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Hatchet pays tribute to Friday the 13th (1980) Victor Crowley is intended as a homage to Jason Voorhees, the point being made direct by the casting of Kane Hodder, best known for playing Jason in several of the Friday the 13th sequels, as both the deformed hulking killer and his father. The film also comes with a Friday the 13th-modeled surprise ending with people in a boat being surprised after thinking that the hulking killer is dead. As is almost requisite for this type of film, there is a line-up of genre cameos, including Freddy Krueger himself Robert Englund as the redneck father who gets slaughtered in the opening scenes; Joshua Leonard, one of the victims in The Blair Witch Project (1999), as Englunds son; Candyman series star Tony Todd as a tour guide; and John Carl Buechler, a makeup effects man and occasional director for many cheap Empire Films of the 1980s, as a crazy fisherman who tries to warn them away. Hatchet is exxxxxxxtremely gory. Director Adam Green clearly has an enormous amount of fun piling the excess on and taking everything to extremes. We get scenes with Patrika Darbo getting the top of her head torn open; where Robert Englund and Joshua Leonard are torn apart in the opening moments, which ends with literally buckets of blood being thrown at trees; Joel Murrays head being twisted around and spraying blood everywhere; Perry Shen being beheaded with a shovel; Mercedes McNabbs arms being torn off and so on. On the other hand, Hatchet is not a particularly standout or original genre entry. It is however competently well made, which certainly stands it above the majority of slasher films just from the starting line. An added bonus is the undeniable sense of humour that Adam Green gives the film. Particularly amusing are some of the airhead lines that the two bimbos come out with in their mutual bitch fight Are you sure the number is 911? Maybe you have to type in a different area code? and You do know the vibrator goes in your cooch and not your ear, right? or the debate that goes Im going to call the police and theyre going to send the cops. Theyre the same thing, Are not. On the other hand, the film lacks the cleverness of playing and wrapping itself around genre cliches that something like Scream had. All that Hatchet seems to have in its favour is a sense of humour and an extremely high level of gore. That is enough to make it an amiable entry but does not elevate the film to the various modern classic hyperboles that some genre purveyors were reaching for when it came out. Adam Green returned with a sequel Hatchet 2 (2010).
Adam Green subsequently went onto make Spiral (2007), a study in disturbed psychology, and Frozen (2010), a survival horror about a trio of people trapped on a ski chairlift.
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