Friday The 13th (1980 Film) - Plot

Plot

The film begins in 1958 with two counselors at Camp Crystal Lake, Barry (Willie Adams) and Claudette (Debra S. Hayes), are murdered by an unseen assailant after they sneak away to a cabin to have sex.

Twenty-two years later on Friday, June 13, 1980 the camp is being re-opened. Annie (Robbi Morgan), one of the new counselors, is hitchhiking to Crystal Lake. She is warned by the town crazy Ralph (Walt Gorney) that the camp is cursed. She is given a lift by a friendly truck driver, Enos (Rex Everhart) who also warns her; telling her of the 1957 drowning of a boy and the 1958 murders. Enos drops Annie off a few miles from the camp and is soon picked up by an unseen driver. As the driver speeds past the entrance to the camp, Annie becomes concerned and leaps from the moving vehicle when the driver fails to stop, fleeing into the woods.

Meanwhile, several other counselors have been hired to help Steve with the camp, including Alice (Adrienne King), Bill (Harry Crosby), Marcie (Jeannine Taylor), Jack (Kevin Bacon), Brenda (Laurie Bartram) and Ned (Mark Nelson). The counselors begin refurbishing and renovating the camp as Steve heads off to get supplies in town.

Meanwhile Annie is still fleeing her pursuer in the woods. However she trips and falls and when she looks up, she sees her pursuer who pulls out a knife. Terrified, Annie backs away into a tree and has her throat slit.

Back at camp, Ned follows a figure wearing a black rain slicker and disappears into the cabin and is murdered. Meanwhile, a thunderstorm forces Jack and Marcie to take refuge in a bunkhouse and have sex, unaware that Ned's corpse rests on the upper bunk. Marcie then leaves for the bathroom, while Jack stays and smokes when an unseen figure shoves an arrow through his throat from under the bed. In the bathroom, Marcie hears footsteps and thinks Jack is playing a joke. When she searches the empty shower stalls, a hatchet is seen behind her and when Marcie turns around and the hatchet strikes her in the head, killing her.

Meanwhile, Steve's Jeep gets stuck in mud and he is escorted back to camp by a police officer. Upon arrival at the camp, Steve sees a light from an unseen figure who Steve recognizes who then murders him off-screen.

After Alice, Bill and Brenda finish playing strip Monopoly, Brenda heads back to her cabin for the night when she hears a child's voice faintly crying for help. She is lured out to the archery range when the lights turn on suddenly and Brenda is murdered off-screen, but her scream is heard by Alice and Bill.

After discovering the phone lines have been cut and Ned's truck won't start, Bill leaves to check the generator. Afterwards, Alice becomes worried when Bill does not return. While looking for him, she finds his corpse pinned to a door with arrows and flees back to her cabin. After Alice barricades herself in the cabin, Brenda's body is hurled through the window, forcing Alice to run back outside only to meet a middle-aged woman who identifies herself as Mrs. Voorhees (Betsy Palmer). As Alice begins to tell Mrs. Voorhees about the murders, Mrs. Voorhees tells Alice about her son Jason who had drowned in the lake at the camp years before. Blaming camp counselors who were not watching her son, Mrs. Voorhees charges at Alice with a hunting knife, and Alice realizes that Mrs. Voorhees is the killer.

A lengthy chase ensues in which Alice appears to subdue Mrs. Voorhees several times and finds the dead bodies of Steve and Annie in the process. The two women face off near the shore of the lake and Alice manages to finally decapitating Mrs. Vorhees with her own machete. Alice then climbs into a canoe and floats onto the lake.

The next morning, Alice wakes to find police officers on the shore. However, as Alice continues to float in the canoe, the decayed corpse of Jason (Ari Lehman), Mrs. Voorhees's son, leaps up from the surface and pulls Alice underwater. Alice awakes in the hospital, the previous scene with Jason having been a nightmare. Alice asks about Jason, but when the officer explains that no child was found at the camp, Alice replies, "Then he's still there." as the last scene shows the lake in peace.

Read more about this topic:  Friday The 13th (1980 film)

Famous quotes containing the word plot:

    The westward march has stopped, upon the final plains of the Pacific; and now the plot thickens ... with the change, the pause, the settlement, our people draw into closer groups, stand face to face, to know each other and be known.
    Woodrow Wilson (1856–1924)

    “The plot thickens,” he said, as I entered.
    Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (1859–1930)

    The plot was most interesting. It belonged to no particular age, people, or country, and was perhaps the more delightful on that account, as nobody’s previous information could afford the remotest glimmering of what would ever come of it.
    Charles Dickens (1812–1870)