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Kevin Coughlin
Kevin Coughlin

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FULL WATCHALONG ~ FREDDY VS. JASON

Freddy vs. Jason (2003) is the monster mashup fever dream that took a decade of development hell, script rewrites, fan fights, and studio indecision—and somehow came out the other side as a blood-soaked, nu-metal-fueled WWE match with machetes and finger knives.

Let’s be clear: this movie is absolutely ridiculous, and also? A total blast. It’s the cinematic equivalent of smashing your two favorite action figures together while shouting, “WHO WINS?!” at full volume—and then pouring Mountain Dew on them for dramatic effect.

The plot—such as it is—kicks off with Freddy Krueger stuck in hell, forgotten by the kids of Springwood. His solution? Resurrect Jason Voorhees and let him start slashing teens again, hoping that’ll put Freddy back in their nightmares. It’s the most convoluted plan imaginable, but it’s also so on-brand for Freddy: manipulative, petty, and full of unnecessary flair.

But Freddy didn’t count on Jason being… well, Jason. The guy doesn’t stop. He doesn’t share. And when Freddy realizes he’s unleashed a machete-swinging murderbot who doesn’t want to give the spotlight back, it becomes a full-on turf war for who gets to kill the most confused teenagers.

Robert Englund returns as Freddy and absolutely feasts—he’s slimy, theatrical, cruel, and having the time of his life. Sadly, Kane Hodder didn’t get to reprise his role as Jason (a studio decision that still burns in the fandom), but Ken Kirzinger does a solid job of making Jason a lumbering, unstoppable freight train with zero chill.

The teens? Look, no one’s here for the acting. The dialogue feels like it was scribbled on a Trapper Keeper during study hall, and the characters exist mostly to die spectacularly—which they do, often. Freddy’s dream sequences are still imaginative, but it’s Jason who racks up the kill count like he's playing on easy mode.

But let’s be honest: you’re here for the fight. And when it finally hits, it’s glorious. Freddy flings rebar like a ninja. Jason uppercuts Freddy through windows. There’s blood geysers, flaming dock explosions, and the kind of brutality that would’ve gotten this movie banned in the 80s. It’s got wire-fu. It’s got sparks. It’s got Freddy bouncing Jason’s head off pipes like a xylophone.

Is it high art? Hell no. Is it fun as hell? Absolutely. It’s dumb in all the right ways, delivers exactly what the title promises, and ends on the perfect ambiguous wink that lets both fanbases pretend their guy won.

Freddy vs. Jason isn’t just a crossover—it’s a chaotic love letter to slasher fans who spent decades arguing over who would win in a fight. And for one glorious hour and a half, we all won.

FULL WATCHALONG ~ FREDDY VS. JASON

Comments

This and Jason X were the first films I saw from these franchises so I was glad they did a recap for Freddy. I agree the other Nightmare films are skippable since they are quite nonsensical and make Halloween seem coherent lol Some trivia: New Line Cinema first attempted to make this film several times in the late 1980s, as early as 1987 when they tried to team up with Paramount Pictures by pitting Jason against Freddy Krueger in the seventh Friday the 13th movie. However, they couldn't reach an agreement, so Paramount made Friday the 13th: The New Blood (1988) by having Jason fight a telepathic teenage girl. A sequel was planned, but never materialized. Wildstorm published a six issue comic series in late 2007 and early 2008. This added The Evil Dead (1981)'s Ash Williams to the mix.

Wade Wallenstein

Jason is a poor unfortunate child that does not know any better. Freddy, is just an twisted evil man.

LazyBoy Stays Up Late Watchin Video Tapes


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