the 13th}}
* {{cite book |last=Bracke |first=Peter |title=Crystal Lake Memories |publisher=Titan Books |year=2006 |location=[[United Kingdom]] |isbn=1-84576-343-2 }}
*{{amg movie|id=1:18658|title=Friday the 13th}}
*{{cite book|last=Clover|first=Carol|author-link=Carol J. Clover|year=1993|title=Men, Women, and Chainsaws: Gender in the Modern Horror Film|isbn=978-0-691-00620-8|publisher=Princeton University Press|location=Princeton, New Jersey|title-link=Men, Women, and Chainsaws}}
*{{rotten-tomatoes|id=friday_the_13th_part_1|title=Friday the 13th}}
*{{cite book|last=Dimare|first=Philip C.|year=2011|title=Movies in American History: An Encyclopedia|volume=1|publisher=ABC-CLIO|location=Santa Barbara, California|isbn=978-1-598-84296-8}}
*{{mojo title|id=friday13th|title=Friday the 13th}}
*{{cite book|last=Falconer|first=Peter|year=2010|title=Virgin Territory: Representing Sexual Inexperience in Film|chapter=Fresh Meat? Dissecting the Horror Movie Virgin|pages=123–137|publisher=Wayne State University Press|location=Detroit|isbn= 978-0-814-33318-1|editor=McDonald, Tamar Jeffers}}
*[http://www.thefutureandyou.libsyn.com/index.php?post_id=47863 Interview with Betsy Palmer] on the podcast ''[[The Future And You]]'' (includes anecdotes about working on ''Friday the 13th'')
* {{cite book |last=Grove |first=David |title=Making Friday the 13th: The Legend of Camp Blood |publisher=FAB Press |year= 2005 |location=United Kingdom |isbn=1-903254-31-0 }}
*{{cite book |last=Hawke |first=Simon |title=Friday the 13th |publisher=Signet |year=1987 |location=New York |isbn=0-451-15089-9 }}
*{{cite book|last=Hills|first=Matt|year=2007|title=Sleaze Artists: Cinema at the Margins of Taste, Style, and Politics|chapter=The ''Friday the 13th'' Film Series as Other|pages=219–239|publisher=Duke University Press|location=Durham, North Carolina|isbn=978-0-822-39019-0}}
*{{cite book|last=Hogan|first=David J.|year=2016|title=Dark Romance: Sexuality in the Horror Film|publisher=McFarland|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|isbn=978-0-786-46248-3}}
*{{cite book|last=Kendrick|first=James|year=2017|title=A Companion to the Horror Film|editor=Benshoff, Harry M.|chapter=Slasher Films and Gore in the 1980s|pages=310–328|publisher=John Wiley & Sons|location=Hoboken, New Jersey|isbn=978-1-119-33501-6}}
*{{cite book |last=Maltin |first=Leonard |year=2000 |title=Leonard Maltin's Movie Guide |isbn=0-451-19837-9 |publisher=[[Signet Books]]|location=New York}}
*{{cite book |last=McCarty| first= John |title=Splatter Movies: Breaking the Last Taboo of the Screen |year=1984 |location=New York|publisher=St. Martin's Press |isbn=0-312-75257-1}}
* {{cite book|last=Norman|first=Jason|year=2014|title=Welcome to Our Nightmares: Behind the Scene with Today's Horror Actors|publisher=McFarland|location=Jefferson, North Carolina|isbn=978-0-786-47986-3}}
*{{cite book|title= Blood Money: A History of the First Teen Slasher Film Cycle|first=Richard|last=Nowell|publisher=Bloomsbury|location=London|isbn= 978-1-441-12496-8|year=2010}}
* {{cite book |last=Rockoff |first=Adam |title=Going to Pieces: The Rise and Fall of the Slasher Film |location=[[Jefferson, North Carolina|Jefferson]], [[North Carolina]] |publisher=McFarland and Company |year=2002 |isbn=0-7864-1227-5 }}
*{{cite book|last=Robinson|first=Jessica|year=2012|title=Life Lessons from Slasher Films|publisher=Scarecrow Press|location=Lanham, Maryland|isbn=978-0-810-88502-8|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/lifelessonsfroms0000robi}}
*{{cite book|last=Shary|first=Timothy|title=Teen Movies: American Youth on Screen|year=2012|publisher=Columbia University Press|location=New York|isbn=978-0-231-50160-6}}
*{{cite book|last=Thompson|first=Graham|year=2007|title=American Culture in the 1980s|publisher=[[Edinburgh University Press]]|location=Edinburgh|isbn=978-0-748-62895-7}}
*{{cite book|last=Williams|first=Tony|year=2015|title=Hearths of Darkness: The Family in the American Horror Film|edition=Revised|location=Jackson|publisher=[[University Press of Mississippi]]|isbn=978-1-628-46107-7}}
{{Refend}}


== External links ==
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Wikiquote}}
{{Portal|Film|United States|1980s}}
* {{IMDb title|0080761}}
* {{TCMDb title|17974}}
* {{Rotten Tomatoes|friday_the_13th_part_1}}
* {{mojo title|friday13th}}
* [http://www.fridaythe13thfranchise.com/2011/06/friday-13th-1980.html Film page at Friday The 13th: The Franchise]
* [http://fridaythe13thfilms.com/films/friday1.html Film page at Fridaythe13thfilms.com]

{{Friday the 13th}}
{{Friday the 13th}}
{{Sean S. Cunningham}}
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Friday the 13th Part 01}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Friday the 13th Part 01}}
[[Category:1980 films]]
[[Category:1980 films]]
[[Category:1980s horror films]]
[[Category:1980 horror films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:1980s serial killer films]]
[[Category:Friday the 13th films]]
[[Category:1980s slasher films|Friday Part 01]]
[[Category:Paramount films]]
[[Category:American independent films]]
[[Category:Teen films]]
[[Category:1980 independent films]]
[[Category:American serial killer films]]
[[Category:American slasher films]]
[[Category:American teen films]]
[[Category:1980s English-language films]]
[[Category:Films about summer camps]]
[[Category:Films directed by Sean S. Cunningham]]
[[Category:Films scored by Harry Manfredini]]
[[Category:Films set in 1957]]
[[Category:Films set in 1958]]
[[Category:Films set in 1979]]
[[Category:Films set in forests]]
[[Category:Films set in New Jersey]]
[[Category:Films shot in New Jersey]]
[[Category:Films with screenplays by Victor Miller (writer)]]
[[Category:Friday the 13th (franchise) films]]
[[Category:Paramount Pictures films]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. films]]
[[Category:Warner Bros. films]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1950s]]
[[Category:1980s American films]]
[[Category:Films set in the 1970s]]
[[Category:Films produced by Sean S. Cunningham]]
[[Category:B movies]]
[[Category:Video nasties]]
[[Category:English-language horror films]]

[[Category:English-language independent films]]
[[de:Freitag der 13. (Film)]]
[[Category:English-language crime films]]
[[es:Viernes 13]]
[[fr:Vendredi 13 (film)]]
[[it:Venerdì 13 (film)]]
[[hu:Péntek 13. (film)]]
[[ja:13日の金曜日 (映画)]]
[[pl:Piątek, trzynastego]]
[[pt:Friday the 13th (filme)]]
[[ro:Vineri 13 (film din 1980)]]
[[ru:Пятница, 13-е (фильм)]]
[[fi:Perjantai 13. (elokuva)]]
[[sv:Fredagen den 13:e (1980)]]

Latest revision as of 11:28, 2 January 2025

Friday the 13th
Theatrical release poster by Alex Ebel
Directed bySean S. Cunningham
Written byVictor Miller
Produced bySean S. Cunningham
Starring
CinematographyBarry Abrams
Edited byBill Freda
Music byHarry Manfredini
Production
company
Georgetown Productions Inc.[1]
Distributed by
Release date
  • May 9, 1980 (1980-05-09) (United States)
Running time
95 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
Budget$550,000
Box office$59.8 million[2]

Friday the 13th is a 1980 American independent slasher film produced and directed by Sean S. Cunningham, written by Victor Miller, and starring Betsy Palmer, Adrienne King, Harry Crosby, Laurie Bartram, Mark Nelson, Jeannine Taylor, Robbi Morgan, and Kevin Bacon. The plot follows a group of teenage camp counselors who are murdered one by one by an unknown killer while they are attempting to reopen an abandoned summer camp with a tragic past.

Prompted by the success of John Carpenter's Halloween (1978), director Cunningham put out an advertisement to sell the film in Variety in early 1979, while Miller was still drafting the screenplay. After casting the film in New York City, filming took place in New Jersey in the summer of 1979, on an estimated budget of $550,000. A bidding war ensued over the finished film, ending with Paramount Pictures acquiring the film for domestic distribution, while Warner Bros. secured international distribution rights.

Released on May 9, 1980, Friday the 13th was a major box office success, grossing $59.8 million worldwide. Critical response was divided, with some praising the film's cinematography and score, while numerous others derided it for its depiction of graphic violence. Aside from being the first independent film of its kind to secure distribution in the U.S. by a major studio, its box office success led to a long series of sequels, a crossover with the A Nightmare on Elm Street film series, and a 2009 series reboot. A direct sequel, Friday the 13th Part 2, was released one year later.

Plot

In 1958, at Camp Crystal Lake, two counselors sneak inside a cabin to have sex, where an unseen assailant murders them. In present day, camp counselor and cook Annie Phillips is driven halfway to the reopened Camp Crystal Lake by truck driver Enos. Enos warns her about the camp's troubled past, beginning when a young boy drowned in Crystal Lake in 1957. After being dropped off at the halfway point, Annie hitches another ride from an unseen person, who eventually slashes her throat.

At the camp, counselors Ned, Jack, Bill, Marcie, Brenda, and Alice, along with owner Steve Christy, refurbish the cabins. As a thunderstorm approaches, Steve leaves for supplies. Ned sees someone walk into a cabin and follows. While Jack and Marcie have sex, they are unaware of Ned's dead body above them. When Marcie leaves for the bathroom, Jack's throat is pierced with an arrow. The killer kills Marcie next with an axe. Brenda hears a little boy's voice calling for help and ventures outside, where the lights turn on. Brenda screams.

Worried by their friends' disappearances, Alice and Bill investigate. They find the axe in Brenda's bed and the phones disconnected. Steve returns and recognizes the unseen killer who stabs him. When the power goes out, Bill goes to check on the generator. Alice finds his body pinned with arrows to the door. She flees to the main cabin, where Brenda's body is thrown through the window.

Mrs. Voorhees, a middle-aged woman who claims to be a friend of Steve, arrives. She reveals that her son, Jason, was the young boy who drowned in 1957 and she blames his death on neglect by the counselors because they were having sex instead of supervising him. Revealing herself as the killer, she attempts to kill Alice. At the shore, they struggle until Alice is able to decapitate her with a machete. Exhausted, Alice falls asleep inside a canoe that floats out on Crystal Lake. When she awakes, Jason's decomposing corpse emerges from the lake and drags her underwater, at which point she awakens in a hospital, surrounded by a police sergeant and medical staff. The sergeant says there was no sign of a boy at the lake, to which Alice says, "Then he's still there."

Cast

Production

Development

Friday the 13th did not have a completed script when Sean S. Cunningham took out this advertisement in Variety magazine

Friday the 13th was produced and directed by Sean S. Cunningham, who had previously worked with filmmaker Wes Craven on the film The Last House on the Left. Cunningham, inspired by John Carpenter's Halloween,[3] wanted Friday the 13th to be shocking, visually stunning and "[make] you jump out of your seat."[3] Wanting to distance himself from The Last House on the Left, Cunningham wanted Friday the 13th to be more of a "roller-coaster ride".[3]

The original screenplay was tentatively titled A Long Night at Camp Blood.[4] While working on a redraft of the screenplay, Cunningham proposed the title Friday the 13th, after which Miller began redeveloping.[4] Cunningham rushed out to place an advertisement in Variety using the Friday the 13th title.[5] Worried that someone else owned the rights to the title and wanting to avoid potential lawsuits, Cunningham thought it would be best to find out immediately. He commissioned a New York advertising agency to develop his concept of the Friday the 13th logo, which consisted of big block letters bursting through a pane of glass.[6] In the end, Cunningham believed there were "no problems" with the title, but distributor George Mansour stated, "There was a movie before ours called Friday the 13th: The Orphan. It was moderately successful. But someone still threatened to sue. Either Phil Scuderi paid them off, but it was finally resolved."[5]

The screenplay was completed in mid-1979[4] by Victor Miller, who later went on to write for several television soap operas, including Guiding Light, One Life to Live and All My Children; at the time, Miller was living in Stratford, Connecticut, near Cunningham, and the two had begun collaborating on potential film projects.[5] Miller delighted in inventing a serial killer who turned out to be somebody's mother, a murderer whose only motivation was her love for her child. "I took motherhood and turned it on its head and I think that was great fun. Mrs. Voorhees was the mother I'd always wanted—a mother who would have killed for her kids."[7] Miller was unhappy about the filmmakers' decision to make Jason Voorhees the killer in the sequels. "Jason was dead from the very beginning. He was a victim, not a villain."[7]

The idea of Jason appearing at the end of the film was initially not used in the original script; in Miller's final draft, the film ended with Alice merely floating on the lake.[8] Jason's appearance was actually suggested by makeup designer Tom Savini.[8] Savini stated that "The whole reason for the cliffhanger at the end was I had just seen Carrie, so we thought that we need a 'chair jumper' like that, and I said, 'let's bring in Jason'".[9]

Casting

A New York-based firm, headed by Julie Hughes and Barry Moss, was hired to find eight young actors to play the camp's staff members. Cunningham admits that he was not looking for "great actors", but anyone that was likable, and appeared to be a responsible camp counselor.[10] The way Cunningham saw it, the actors would need to look good, read the dialogue somewhat well, and work cheap. Moss and Hughes were happy to find four actors, Kevin Bacon, Laurie Bartram, Peter Brouwer, and Adrienne King, who had previously appeared on soap operas.[10] The role of Alice Hardy was set up as an open casting call, a publicity stunt used to attract more attention to the film. The producers originally wanted Sally Field for the role of Alice, but realized that they could not afford an established high-profile actress and went for unknowns instead. According to Adrienne King. "originally, [the producers] were looking really hard for a name actress to play Alice. They finally realized that even if they could find somebody like that who was willing to do it, they wouldn't be able to afford her, so they decided to go with new talent instead."[11] King earned an audition primarily because she was the friend of someone working in Moss and Hughes's office, and Cunningham felt she embodied the qualities of Alice.[12] After she auditioned, Moss recalls Cunningham commenting that they saved the best actress for last.[13] As Cunningham explains, he was looking for people that could behave naturally, and King was able to show that to him in the audition.[13]

I didn't even really think of this movie as a horror film. To me, this was a small independent film about carefree teenagers who are having a rip-roaring time at a summer camp where they happen to be working as counselors. Then they just happen to get killed.

—Jeannine Taylor on how she viewed Friday the 13th[13]

With King cast in the role of lead heroine Alice, Laurie Bartram was hired to play Brenda. Kevin Bacon, Mark Nelson and Jeannine Taylor, who had known each other prior to the film, were cast as Jack, Ned, and Marcie respectively. It is Bacon and Nelson's contention that, because the three already knew each other, they already had the specific chemistry the casting director was looking for in the roles of Jack, Ned, and Marcie.[10] Taylor has stated that Hughes and Moss were highly regarded while she was an actress, so when they offered her an audition she felt that, whatever the part, it would "be a good opportunity."[13]

Friday the 13th was Nelson's first feature film, and when he went in for his first audition, the only thing he was given to read were some comedic scenes. Nelson received a call back for a second audition, which required him to wear a bathing suit, which, Nelson acknowledges, made him start to wonder if something was off about this film. He did not fully realize what was going on until he got the part and was given the full script to read. Nelson explains, "It certainly was not a straight dramatic role, and it was only after they offered me the part that they gave me the full script to read and I realized how much blood was in it."[13] Nelson believes that Ned used humor to hide his insecurities, especially around Brenda, whom the actor believes Ned was attracted to. Nelson recalls an early draft of the script stating that Ned suffered from polio, and his legs were deformed while his upper body was muscular.[14] Ned is believed to have given birth to the "practical joker victim" of horror films.[15] According to author David Grove, there was no equivalent character in John Carpenter's Halloween, or Bob Clark's Black Christmas before that. He served as a model for the slasher films that would follow Friday the 13th.[15]

I went in to audition for [Moss and Hughes] for something else. They said, "You know, Robbi, you're not really right for this, but there's a movie called Friday the 13th and they need an adorable camp counselor."

—Robbi Morgan on how she obtained the role of Annie[13]

The part of Bill was given to Harry Crosby, son of Bing Crosby.[16] Robbi Morgan, who played Annie, was not auditioning for the film when she was offered the role; while in her office, Hughes looked at Morgan and proclaimed, "You're a camp counselor." The next day, Morgan was on the set.[10] Morgan only appeared on set for a day to shoot all her scenes. Rex Everhart, who portrayed Enos, did not film the truck scenes with Morgan, so she had to either act with an imaginary Enos, or exchange dialogue with Taso Stavrakis—Savini's assistant—who would sit in the truck with her.[17] It was Peter Brouwer's girlfriend that helped him land a role on Friday the 13th. After recently being written off the show Love of Life, Brouwer moved back to Connecticut to look for work. Learning that his girlfriend was working as an assistant director for Friday the 13th, Brouwer asked about any openings. Initially told casting was looking for big stars to fill the role of Steve Christy, it was not until Sean Cunningham dropped by to deliver a message to Brouwer's girlfriend, and saw him working in a garden, that Brouwer was hired.[10]

Estelle Parsons was initially asked to portray the film's killer, Mrs. Voorhees, but declined with her agent citing that the film was too violent, and did not know what kind of actress would play such a part. Shelley Winters was also offered the part, but turned it down.[18] Hughes and Moss sent a copy of the script to Betsy Palmer, in hopes that she would accept the part. Palmer could not understand why someone would want her for a part in a horror film, as she had previously starred in films such as Mister Roberts, The Angry Man, and The Tin Star. Palmer only agreed to play the role because she needed to buy a new car, even when she believed the film to "be a piece of shit."[10] Stavrakis subbed for Betsy Palmer as well, which involved Morgan's character being chased through the woods by Mrs. Voorhees, although the audience only sees a pair of legs running after Morgan. Palmer had just arrived in town when those scenes were about to be filmed, and was not in the physical shape necessary to chase Morgan around the woods. Morgan's training as an acrobat assisted her in these scenes, as her character was required to leap out of a moving jeep when she discovers that Mrs. Voorhees does not intend to take her to the camp.[17] Betsy Palmer explains how she developed the character of Mrs. Voorhees:

Being an actress who uses the Stanislavsky method, I always try to find details about my character. With Pamela ... I began with a class ring that I remember reading in the script that she'd worn. Starting with that, I traced Pamela back to my own high school days in the early 1940s. So it's 1944, a very conservative time, and Pamela has a steady boyfriend. They have sex—which is very bad of course—and Pamela soon gets pregnant with Jason. The father takes off and when Pamela tells her parents, they disown her because having ... babies out of wedlock isn't something that good girls do. I think she took Jason and raised him the best she could, but he turned out to be a very strange boy. [She took] lots of odd jobs and one of those jobs was as a cook at a summer camp. Then Jason drowns and her whole world collapses. What were the counselors doing instead of watching Jason? They were having sex, which is the way that she got into trouble. From that point on, Pamela became very psychotic and puritanical in her attitudes as she was determined to kill all of the immoral camp counselors.[19]

Cunningham wanted to make the Mrs. Voorhees character "terrifying", and to that end he believed it was important that Palmer not act "over the top." There was also the fear that Palmer's past credits, as more of a wholesome character, would make it difficult to believe she could be scary.[20] Palmer was paid $1000 per day for her ten days on set.[16] Ari Lehman, who had previously auditioned for Cunningham's Manny's Orphans, failing to get the part, was determined to land the role of Jason Voorhees. According to Lehman, he went in very intense and afterward Cunningham told him he was perfect for the part.[10] In addition to the main cast, Walt Gorney came on as "Crazy Ralph", the town's soothsayer. The character of Crazy Ralph was meant to establish two functions: foreshadow the events to come, and insinuate that he could actually be the murderer. Cunningham has stated that he was apprehensive about including the character, and is not sure if he accomplished his goal of creating a new suspect.[13]

Filming

Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco

The film was shot in and around the townships of Hardwick, Blairstown, and Hope, in Warren County, New Jersey in September 1979. The camp scenes were shot on a working Boy Scout camp, Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco which is located in Hardwick.[21] The camp is still standing and still operates as a summer camp.[22][23]

Tom Savini was hired to design the film's special effects based upon his work in George A. Romero's Dawn of the Dead (1978).[16] Savini's design contributions included crafting the effects of Marcie's axe wound to the face, the arrow penetrating Jack's throat, and Mrs. Voorhees's decapitation by the machete.[16] The cinematography in the film employs recurrent point-of-view shots from the perspective of the villain.[24] A live snake was killed during filming as part of a scene where Alice discovers it in her cabin.[25]

During the filming of the fight sequences between King and Palmer's characters, Palmer suggested rehearsing the scene based on her theater training: "I said to Adrienne that night, 'Why don't we rehearse this scene, I have to slap you,' because on stage when you slap somebody, you slap them."[21] While rehearsing, Palmer slapped King in the face, and she began crying: "She collapsed to the floor, crying, 'Sean! [Cunningham] She hit me.' I said, 'Well, of course I hit her, we were rehearsing the scene.' He said, 'No, no, no Betsy, we don't hit people in movies. We miss them.'"[21]

Music

Friday the 13th
Soundtrack album by
ReleasedJanuary 13, 2012
Recorded1980
GenreFilm score
Length43:41
LabelGramavision Records
La-La Land Records

When Harry Manfredini began working on the musical score, the decision was made to only play music when the killer was actually present so as to not "manipulate the audience".[26] Manfredini pointed out the lack of music for certain scenes: "There's a scene where one of the girls ... is setting up the archery area ... One of the guys shoots an arrow into the target and just misses her. It's a huge scare, but if you notice, there's no music. That was a choice."[26] Manfredini also noted that when something was going to happen, the music would cut off so that the audience would relax a bit, and the scare would be that much more effective.[citation needed]

Because the killer, Mrs. Voorhees, appears onscreen only during the final scenes of the film, Manfredini had the job of creating a score that would represent the killer in her absence.[26] Manfredini borrows from the 1975 film Jaws, where the shark is likewise not seen for the majority of the film but the motif created by John Williams cued the audience to the shark's invisible menace.[27] Sean S. Cunningham sought a chorus, but the budget would not allow it. While listening to a Krzysztof Penderecki piece of music, which contained a chorus with "striking pronunciations", Manfredini was inspired to recreate a similar sound. He came up with the sound "ki ki ki, ma ma ma" from the final reel when Mrs. Voorhees arrives and is reciting "Kill her, mommy!" The "ki" comes from "kill", and the "ma" from "mommy". To achieve the unique sound he wanted for the film, Manfredini spoke the two words "harshly, distinctly and rhythmically into a microphone" and ran them into an echo reverberation machine.[26] Manfredini finished the original score after a couple of weeks, and then recorded the score in a friend's basement.[27] Victor Miller and assistant editor Jay Keuper have commented on how memorable the music is, with Keuper describing it as "iconographic". Manfredini says, "Everybody thinks it's cha, cha, cha. I'm like, 'Cha, cha, cha? What are you talking about?'"[28]

In 1982, Gramavision Records released an LP record of selected pieces of Harry Manfredini's scores from the first three Friday the 13th films.[29] On 13 January 2012, La-La Land Records released a limited edition 6-CD boxset containing Manfredini's scores from the first six films. It sold out in less than 24 hours.[30]

Release

Distribution

A bidding war over distribution rights to the film ensued in 1980 between Paramount Pictures, Warner Bros., and United Artists.[31] Paramount executive Frank Mancuso, Sr. recalled: "The minute we saw Friday the 13th, we knew we had a hit."[31] Paramount ultimately purchased domestic distribution rights for Friday the 13th for $1.5 million.[31] Based on the success of recently released horror films (such as Halloween) and the low budget of the film, the studio deemed it a "low-risk" release in terms of profitability.[32] It was the first independent slasher film to be acquired by a major motion picture studio.[33] Paramount spent approximately $500,000 in advertisements for the film, and then an additional $500,000 when the film began performing well at the box office.[34]

Marketing

A full one-sheet poster, featuring a group of teenagers imposed beneath the silhouette of a knife-wielding figure, was designed by artist Alex Ebel to promote the film's U.S. release.[35] Scholar Richard Nowell has observed that the poster and marketing campaign presented Friday the 13th as a "light-hearted" and "youth-oriented" horror film in an attempt to draw interest from America's prime theater-going demographic of young adults and teenagers.[36] Warner Bros. secured distribution rights to the film in international markets.[31][37]

Home media

Friday the 13th was first released on DVD in the United States by Paramount Home Entertainment on October 19, 1999.[1] The disc sold 32,497 units.[1] On February 3, 2009, Paramount released the film again on DVD and Blu-ray in an unrated uncut, for the first time in the United States (previous VHS, LaserDisc and DVD releases included the R-rated theatrical version).[38] The uncut version of the film contains approximately 11 seconds of previously unreleased footage.[38]

In 2011, the uncut version of Friday the 13th was released in a 4-disc DVD collection with the first three sequels.[39] It was again included in two Blu-ray sets: Friday the 13th: The Complete Collection, released in 2013 and Friday the 13th: The Ultimate Collection, in 2018.[40] Paramount's Blu-ray was re-released as a 40th Anniversary Limited Edition steelbook in 2020.[41] In 2020, to celebrate the film's 40th anniversary, Shout! Factory released a 4K scan of the original film, as well as parts 2-4, in a complete series box set.[citation needed] The film grossed $868,529 in DVD and Blu-Ray home sales.[42][43]

Reception

Box office

Friday the 13th opened theatrically on May 9, 1980, across the United States, ultimately expanding its release to 1,127 theaters.[1] It earned $5,816,321 in its opening weekend, before finishing domestically with $39,754,601,[44] with a total of 14,778,700 admissions.[1] It was the 18th highest-grossing film that year, facing competition from other high-profile horror releases such as The Shining, Dressed To Kill, The Fog, and Prom Night.[45] The worldwide gross for the film was $59,754,601.[46][47] Of the seventeen films distributed by Paramount in 1980, only one, Airplane!, returned more profits than Friday the 13th.[48]

Friday the 13th was released internationally, which was unusual for an independent film with, at the time, no well-recognized or bankable actors; aside from well-known television and movie actress Betsy Palmer.[49] The film would take in approximately $20 million in international box office receipts.[50] Not factoring in international sales, or the cross-over film with A Nightmare on Elm Street's Freddy Krueger, the original Friday the 13th is the highest-grossing film of the franchise.[51]

To provide context with the box office gross of films in 2014, the cost of making and promoting Friday the 13th—which includes the $550,000 budget and the $1 million in advertisement—is approximately $4.5 million. With regard to the US box office gross, the film would have made $177.72 million in adjusted 2017 dollars.[52] On July 13, 2007, Friday the 13th was screened for the first time on Blairstown's Main Street in the very theater which appears shortly after the opening credits.[23] Overflowing crowds forced the Blairstown Theater Festival, the sponsoring organization, to add an extra screening. A 30th Anniversary Edition was released on March 10, 2010.[53] A 35th-anniversary screening was held in the Griffith Park Zoo as part of the Great Horror Campout on March 13, 2015.[54]

Critical response

Original theatrical reviews

Linda Gross of the Los Angeles Times referred to the film as a "silly, boring, youth-geared horror movie", though she praised Manfredini's "nervous musical score", the cinematography, as well as the performances, which she deemed "natural and appealing", particularly from Taylor, Bacon, Nelson, and Bartram.[55] Variety, however, deemed the film "low budget in the worst sense—with no apparent talent or intelligence to offset its technical inadequacies—Friday the 13th has nothing to exploit but its title."[56] The Miami News's Bill von Maurer praised Cunningham's "low-key" direction, but noted: "After building terrific suspense and turning over the audience's stomachs, he doesn't quite know where to go from there. The movie begins to sag in the middle and the expectations he has built up begin to sour a bit."[57] Lou Cedrone of The Baltimore Evening Sun referred to the film as "a shamelessly bad film, but then Cunningham knows this. This is sad."[58]

Many critics compared the film unfavorably against John Carpenter's Halloween, among them Marylynn Uricchio of the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, who added: "Friday the 13th is minimal on plot, suspense, and characterization. It's not very original or very scary, but it is very low-budget."[59] Dick Shippy of the Akron Beacon Journal similarly suggested that Carpenter's Halloween played "like Hitchcock when compared to Cunningham's dreadful tale of butchery."[60] The Burlington Free Press's Mike Hughes wrote that the film "copies everything, that is, except the quality" of Halloween, concluding: "The lowest point of the movie comes near the end, when it exploits the genuine grief and madness of the villain. By then, things simply aren't fun anymore."[61] Ron Cowan of the Statesman Journal noted the film as a "routine 'endangered teenagers' exploitation movie", adding that "Cunningham betrays a rather plodding approach to suspense for most of the film, sometimes allowing his camera to act as the killer, sometimes as the victim. And the victims, of course, deliberately put themselves in peril."[62]

A significant number of reviews criticized the film for its depiction of violence: The Hollywood Reporter derided the film, writing: "Gruesome violence, in which throats are slashed and heads are split open in realistic detail, is the sum content of Friday the 13th, a sick and sickening low budget feature that is being released by Paramount. It's blatant exploitation of the lowest order."[63] Michael Blowen of The Boston Globe similarly referred to the film as "nauseating", warning audiences: "Unless your idea of a good time is to watch a woman have her head split by an ax or a man stuck to a door with arrows, you should stay away from Friday the 13th. It's bad luck."[64] The film's most vocal detractor was Gene Siskel, who in his review called Cunningham "one of the most despicable creatures ever to infest the movie business."[65] He also published the address for Charles Bluhdorn, the chairman of the board of Gulf+Western, which owned Paramount, as well as Betsy Palmer's home city and encouraged fellow detractors to write to them and express their contempt for the film. Attempting to convince people not to see it, he even gave away the ending.[66] Siskel and Roger Ebert spent an entire episode of their TV show berating the film (and other slasher films of the time) because they felt it would make audiences root for the killer.[67] Leonard Maltin initially awarded the film one star, or 'BOMB', but later changed his mind and awarded the film a star and-a-half "simply because it's slightly better than Part 2" and called it a "gory, cardboard thriller...That younger viewers made it a box-office juggernaut is one more clue as to why SAT scores keep declining. Still, any movie that spawns this many sequels must have done something right".[68]

Contemporary

On the review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, Friday the 13th holds an approval rating of 66% based on 59 reviews, with an average rating of 6.4/10. The site's critics' consensus reads: "Rather quaint by today's standards, Friday the 13th still has its share of bloody surprises and a '70s-holdover aesthetic to slightly compel."[69] On Metacritic, it has a weighted average score of 22 out of 100, based on 11 critics, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[70] It was nominated for Worst Picture at the 1st Golden Raspberry Awards, and Palmer was nominated for Worst Supporting Actress.[71]

Bill Steele of IFC ranked the film the second-best entry in the series, after Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981).[72] Critic Kim Newman, in a 2000 review, awarded the film two out of five stars, referring to it as "a pallid Halloween rip-off, with a mediocre shock count and a botched ending... As the bodies pile up amongst this testy crowd of horny teens, there remains a vacant hole were [sic] someone scary should be. In a strange way, this film stands unique amongst all slasher films as one where the killer is nearly intangible."[73] Jeremiah Kipp of Slant Magazine reviewed the film in 2009, noting "a kind of minimalism at work, eschewing anything special in terms of mood, pacing, character, plot, and tension."[74] Further commenting on the revelation of the killer's identity, Kipp observed:

The murderer turns out to be a middle-aged woman named Mrs. Voorhees (Betsy Palmer) with a butch haircut and a gigantic bulky sweater, whose line readings are akin to nails on a chalkboard ("They were making love while that boy drowned! His name was Jason!") and a predilection for speaking to herself in the mincing voice of her dead child ("Kill her, Mommy! Kill her!"). It's only in this last 20-minute appearance of this scene-stealing harpy (not to mention the memorable cameo by her rotting zombie son) that Friday the 13th becomes memorable as high camp.[74]

Why did it make such a splash? Theories abound, but here's mine: Friday the 13th succeeded because it was brazen enough to steal so many tricks from the many brilliant horror films that came before it.

—Critic Scott Meslow on the film's legacy[75]

In 2012, Bill Gibron of PopMatters wrote of the film: "This movie feels at least twice as long as its 90-minute running time and not always in a good way. There are far too many pointless pauses between the bloodletting. On the positive side, Tom Savini's make-up work is flawless, and Betsy Palmer's turn as big bad Pamela V. has to go down in history as one of the meanest 'mothers' in the entire horror genre. For those who think it's a classic–think again. Of a type? Absolutely. Of faultless movie macabre? No way."[76]

Scott Meslow of The Week reviewed the film in 2015, assessing its original critical reception in a contemporary context: "Before it became an absurdly prolific franchise, Friday the 13th was a cynical, one-off attempt to make a fast buck on a sleazy slasher movie that accidentally ended up spawning a decades-spanning, multimillion-dollar phenomenon... What's most striking about Friday the 13th is how little regard anyone but its fans seem to have for it."[75]

Analysis

Teen sexuality

Film scholar Williams views Friday the 13th as "symptomatic of its era", particularly Reagan-era America, and part of a trajectory of films such as The Texas Chain Saw Massacre (1974) and Race with the Devil (1975), which "exemplify a particular apocalyptic vision moving from disclosing family contradictions to self-indulgent nihilism."[77] The film's recurring use of point-of-view shots from the killer's perspective have been noted by scholars such as Philip Dimare as "inherently voyeuristic".[24] Dimare regards the film as a "cautionary tale that succeeds in warning against the sexual impropriety even as it fetishizes violent transgression."[24]

Film critic Timothy Shary notes in his book Teen Movies: American Youth on Screen (2012) that while Halloween introduced a "more subtle sexual curiosity within its morbid moral lesson," films such as Friday the 13th "capitali[zed] on the reactionary aspect of teen sexuality, slaughtering wholesale those youth who deigned to cross the threshold of sexual awareness."[78] Commenting on the film's violence and sexuality, film scholar David J. Hogan notes that, "throughout the film, teenage boys are hideously dispatched, but not with the same buildup and attention to detail that Cunningham and makeup wiz Tom Savini reserved for nubile young girls."[79]

Gender of villain

The film has spurred critical discussion in regard to its villain being female, a plot point examined at length by film scholar Carol J. Clover in her book Men, Women, and Chainsaws. Clover notes the revelation of Pamela Voorhees as the killer as "the most dramatic case of pulling out the gender rug" in horror film history.[80] Commenting on the first-person point-of-view shots from the killer, Clover writes: "'We' [the audience] stalk and kill a number of teenagers over the course of an hour of movie time without even knowing who 'we' are; we are invited, by conventional expectation and by glimpses of 'our' own bodily parts—a heavily booted foot, a roughly gloved hand—to suppose that 'we' are male, but 'we' are revealed, at the film's end, as a woman."[80]

On the killer's identity, Dimare has noted:

Because Cunningham avoids revealing anything about the psychotic killer beyond the fact that the figure is dressed in men's gloves and boots, the audience assumes the slayer is a man...   Cunningham sustains the eerie indeterminacy of the killer's age, social status, and gender deep into his film. The use of this cinematic process of abstraction allows the film to linger over the ambiguous nature of evil until 'sits [sic] climactic last act.[24]

Legacy

Crowds attending a revival screening of the film in Blairstown, New Jersey, where it was filmed.

Contemporary scholars in film criticism, such as Tony Williams, have credited Friday the 13th for initiating the subgenre of the "stalker" or slasher film.[77] Cultural critic Graham Thompson also considers the film as a template, along with John Carpenter's Halloween (1978), that "instigated a rush" of films of its type, in which young people away from supervision are systematically stalked and murdered by a masked villain.[81] While critical reception of the film has been varied in the years since its release, it has attained a significant cult following.[82] In 2017, Complex ranked the film ninth in a list of the best slasher films of all time.[83]

Film scholar Matt Hills wrote of the film's legacy: "Friday the 13th has not just been critically positioned as intellectually lacking, it has been othered and devalued in line with the conventional aesthetic norms of the academy and official film culture, said to lack originality and artfulness, to possess no nominated or recognized auteur, and to be grossly sensationalist in its focus on Tom Savini's gory special effects."[84] The film was nominated in 2001 for AFI's 100 Years... 100 Thrills.[85]

In April 2018, Camp No-Be-Bo-Sco, where the film was shot, held "Crystal Lake Tours", an event dedicated to the making of the film which brought attendees to nine of the filming locations on the property.[86] The event was attended by actress Adrienne King, who recounted the making of the film to fans.[86]

Other media

Sequel and franchise

As of 2018, Friday the 13th has spawned ten sequels, including a crossover film with A Nightmare on Elm Street villain Freddy Krueger.[87] Friday the 13th Part II introduced Jason Voorhees, the son of Mrs. Voorhees, as the primary antagonist, which would continue for the remaining sequels (with exception of the fifth movie) and related works.[88] Most of the sequels were filmed on larger budgets than the original. For comparison, Friday the 13th had a budget of $550,000, while the first sequel was given a budget of $1.25 million.[89] At the time of its release, Freddy vs. Jason had the largest budget, at $30 million.[90] All of the sequels repeated the premise of the original, so the filmmakers made tweaks to provide freshness. Changes involved an addition to the title—as opposed to a number attached to the end—like "The Final Chapter" and "Jason Takes Manhattan", or filming the movie in 3-D, as Miner did for Friday the 13th Part III (1982).[91] One major addition that would affect the entire film series was the addition of Jason's hockey mask in the third film; this mask would become one of the most recognizable images in popular culture.[92]

A reboot to Friday the 13th was released theatrically in February 2009, with Freddy vs. Jason writers Damian Shannon and Mark Swift hired to script the new film.[93] The film focused on Jason Voorhees, along with his trademark hockey mask.[94] The film was produced by Michael Bay, Andrew Form and Brad Fuller through Bay's production company Platinum Dunes, for New Line Cinema.[93] In November 2007, Marcus Nispel, director of the 2003 remake of The Texas Chainsaw Massacre, was hired to direct.[95] The film had its United States release on February 13, 2009.[96]

Novelization

In 1987, seven years after the release of the motion picture, Simon Hawke produced a novelization of Friday the 13th. One of the few additions to the book was Mrs. Voorhees begging the Christy family to take her back after the loss of her son; they agreed.[97] Another addition in the novel is more understanding in Mrs. Voorhees' actions. Hawke felt the character had attempted to move on when Jason died, but her psychosis got the best of her. When Steve Christy reopened the camp, Mrs. Voorhees saw it as a chance that what happened to her son could happen again. Her murders were against the counselors, because she saw them all as responsible for Jason's death.[98]

Comic books

A number of scenes from the film were recreated in Friday the 13th: Pamela's Tale, a two-issue comic book prequel released by WildStorm in 2007. In 2016, the book On Location in Blairstown: The Making of Friday the 13th was released detailing the planning and filming of the movie.[99]

Video game

In 2007, Xendex released game-adaptation movie Friday the 13th for mobile phones. In the game, the player plays as Annie Phillips (but unlike in the film she doesn't die), one of the counselors at Camp Crystal Lake. While the staff is preparing the camp for its first summer weekend, an "unknown stalker" begins murdering each of them. The player must discover the truth and escape the camp alive.[100]

Crystal Lake prequel series

On October 31, 2022, a Friday the 13th prequel streaming series was announced, titled Crystal Lake. It will be written and executive produced by Bryan Fuller and Victor Miller, along with executive producers Marc Toberoff and Rob Barsamian. A24 will serve as the studio behind the series and will air on Peacock.[101] In January 2023, Adrienne King was cast in a recurring undisclosed role. She previously portrayed Alice Hardy in the 1980 original film and its 1981 sequel where her character was killed off during the opening of the film.[102] Writing for the series was slated to begin in late January 2023 with Kevin Williamson writing one episode for season one.[102] On May 6, 2024, unconfirmed reports stated that the series was no longer happening. However, the following day, Bloody Disgusting confirmed that the series was still happening but was going through a retooling process.[103]

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Sources