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Rob Hedden and Kane Hodder in Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989)

Metacritic reviews

Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan

14

Metascore

10 reviews · Provided by Metacritic.com
  • 60
    Time Out
    Time Out
    For what it's worth (very little), probably the best in the series.
  • 60
    Variety
    Variety
    Jensen Daggett is a standout as the troubled young girl on whom Jason is fixated. V.C. Dupree has vibrant energy in his boxing scenes, Sharlene Martin has a fine time with the bitch role, and Martin Cummins is funny as a video freak who compulsively films the proceedings.
  • 25
    Chicago TribuneDave Kehr
    Chicago TribuneDave Kehr
    It seems that as long as Jason can keep his costs down-by hiring unknown young actors, desperate for any kind of a break, and hiring directors (Rob Hedden this time) straight out of television or film school-he`ll be with us forever. Conveniently devoid of any personality (a variety of anonymous stunt men have filled the role over the years), he`s as infinitely reproducible as one of Warhol`s soup cans, though considerably less expressive. [31 July 1989, p.C3]
  • 25
    USA TodayMike Clark
    USA TodayMike Clark
    To crystallize its fundamental flaw, here's a movie about Manhattan that takes 75 minutes just to get to Manhattan - followed by another 15 that could just as easily have been shot (and possibly were) in some East Topeka alley. [31 July 1989, p.4D]
  • 20
    TV Guide Magazine
    TV Guide Magazine
    During all of this tediously staged action, the virginal female heroine, Rennie Wickham (Jensen Daggett), suffers hallucinations about the young Jason. Not surprisingly, these scenes — which feel as if they belong in another movie — are among the most effective in the film, a welcome distraction from the mundane mechanics of the rest of this predictable effort.
  • 20
    The New York TimesCaryn James
    The New York TimesCaryn James
    But (Jason) will never change and never die, not while cheap, dull ax-murder movies can yield one witty, misleading, probably lucrative commercial.
  • 10
    Los Angeles Times
    Los Angeles Times
    Funny ad campaign; a real dunghill of a major motion picture.
  • 10
    Washington PostRichard Harrington
    Washington PostRichard Harrington
    Also zero, which is the amount of inspiration and achievement in this continuing saga of the little boy who drowned in Crystal Lake 30 years, seven films and approximately 286 teenagers ago (30-7-286)
  • 0
    Austin ChronicleSteve Davis
    Austin ChronicleSteve Davis
    I'll maim, chop, slash, and I'll kill, Just as I please.
  • 0
    Miami Herald
    Miami Herald
    Putting this hackneyed villain in The Big Apple is a tantalizing concept, but Hedden rarely takes advantage of it. He deserves credit for a few shocks and some laughs from a gloom- and-doom deck swabber, but this is highly derivative stuff. And like many slash directors, he replaces suspense with short chases and violence. If audience response is a meter, Jason VIII is a dud. Save a few shrieks, the crowd fell victim to boredom. [31 July 1989, p.C5]
  • See all 10 reviews on Metacritic.com
  • See all external reviews for Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan

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