My Years at Cinema Slaughter Camp
Every Friday the 13th,
I take to social media to share my love for this unusual theme day, and the
film franchise that defines it. I’m certainly not alone in treating Friday the
13th like a holiday; many of my friends celebrate with posts,
parties and movie marathons of their own. But where exactly did my love for
this most unlucky day come from? Why does a retro murder movie hold such high
esteem in my memories, and why does Friday the 13th continue to be
one of my favorite days of the year, every year? This Friday the 13th,
I thought it’d be fun to explore the reasons, like exploring an abandoned
summer camp during a rainstorm at night. It’s a story of fear and tradition, a
myth told around the campfire of my youth. It’s a twenty-four hour nightmare of
terror that has lasted thirty-five years now, and is still going strong.
It started with my
adolescent screams on Friday, May 9, 1980, when Friday the 13th hit screens nationwide like the arrow to
the bulls eye beside camp counselor Brenda. The wave of modern slasher horror
had really begun two years before, when Halloween
carved the box office and national consciousness like a pumpkin. I was too
young to catch Halloween during its initial theatrical run. Like many kids who
grew up in the 1980s, I first experienced Halloween
during its second annual NBC broadcast, in truncated form, in 1982, with
commercials for the newly released Halloween
III: Season of the Witch aired throughout. In 1978, I was a moppet bopping
down the aisles to Grease. There were
no maniacs with knives in my worldview yet.
If Halloween is the granddaddy of the
modern slasher movie, then Friday the 13th
qualifies as the grandmommy, or more specifically, the grandmommy denied that
was Mrs. Voorhees. Jason would not be giving her any grandchildren, even if he
eventually gave her a graveyard.
During my childhood, I
was not a fan of horror movies. In fact, I genuinely hated them for scaring me.
Shocking, right? I’m talking the black and white classics and luridly colorful
Hammer films on television, before I became aware of modern horror along the
lines of The Exorcist and The Texas Chainsaw Massacre. Even the
intro to John Stanley’s late night Creature Features series was too scary for
me, with its images of Christopher Lee as Dracula. During the 1970s, Scooby Doo and The Twilight Zone were the only scares I could tolerate. I even
have memories of sitting in cringing terror during Young Frankenstein, which I caught on the big screen in my earliest
years, probably because of Peter Boyle’s freaky forehead and Marty Feldman’s freakier
eyeballs.
On May 9, 1980, I was
eight years old and too young to see a film of Friday the 13th’s intensity. It was entirely my decision
to do so, and I still have to wonder what possessed me to do it, considering my
incredibly low threshold for the scary stuff. I recall the schoolyard hype for
this movie, and the chillingly effective commercials that dared you to see it
once (“but that will be enough!”). Perhaps this was some kind of cinematic
shock treatment, so I could end the long, sleepless nights that monster movies
gave me. Only Friday the 13th didn’t
have any monsters in it. It had a person with a knife. And that bloody knife
was a lot bigger than Christopher Lee’s blood-tipped fangs.
There’s no question
that I was not old enough to view Friday
the 13th alone with the film’s restrictive R rating. Luckily, my
teenage babysitter Kelly was game to go and get me into the film, even if she
was not my legal guardian. My legal guardian did approve, since my mom drove us
to the Tri-Cinemas for the first 5:30pm show on opening night. And what kind of
mom would let her children see Friday the
13th? One that was also a horror fan. In the mid-80s, we would
go together on opening night to see films like Silver Bullet and Day of the
Dead. For this permissiveness to always let me choose what I wanted to see,
her complete disregard for film ratings, and for frequently arguing with
theater staff to let me in because I was mature enough to watch whatever it was
they were showing, I say Thank you, mom!
Friday the
13th was not only the first horror film I saw in a theater, it was
my first R-rated movie. This was the very first of thousands of times I would
challenge and subvert the rules of the notoriously censorial MPAA. While most
kids growing up rebelled against their parents or school, my chief rebellion was
towards the ratings board.
When we entered the
theater for the 5:30pm showing, it was light outside. It would be dark when we
left the theater two hours later. The terror of that night would last for years.
Friday the 13th was in the big showcase auditorium #1 on
the left, and we sat two-thirds of the way back on the left side. I had to have
some distance from the screen then; in later years I would become a front row addict
for full immersion. Apparently, the film’s ad campaign worked on everyone else,
because it was a full house. I got a Coke and Red Vines from the snack bar, and
would soon learn that comfort food would offer me no comfort whatsoever as the
film unspooled.
But first, the
trailers. Bam! The first one put me in a state of shock. I could only recognize
certain words as the text rolled quickly up the screen, words like Master of
Modern Horror and Stephen King, who I knew as the guy that made Carrie, a movie that I was denied seeing
until I was older (the only film that had that stipulation from my otherwise
lenient mom). Only it was the music that I noticed more, and it made my blood
run cold. The trailer is entirely one shot, an elevator that opens to unleash a
flood of blood. This image was my bloody baptism to theatrical horror, which in
hindsight is bloody brilliant, but at the time I felt like I was flailing
helplessly in that crimson tidal wave. I had no desire to see The Shining after that trailer; it
effectively frightened me off. With Carrie
and The Shining, I figured Stephen
King had to be some kind of mean, jabbering bastard, and I hoped I’d never run
into him in a dark parking lot at night.
That trailer for The Shining generates genuine fear in me
to this day.
The feature began, and
my terror began one minute in, when the film’s iconic theme first echoed on
the soundtrack during the killer’s POV shot through a cabin of sleeping kids,
my screen surrogates. When the audience screams began at the five minute mark
with the opening double murder, I was already petrified. I could not have
gotten up and walked out if I wanted to. As the rapidly zooming title shattered
the glass over the screen, my fragile mind and sense of safety shattered with it.
At eight years old, I knew full well that movies were not real, and neither was
Santa Claus. That didn’t matter. The film looked and felt real. No amount of laughter or
audience reaction could quell my terror.
I don’t want to get
into a review of Friday the 13th,
since that has been done to death, and nobody needs a recap. A few elements are
worth exploring to quantify the film’s impact on me. The first is, quite
simply, Victor Miller’s beautifully simplistic story that serves only to scare.
It has more sequels than any other horror franchise, a testament to its mythic
greatness. Even those who have not seen the original movie know the story about
the cursed camp, Jason drowning in the lake, Friday the 13th is Jason’s
birthday, and counselors are cut instead of cake. Told in schoolyards, summer
camps and on cinema screens, the Friday
the 13th origin story is legend.
What really kept me
paralyzed was Friday the 13th’s
palpable atmosphere of quiet, constant dread, which can be attributed to Sean
S. Cunningham’s often overlooked, masterful direction. Despite my babysitter
and the full house, I felt alone at Camp Crystal Lake with those poor, poor
young people who were so unfairly losing their lives. The storm and isolation
did a number on me, and storms make me uneasy to this day. It’s a Friday the 13th forecast. I
can partly blame the legend within the legend for this phobia. Even a monologue
in Friday the 13th had the
power to petrify me, in this case Marci’s story about her “shower dream”, where
a rainstorm turns to blood. Hearing about a blood rain right after seeing The Shining’s blood flood was too much
for my chicken blood.
Friday the 13th’s notorious reputation and biggest
scares came courtesy of Tom Savini’s groundbreaking, skin-slitting make-up
effects work, which delivers convincing bloody murders right before your very eyes.
Those murder scenes really fucked me up. I had never seen effects like that
before, did not even know that they were possible, and they contributed to the
reality of what I was seeing. The worst one was the fate of Marci in the
bathroom stall. Even through the effect of the axe buried deep in her face
lasted only two seconds, it seemed like an eternity to me, and in my memory of
the scene for many years, I thought I saw the axe come back out of her head, revealing
the bloody inside of her shattered skull, with brains and bone and quivering
veins. I no longer had an appetite for those Red Veins, I mean Vines.
I kept covering my
eyes, and then covering my ears, but that didn't really work because I didn’t
have enough hands to cover all of my vulnerable spots. The audiences’ screams
were their own new breed of electric shock to my tiny system. I was not having
fun. I had made a huge mistake, trying to be an adult when I wasn’t. This was like
getting onto a carnival ride that proves way too fast and terrifying, and I was
stuck for the dizzying duration of ninety-five minutes.
Much like poor Alice on the screen, I was sick and exhausted from terror. Good thing neither Alice nor I puked. I was counting on her, because if she survived, I survived. My identification with this final girl was absolute, and in many ways informed my future interest in this character type. I’m less of a Jason fan and more of an Alice fan, and Ginny, Chris and Trish. My investment lies with the survivors. I want to be a survivor too.
Somehow I made it
through the finale of the film, where in another strange display of the weird
and secret rituals of adulthood, a middle-aged woman had gotten her head chopped
off, in slow motion close-up no less, and the audience had cheered. Alice and I
both sighed with relief, and thought this horrifying endurance test was over.
And then that damn
monster kid Jason popped up out of the lake to pull Alice down. Everybody
screamed, and perhaps I screamed loudest of all. Only I did a lot worse than
that. I flew up out of my seat as I threw my soda cup and Red Vines in the air,
and I apologize to anyone I might have drenched with drink or hit with sugar whips. I tore
out of the row, and ran shrieking up the center aisle until I burst out of the
theater doors into the bright lobby.
It was my prepubescent
Carrie moment. They all laughed at
me. These mortifying and embarrassing events of May 9, 1980 remain some of my
most vivid memories of childhood. At least Alice and I had survived.
To this day, a late
night viewing alone in a dark room or on a revival cinema screen, Friday the 13th is still
capable of evoking dread in me.
To this day, the smell
of an open box of Red Vines takes me back to that night of my eight-year old
cinematic shock treatment. Every single time I smell fear and murder at summer
camp as well as licorice. The title Friday
the 13th might as well be written in Red Vines (which I have done).
Friday the 13th gave me restless nights for years. I
slept with a circle of stuffed animals around me far longer than most kids, to
protect me and bite Mrs. Voorhees’ hand if she tried to reach up from under my
bed to grab me like she grabbed Kevin Bacon before skewering his neck with an
arrow. I never went to summer camp, I would have had to be forced to go kicking
and screaming, and the few times I had to go camping in a tent, it was a
frightening and unpleasant experience. Didn’t everyone know we were axe fodder
out in the woods? Friday the 13th had effectively destroyed my enjoyment of the woodsy outdoors.
When Friday
the 13th Part II came out one year later, I purposely avoided
the cinema, and even turned away when the commercials aired on TV. They weren’t going to fool me and get me again.
Why would anyone pay for such an unpleasant experience of being scared that bad? Considering how
disturbed I was by Marci’s axe to the face in the original, I can’t imagine how
much worse I would have reacted to poor, crippled, wheelchair-bound Mark
getting a machete through his face and rolling back down the camp stairs in the
sequel. What a spectacularly cruel murder scene! What kind of demented person
could possibly be entertained by a movie like that? Stephen King maybe, but not
me!
Just over two years after
the release of Friday the 13th,
I did take notice of the commercials for Friday
the 13th Part III in 3-D. I had missed Comin’ at Ya! the previous year in the cinema, and was incredibly
curious to see a 3-D movie and have those bragging rights. Still, considering
my continued sleepless nights, I wonder what possessed me to make my first 3-D
movie a Friday the 13th film.
Maybe I just wanted to be a brave boy and make up for my humiliation when
watching the first.
At ten, I had many years
of restricted viewing left by the MPAA’s rulebook, so how did I manage to get
into Friday the 13th Part III
in 3-D on opening weekend? The theater playing it, the Movies 4, never
carded or enforced the ratings, and I thank them dearly for that. Soon, I’d be
receiving my sex education at this theater, going to see adult sex comedies by
myself every other weekend.
In part due to the gimmick of its extra
dimension, this sequel was not as convincingly real as the original. At the
same time, the admittedly effective 3-D really did immerse me fully into the remote
location, had me hating the isolation of that cabin and barn, and got me dodging Jason’s
wicked projectiles. He was constantly trying to jab me in the face with a meat
cleaver, a machete, a pitchfork, a knitting needle, a spear, a burning hot
fireplace poker and a high-speed eyeball. This campier sequel scared me bad enough that my sleepless nights continued.
Right after I turned
twelve came the ads for Friday the 13th:
The Final Chapter. This one promised the death of Jason, and after
everything that deformed and demented shit had put me through, I wanted to see
him dead. Maybe then I could then get some sleep at nights. I guess I was a sucker
for good advertising too. I didn’t go on opening night; I went the following
day, Saturday the 14th, to the first matinee with a group of friends,
again at the Movies 4. We were the first to enter the empty theater, and for
some reason, the lights kept going on and off. That projectionist was a real
dick to screw with us like that! The film for me was the most frightening of the
sequels, which is to say, it totally scared the living shit out of me, far more
than the previous entry. The kill that really got to me was when stoned Teddy
was playing coochie-coo with a porno movie. The way that the butcher knife
plunged through the movie screen into Teddy’s skull, with the screen splitting
between bubbling blood, was perfectly representative of the series’ effect on
me. I feared these murder movies would tear through the movie screen, and I
would be the next unfortunate victim with a garden tool in his head.
I didn’t care if my friends mocked or
laughed anymore, and I watched segments of the film standing at the back of the
auditorium beside the doors. I even ran out of the theater on a few occasions. I
just didn’t scream or throw my Red Vines this time. One grouchy employee
complained at me that if I couldn’t take watching the movie, I shouldn’t have
come to see it. She obviously had forgotten what it was like to be young, looking
for a safe scare and taking dares with friends.
Again, my terror from Friday the 13th: The Final
Chapter was so great, I immediately regretted seeing it because of the long
night that would follow. I tried to find friends to have a sleepover with, but
they were all busy. On really stormy or melancholy nights, I would have a
grieving pity party in my bedroom for one, as I mourned and cried for all of
those teenagers and counselors who had lost their lives so unfairly at Camp
Crystal Lake. Especially that bunch from The
Final Chapter, they had been so attractive and likable.
Less than nine months
later, I picked up my first Stephen King novel, Cujo, and I bought my first issue of Fangoria a few months later with issue #42. My hatred of horror started
to become an intense curiosity in the making of it. I was probably on my third King novel when Friday the 13th: A New Beginning
reached theaters, but while my interest in the genre was growing, I was not yet
ready to go back to camp at my local cinema. I was too afraid just watching the
commercials for A New Beginning when
I was watching Night Flight. The Final Chapter had scared me too much.
As 1985 progressed, my interest in horror exploded into a full blown obsession.
I was constantly reading horror novels and daring myself to see most every
horror film in a theater. I was finally able to face revisiting the original Friday the 13th and seeing Friday the 13th Part II for
the first time, but only by watching daytime, edited broadcasts on the USA
Network. I also had to sit right up beside the television set with my hand on
the round channel knob, ready to turn it to something safe if I got too scared.
I turned that knob frequently.
Instead of hating Friday the 13th, I was
starting to enjoy it. A lot. When Friday
the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives arrived in theaters in the summer
of 1986, I was a hardcore genre nut, and this would be the first Friday the 13th I went to see
in the cinema with genuine enthusiasm. By myself. There were only two other
people in the theater. I did make it a matinee though, since I was still a bit
chicken. I had a blast with this comic rock and roll version of Friday the 13th, a satisfying thrill ride that would not give me nightmares. I returned to see it a few more times on the big screen, bought the seven-inch single of Alice Cooper’s theme song, and mail
ordered the one-sheet. Jason Lives made me an instant Friday
the 13th super fan.
When Friday the 13th Part VII: The New
Blood arrived in May, 1988, the unspeakable happened. The film did not open
in the small city where I grew up, Carson City, Nevada. Considering that the
town had only four theaters and eleven screens total, counting a two screen
drive-in theater, we were lucky to get most first run features like the first
six Friday the 13ths, but
not this time. So my best horror friend Dale Sadler and I bought Greyhound bus
tickets and traveled sixty plus miles to Reno, Nevada, to get to the very nearest
theater playing it. This was how much of a Friday
the 13th fanatic I had become, and I had friends who were too. The bus ride was worth it, and The New Blood remains a series high point
to this day. It was the closest I’ve come to taking a trip to summer camp.
Many Friday the 13th fans turned
on the series when Friday the 13th
Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan was released in late summer 1989, but my
experience with it remains another golden memory. I was now a teenage
projectionist at the Movies 4. I got to assemble the latest Friday the 13th movie, and I
was able to run an advance midnight screening at the theater. By myself! Not
just my theater was empty, but also the entire building. I would have to
close the dark projection booth, turn out the lights and lock up the business, and walk home alone in the middle
of the night. This was the ultimate test for that boy who had run out of the
original Friday the 13th.
Because I was so alone, the movie was far more terrifying than
it had any right to be. I was looking over my shoulders constantly. I was
scared and loving every minute of it. Jason
Takes Manhattan will always be special to me because of this unique
experience, extreme cinematic isolation at midnight.
As the projectionist,
I also had fun turning the auditorium lights up and down when young audience
members were taking their seats during Friday
the 13th Part VIII’s run. I was repaying the favor from the
projectionist who had done the same to me in the same theater five years
before, and giving new kids a pre-show scare to remember.
Then Paramount sold
the rights of the series to New Line, I grew old enough that the MPAA could no
longer restrict me, and the Friday the 13th
franchise went through an identity and quality crisis. But it never died. Not
only do I look forward to new Friday the
13th films (I loved the 2009 version, which I saw with a packed house that was frequently screaming and having a blast), I have been actively campaigning to develop my own
entry in the series. I want to go back to that scary, stormy camp for another 24-hour
nightmare of terror as an architect. I also have my own original summer camp slasher series in development. There are a lot of camps in America to explore and create new legends and stalking grounds.
Meanwhile, Friday the 13th inspires my other
arts. Recently, my musical alter ego DJ Pervula created a
music video for my mash-up of the original Friday
the 13th score and an industrial dirge, which I premiered at the
Shriekfest Horror Film Festival’s Opening Night Party as I danced as Jason with
an axe. Hard to believe that this guy was the same kid that had run screaming
from a theater playing the original Friday
the 13th. I’m throwing shapes and making new beats from the
music that had originally chilled my blood.
From my adolescent
pity parties to my filmmaking and nightclub performances, Friday the 13th remains a major influence. I can’t wait to take you all to my camp in the future, on the cinema
screen. I will do my best to make you all throw your soda and Red Vines in the
air and run screaming from the theater. It will be fun.
Happy Friday the 13th!
Armando D. Muñoz
Happy Friday the 13th!
Armando D. Muñoz
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