Author | Scott S. Phillips |
---|---|
Language | English |
Series | Friday the 13th |
Release number | 1 |
Genre | Horror |
Publisher | Black Flame |
Publication date | 9 August 2005 |
Publication place | United Kingdom |
Media type | Print (Paperback) |
Pages | 403 |
ISBN | 9781844161812 |
OCLC | 60371478 |
Followed by | Friday the 13th: Hell Lake |
Friday the 13th: Church of the Divine Psychopath is a 2005 British horror novel written by Scott S. Phillips and published by Black Flame. [1] [2] A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the first in a series of five Friday the 13th novels published by Black Flame and revolves around government operatives coming into conflict with a cult that worships undead killer Jason Voorhees. [3] [4]
Camp Crystal Lake, the hunting ground of undead killer Jason Voorhees, has been leased to the Ministry of the Heavenly Vessel, a fringe Christian group led by Father Eric Long. Long has discovered Jason lying dormant in Crystal Lake and plans on reviving him, deludedly believing Jason to be an avenging angel who judges and kills sinners at the behest of God. Long's congregants include Kelly Mills, a troubled twenty-six-year-old with a history of being abused both physically and sexually, including being gangraped as a child, and her friend Meredith Host, a closeted teenage lesbian who has a crush on Kelly. A few days after the Ministry moves into the camp, a group of government Operators set up nearby, having been assigned to locate and kill Jason. Walter Hobb, a member of the unit living in disgrace since his involvement in a meth lab raid that went awry, is convinced the mission is a Snipe hunt.
Long uses electricity to resuscitate Jason, who murders several of Long's disciples, with Long dismissing the victims as sinners rightfully punished by Jason. Kelly flees the church and seeks aid from the Operators. Jason begins picking the Operators off one by one, assisted in his rampage by Long, who has ordered his followers to kill the Operators. One of the slain Operators is the group's leader and Hobb's best friend, Jeff Townsend. Meredith, distraught over Long's increasingly megalomaniacal behavior, the lecherous advances of Long's second-in-command, a disabled Marine named Curtis Rickles, and her belief her sexuality was the reason Jason murdered her parents, runs away from the camp in search of Jason, but is found and snapped back to her senses by Hobb and Kelly.
After Long refuses to surrender, the remaining Operators lay siege to Camp Crystal Lake. Jason joins the fray, killing combatants on both sides; during the battle, Rickles sexually assaults Meredith and is shot by Hobb, who is unable to save Meredith from Jason. In the aftermath, the only ones left alive are Hobb, Kelly, Jason, and Long. Long, having missed the conflict due to passing out after abandoning his three wives and engaging in frenzied self-flagellation, denounces his cultists before supplicating himself before Jason to be "judged" by him; he is killed while declaring, "Praise God in all His wisdom."
Hobb arms himself with a pair of grenade launchers, while Kelly, in a bid to lure Jason out into the open, strips to her underwear and prances through the ruins of Camp Crystal Lake. Jason takes the bait and chases Kelly into the cafeteria, where he is ambushed by Hobb. During their fight, Hobb knocks Jason into a pit where the Ministry had been dumping the dead, including Townsend. Hobb blows Jason and the mass grave up, recovers Jason's body parts and hockey mask to place in government custody, and drives off with Kelly.
Author Scott S. Phillips has stated he had "a great time" writing the book and that he was "pretty much left alone" while authoring it; the only parameter Black Flame had given him to follow was "to make it R-rated." [5] However, Phillips has also declared, "After a truly unpleasant experience with the editor of my novel Friday the 13th: Church of the Divine Psychopath, I decided to take a stab at self-publishing, and I've never looked back." [6] Black Flame "goofed up" and did not credit Phillips with the "S" initial he used to avoid being confused with another author named Scott Phillips. [7]
Phillips celebrated the book's release with a signing at the Dark Delicacies bookstore in Burbank, California, on August 20, 2005. [8]
Nat Brehmer of Wicked Horror felt the novel was "pretty decent" with an intriguing premise and a "great" villain in the form of Father Eric Long. [9] In a review written for Rue Morgue , Joel Harley praised the book, opining that it added "a new dimension to the franchise in a way that the movies could never have" and was "one of the franchise's most vibrant and exciting entries to date." [10]
Friday the 13th is a 1980 American independent slasher film produced and directed by Sean S. Cunningham, written by Victor Miller, and starring Betsy Palmer, Adrienne King, Harry Crosby, Laurie Bartram, Mark Nelson, Jeannine Taylor, Robbi Morgan, and Kevin Bacon. The plot follows a group of teenage camp counselors who are murdered one by one by an unknown killer while they are attempting to reopen an abandoned summer camp with a tragic past.
Jason Voorhees is a character from the Friday the 13th series. He first appeared in Friday the 13th (1980) as the young son of camp-cook-turned-killer Pamela Voorhees, in which he was portrayed by Ari Lehman. Created by Victor Miller, with contributions by Ron Kurz, Sean S. Cunningham and Tom Savini, Jason was not originally intended to carry the series as the main antagonist. The character has subsequently been represented in various other media, including novels, video games, comic books, and a crossover film with Freddy Krueger.
Freddy vs. Jason is a 2003 American slasher film directed by Ronny Yu and written by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift. It is a crossover between the A Nightmare on Elm Street and Friday the 13th franchises, being the eighth installment in the former and the eleventh in the latter. The film stars Monica Keena, Kelly Rowland, Jason Ritter, Christopher George Marquette, Lochlyn Munro, and Robert Englund.
Friday the 13th Part 2 is a 1981 American slasher film produced and directed by Steve Miner in his directorial debut, and written by Ron Kurz. It is the sequel to Friday the 13th (1980), and the second installment in the franchise. Adrienne King, Betsy Palmer, and Walt Gorney reprise their respective roles from the first film as Alice Hardy, Pamela Voorhees, and Crazy Ralph. Amy Steel and John Furey also star. Taking place five years after the first film, Part 2 follows a similar premise, with an unknown stalker killing a group of camp counselors at a training camp near Crystal Lake. The film marks the debut of Jason Voorhees as the series' main antagonist.
Pamela Voorhees is a fictional character and the overarching antagonist of the Friday the 13th series of horror films. She was created by Victor Miller, and first appeared in Sean S. Cunningham's Friday the 13th (1980), played by Betsy Palmer. Pamela is the main antagonist of the first film, in which she is known only as Mrs. Voorhees, and remains an antagonistic presence in its sequels, in which she is seen mostly as a severed head or a figment of her son's imagination. In Friday the 13th Part III (1982), the character appears as a reanimated corpse in a hallucination, played by Marilyn Poucher. Paula Shaw played Pamela in the crossover Freddy vs. Jason (2003); according to Palmer in Friday The 13th Reunion, she was asked to reprise her role in the film, but turned it down after reading the script. Nana Visitor played Pamela in the 2009 reboot.
Jason Goes to Hell: The Final Friday is a 1993 American supernatural slasher film directed by Adam Marcus from a screenplay by Dean Lorey and Jay Huguely, based on a story by Huguely and Marcus. The ninth installment in the Friday the 13th franchise and a sequel to Friday the 13th Part VIII: Jason Takes Manhattan (1989), it stars John D. LeMay, Kari Keegan, Erin Gray, Allison Smith, Steven Culp, Steven Williams, and Kane Hodder as Jason Voorhees, reprising his role from Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood (1988) and Jason Takes Manhattan. The film follows Jason's spirit as it possesses various people to continue his killings after his death. To resurrect himself, Jason must find and possess a member of his bloodline, but he can also be permanently killed by one of his surviving relatives using a magical dagger.
Friday the 13th Part VII: The New Blood is a 1988 American supernatural slasher film directed by John Carl Buechler and starring Lar Park Lincoln, Kevin Blair, Susan Blu, Terry Kiser, and Kane Hodder in his first appearance as Jason Voorhees, a role he would reprise in three subsequent films. It is a sequel to Friday the 13th Part VI: Jason Lives (1986) and the seventh installment in the Friday the 13th franchise. Set seven years after the events of the previous film, the plot follows a psychokinetic teenage girl (Lincoln) who unwittingly releases Jason from his tomb at the bottom of Crystal Lake, allowing him to go on another killing spree in the area.
Friday the 13th is an American horror franchise that comprises twelve slasher films, a television series, novels, comic books, video games, and tie‑in merchandise. The franchise mainly focuses on the fictional character Jason Voorhees, who was thought to have drowned as a boy at Camp Crystal Lake due to the negligence of the camp staff. Decades later, the lake is rumored to be "cursed" and is the setting for a series of mass murders. Jason is featured in all of the films, as either the killer or the motivation for the killings. The original film was written by Victor Miller, produced and directed by Sean S. Cunningham, and released by Paramount Pictures. The films have grossed over $468 million at the box-office.
Alice Hardy is a fictional character in the Friday the 13th franchise. Alice first appears in Friday the 13th (1980) as an artist working as a camp counselor. She is portrayed by Adrienne King—who reprises the role in the sequel Friday the 13th Part 2 (1981) and the fan film Jason Rising (2021). Alice's creator, Victor Miller, scripted her as a flawed character, envisioning her in an affair. Once production began on the original film, budgetary constraints limited the deeper exposition intended for Alice's character.
Friday the 13th is a 2009 American slasher film directed by Marcus Nispel, and written by Damian Shannon and Mark Swift, from a story by Shannon, Swift, and Mark Wheaton. It is the twelfth installment in the Friday the 13th franchise. The film stars Jared Padalecki, Danielle Panabaker, Aaron Yoo, Amanda Righetti, Travis Van Winkle, and Derek Mears. It follows Clay Miller (Padalecki) as he searches for his missing sister, Whitney (Righetti), who is captured by Jason Voorhees (Mears) while camping in woodland at Crystal Lake.
Derek Mears is an American actor and stuntman. Often appearing in horror and science-fiction titles, he came to prominence for portraying Jason Voorhees in the 2009 reboot of Friday the 13th. His film roles also include The Hills Have Eyes 2 (2007), Predators (2010), Pirates of the Caribbean: On Stranger Tides (2011), Hansel & Gretel: Witch Hunters (2013), and Alita: Battle Angel (2019). On television, he played the title character on the DC Universe series Swamp Thing (2019).
Videogram is the alter ego of Swedish composer/producer Magnus Jan Michael Sellergren. The originator of the VHS-inspired horror synth sound, the project debuted with the "Charles Bronson" digital single and S/T album in 2014, coinciding with Doc Terror's Italian Horror Week.
Ari Lehman is an American performing artist, composer, and actor. He is known for playing the child Jason Voorhees in the Paramount horror film Friday the 13th, becoming the first actor to portray the horror film icon. As of 2018, Lehman performs in a punk rock/heavy metal band, First Jason.
Friday the 13th: Hell Lake is a 2005 British horror novel written by Paul A. Woods and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the second in a series of five Friday the 13th novels published by Black Flame and focuses on undead killer Jason Voorhees escaping from Hell to resume his killing spree on Earth.
Friday the 13th: Carnival of Maniacs is a 2006 British horror novel written by Stephen Hand and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the fifth and final installment in a series of five Friday the 13th novels published by Black Flame and involves undead killer Jason Voorhees being found and placed on display as a sideshow attraction by Doktor Geistmann's Carnival of Terror.
Jason X: The Experiment is a 2005 British science fiction horror novel written by Pat Cadigan and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the second in a series of five Jason X novels published by Black Flame and acts as a sequel to the 2001 film Jason X and its 2005 novelization, which was also written by Pat Cadigan and published by Black Flame.
Jason X: Planet of the Beast is a 2005 British science fiction horror novel written by Nancy Kilpatrick and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the third in a series of five Jason X novels published by Black Flame and involves undead cyborg Jason Voorhees running amok on G7, a space station orbiting Planet #666.
Jason X: Death Moon is a 2005 British science fiction horror novel written by Alex S. Johnson and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the fourth in a series of five Jason X novels published by Black Flame and is set in Moon Camp Americana, a reformatory for wayward girls that is attacked by undead cyborg Jason Voorhees.
Jason X: To the Third Power is a 2006 British science fiction horror novel written by Nancy Kilpatrick and published by Black Flame. A tie-in to the Friday the 13th series of American horror films, it is the fifth and final installment in a series of five Jason X novels published by Black Flame and revolves around a group of scientists working in seclusion fighting for their lives against escaped convicts and undead cyborg Jason Voorhees.