Trish and Tommy soon arrive and realize their mother is missing. While searching for her children and Gordon, she is killed offscreen. Jarvis arrives home and discovers the power outage. Terri tries to leave the party early, but before she can get on her bike Jason stabs her with a spear.
When Paul goes out to look for her, he is harpooned in the groin. She goes out to the lake where Jason impales her with a spear from under a raft. A jealous Sam sees Tina flirting with Paul and leaves. Later that night, the teens begin the party. They take him to their house, where he meets their mother and Tommy shows him several monster masks he made himself before Rob leaves to go camping. Afterwards, when their car breaks down, Trish and Tommy are helped out by a young man named Rob Dier. Trish and Tommy happen upon the scene, and Trish is invited to a party taking place that night. While going for a walk the next day, the teens meet twin sisters Tina and Terri Moore, and go skinny dipping with them. The teens arrive and meet neighbors Trish Jarvis, her twelve-year-old brother Tommy, and the family dog Gordon. On the way, the group comes across Pamela Voorhees's tombstone and a hitchhiker, who is soon killed by Jason. The group consists of Paul, his girlfriend Sam, virgin Sara, her boyfriend Doug, awkward Jimmy, and jokester Ted. The following day, a group of teenagers drive to Crystal Lake for the weekend. At the hospital, Jason spontaneously revives and escapes from the cold storage, murdering the coroner Axel Burns with a hacksaw and gutting Nurse Robbie Morgan with a scalpel. The night after the events at Higgins Haven, police clean up the grounds and Jason Voorhees's body, believed to be dead, is taken to the morgue. Despite being billed as the final film, its success prompted another sequel, Friday the 13th: A New Beginning, one year later. Though the film received generally negative reviews from critics at the time of release, it has retrospectively come to be considered one of the best, if not the best, in the series.
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on a budget of $2.6 million, making it the fourth most attended of the Friday the 13th series with approximately 9,815,700 tickets sold. Upon its theatrical release, the film grossed $33 million in the U.S. The film was originally scheduled to be released in October, but was pushed up to April 13, 1984. Make-up artist Tom Savini, who worked on the first film, returned because he wanted to help kill off Jason, whom he helped create. As a result, the film was marketed as "The Final Chapter" to ensure it as such.
Paramount Pictures supported the decision, as they were aware of the declining popularity of slasher films at the time of its release. wanted to conclude the series as he felt nobody respected him for his producing work on the series regardless of how much the films earned at the box office, as well as wanting to work on other projects. Much like Part III, the film was originally supposed to be the final installment in the series. The film marks the debut of the character Tommy Jarvis (Feldman), who would make further appearances in two sequels and related media, establishing him as Jason's archenemy. Picking up immediately after the events of Part III, the plot follows a presumed-dead Jason Voorhees who escapes from the morgue and returns to Crystal Lake to continue his killing spree. It is the fourth installment in the Friday the 13th franchise. Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter is a 1984 American slasher film directed by Joseph Zito, produced by Frank Mancuso Jr., and starring Kimberly Beck, Corey Feldman, Crispin Glover, and Peter Barton.