Sight and Sound, 11/01/2003, p.45-6, "...The sequences set in Jason's dreams are ingenious..."
Total Film, 04/01/2004, p.120, "Ronny BRIDE OF CHUCKY Yu compensates with visual panache, inventive deaths and a spectacular, gory climactic smackdown."
Entertainment Weekly, 08/22/2003, p.112, "...Robert Englund's performance as Freddy hasn't lost its delight..."
Los Angeles Times, 08/15/2003, p.C6, "...Writers Damian Shannon and Mark Swift are clever and ingenious in reviving and combining the two venerable horror franchises..."
Theatrical Release Date: August 15, 2003
DVD Features:
Region 1
Double Keep Case
Widescreen - 2.35
Full Frame - 1.33
Audio:
Dolby Surround Stereo - English
Dolby Digital 5.1 EX - English
Additional Release Material:
Audio Commentary - 1. Ronny Yu - Director, Robert Englund - Star, Ken Kirzinger - Star
Deleted Scenes (18 with Optional Audio Commentary)
Alternate Opening and Alternate Ending
Comparison Scenes
Documentaries
Featurette
Interviews
Music Video - 1. "How Can I Live" - Ill Nino
TV Spots
Theatrical Trailer
Text/Image Galleries:
3D Animated Menus
Storyboards
DVD-Rom Features
Veteran slashers Freddy Krueger and Jason Voorhees join forces in this combination sequel to the NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET and FRIDAY THE 13TH series. The film begins with a quick recap of both Freddy and Jason's "lives," underscoring their respective motivations to kill and their distinct weaknesses. Freddy (Robert Englund) explains that the present children of Elm St. (including Monica Keena, Jason Ritter, Kathrine Isabelle, and Kelly Rowland of Destiny's Child) have no memory of him, and if they don't know he exists, he can't enter their dreams to kill them. Ingeniously, he reaches out to Jason (Ken Kirzinger), the brutish death machine from Camp Crystal Lake, to go on an Elm Street killing spree, hoping a lot of gory murder will jog the town's memory.
Jason is up to the task, quickly dispensing with teenager after teenager in suburban homes, cornfields, medical labs and, of course, the forest. Freddy grows jealous over Jason's body count, and so must intervene, setting off a battle royale between the two highly adored slasher heroes across dreamworlds and realities. In another post-modern twist, a character seemingly modeled after Jay from Kevin Smith's films appears in the movie, adding both a comedic element and another level of reality vs. fiction. FREDDY VS. JASON employs a variety of special effects to update these undying series, not the least of which is uniting their once disparate stories.