| 80 |
New Times (L.A.)
A happily self-aware body-count flick that's as brutally funny as it is plain-old brutal. A broad slash of scary, sci-fi fun, the project leapfrogs all the Scream and Last Summer junk to carve itself a new, high-tech niche.
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| 58 |
Portland Oregonian
Has cheesy effects and a hoary plot, but its macabre, self-deprecating sense of humor makes up for a lot.
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| 50 |
LA Weekly
The film has spunk. Unfortunately, the gore comes with brutal regularity, so that, despite Farmer and Isaac's attempts to liven things up, the film still just wears you down.
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| 50 |
San Francisco Chronicle
Jonathan Curiel
The premise of Jason X is silly but strangely believable.
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| 40 |
Salon.com
It gets much more watchable in the last half-hour.
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| 40 |
The Onion (A.V. Club)
Feels like it was written as a fairly straight horror/sci-fi movie, then script-doctored by a comedy writer intent on satirizing the original script. As a result, the film's intentional and unintentional laughs mingle so freely that it becomes difficult to differentiate between the two.
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| 38 |
New York Daily News
If the 10th "Friday" sounds like the first "Alien," it's strictly intentional. Todd Farmer's script rips off that classic sci-fi horror film, replaces the acid-based monster with the hockey-masked Jason, adopts the self-mocking attitude of "Scream" and lets the heads, arms, legs and torsos fall where they may.
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| 38 |
New York Post
There's a hint of nostalgia toward the end, with Jason encountering two nubile female campers in a virtual reality Camp Crystal Lake -- but it merely serves as a reminder that the franchise should have quit while it was ahead.
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| 38 |
Chicago Tribune
Jason X conjures up more giggles than scares, assuming you make it through the first 15 minutes.
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| 38 |
The Globe and Mail (Toronto)
This time the action takes us out of the usual campgrounds and girls in underwear into the realm of outer space, where no one can hear you screaming "Enough already."
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| 38 |
USA Today
A moviegoer's only defense against Jason is to avoid theaters showing this gruesome and derivative movie.
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| 30 |
The New York Times
Even the imaginative gore can't hide the musty scent of Todd Farmer's screenplay.
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| 30 |
Variety
Further proof that titular antagonist Jason Voorhes is ready for retirement -- to videostore shelves.
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| 30 |
Washington Post
A protracted and only sporadically imaginative menu of ways to be murdered.
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| 25 |
ReelViews
Too much of Jason X plays it straight, and that means boredom. Murder and mayhem of this sort quickly becomes monotonous.
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| 20 |
Film Threat
David Grove
The kind of a moron movie, which is built to be watched by people who havent even seen the other nine.
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| 20 |
TV Guide
Despite the futuristic setting, which relies so heavily on GGI effects that it looks like a feature-length production concept painting, this film is painfully predictable.
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| 16 |
Entertainment Weekly
It will come as no surprise that the movie isn't scary. But here's the real damn: It isn't funny, either.
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| 12 |
Chicago Sun-Times
Jason X sucks on the levels of storytelling, character development, suspense, special effects, originality, punctuation, neatness and aptness of thought. Only its title works.
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| 12 |
Boston Globe
The only chills to be found are courtesy of your theater's central air, and the suspense will come from the wait to see which disappointed kid in a hockey mask will be the first to slash the screen.
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| 10 |
Los Angeles Times
Like a dinner-theater version of the "Alien" movies without the good grooming.
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| 10 |
Chicago Reader
Hank Sartin
Here suspense is abandoned, and Jason is on-screen so long you get sick of seeing him -- and sick of the poorly staged slasher-film tricks.
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| 0 |
Austin Chronicle
It had a little originality, unlike the other sequels, but not much.
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