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This Inconsistently Heinous was Headlined on October 2022. |
“ | Ki-ki-ki... Ma-ma-ma | „ |
~ The iconic (sometimes misheard) sound effect that plays whenever Jason is around. |
Jason Voorhees is the main antagonist of the Friday the 13th franchise and the titular secondary antagonist of the 2003 crossover film Freddy vs. Jason.
He is a wrathful, ruthless, and vengeful serial killer who seeks to murder anyone who steps in Camp Crystal Lake. He was originally a deformed boy who was thrown in a lake by bullies who supposedly drowned due to the lack of assistance, but in actuality, had survived and would come back later as a grown up. After truly dying for the first time, he would be revived and return as the cold undead machine he is now.
He was portrayed by Ari Lehman as a child in Friday the 13th, the late Steve Daskewisz (masked) and Warrington Gillette (unmasked) in Part II, the late Richard Brooker in Part III, the late Ted White in The Final Chapter, Tom Morga in A New Beginning (in dream and illusion sequences only), C.J. Graham in Jason Lives, Kane Hodder in fims 7-10, and the game, and Ken Kirzinger in Freddy vs. Jason, who also did some of Hodder's stunts in Jason Takes Manhattan.
His Evil Ranking[]
What Makes Him Heinous?[]
In General[]
- He will kill anyone who entered Camp Crystal Lake, to the point where he has murdered over a hundred.
- Kills many of his victims in brutal ways, such as snapping their necks, ripping off their limbs, crushing their skulls, or punching through their bodies.
- Stalks and toys around with some of his victims, giving some false hope like with Julius before punching his head off, showing somewhat of a sadistic tendency.
Part II[]
- Kills Alice Hardy in her home by driving an ice pick through her temple as revenge for killing his mother. He also placed his mother's head in Alice's fridge to scare her even further.
- Kills Mark Javis by slashing a machete right into his face, not caring that he was handicapped.
Part III[]
- Kills a pregnant woman and her unborn child after having her see the corpse of her husband on the ceiling.
The Final Chapter[]
- Terrorizes a young Tommy Jarvis and his sister, Trish when breaking into their house.
- Causes Tommy Jarvis to be traumatized for many years, due to killing his friends and mother when he was young.
The New Blood[]
- Beats a girl in a body bag to death by slamming her against a tree.
Jason Takes Manhattan[]
- Sinks a ship filled with people.
- Although he kills a rapist duo, it's out of pragmatism to kill the victim they were attempting to rape, and also because he despises all sexual acts.
Jason Goes to Hell[]
- Hypnotizes someone to consume his heart to take over his body to resurrect himself.
- Possesses the bodies of several people and after leaving their bodies they slowly and painfully died by having their skin melted.
Jason X[]
- He causes the ship to crash into the Solaris killing 29,000 people.
- As Uber Jason, he kills members of the ship he's in and kills the Captain. With his nanites, he then proceeds to start making the ship malfunction, which causes Brodki to sacrifice himself to defeat Jason. He also kills Kay-Em once resurrected in its robotic form.
Freddy vs. Jason[]
- Although he could be considered a scapegoat, as he has shown to sometimes want to simply rest in peace and his torment at the hands of Freddy Krueger's was rather horrible, considering he's a brutal, ruthless killing machine who's murdered hundreds of people, calling him a scapegoat is very far fetched as his deaths are 100% well deserved due to killing hundreds of people and being a cold murderous force.
- What's also more is that he's already avenged his mother by killing her murderer, but he still chooses to murder innocent people as the years pass.
- Although it seems Freddy Krueger is worse at first, Jason stands out with a higher number of kills and more brutal kills, not to mention Jason doesn't have any of Freddy's powers (except for physical power and immortality), so it is kind of unfair to compare him to Krueger in resources.
What Makes Him Inconsistent?[]
- His past is far too tragic for him to be Near Pure Evil, as it is brought up a lot and is heavily played for sympathy. He deeply misses his mother, feeling like he has to please her. He was bullied just for having a deformed skull with no one coming to save him from his drowning. Finally, he saw his mother, the only person who cared for him, get decapitated, making him an angry, hurt child who wants to avenge his mother and be left in peace.
- He really loved his mother and wants to satisfy/please her when she gives him orders.
- He has some slight standards as he doesn't kill animals or children, as he sees them as innocent and helpless much like him when he drowned so he sympathizes with them in that sense.
- He does have moral agency issues as being mentally disabled and never having gone to school means he doesn't really fully know the difference between right and wrong. It also doesn't help that there are corrupting influences on his mind such as thinking he hears his mother's ghost and losing parts of his humanity after becoming a full on supernatural undead entity as well as still having a childlike mentality due to not growing up properly.
- He has a pet the dog moment in Part 8 where a group of gangsters threaten him and instead of killing them, he takes off his mask and lets them run away.
Trivia[]
- While the original Jason Voorhees is Inconsistently Heinous, his remake incarnation can't count as Inconsistently Heinous but as Near Pure Evil instead, as his tragedy is treated with less sympathy and brought up less, and he doesn't have the standards or moral agency issues the original Jason has.
External Links[]
- Jason Voorhees on the Villains Wiki
- Jason Voorhees on the Friday the 13th Wiki
- Jason Voorhees on the Horror Wiki
- Jason Voorhess on the VS Battles Wiki
- Jason Voorhees on the Wikipedia
- Jason Voorhees on the The Ultimate Tragic Evil Wiki
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