MovieChat Forums > The Burning (1981) Discussion > Any similarities to 'Friday the 13th'?

Any similarities to 'Friday the 13th'?


Seems like a knock off

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disfigured killer....check
summer camp.....check
clueless camp counselors....check

Definitely similar, but feel Friday was a little "tighter" story-wise. Not a bad film if you pine for an early 80's slasher that comes in under the radar. FYI, from what I read, this story was actually written BEFORE Friday the 13th.

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I agree. Also they have story time with a prank and a secret hide out for the killer. The ending needed some work

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Friday is tighter story wise?

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It's definitely a knockoff.

"The Burning" came out a week after “Friday the 13th Part 2” in 1981 and contains all the staples of that blossoming franchise: disfigured killer, iconic weapon (in this case, garden shears), summer camp, camp counselors, a prank gone wrong, swimming antics, deep woods sexual frolics, death during (or after) sex, a secret hideout for the killer, semi-nekkid or fully nekkid teen girls, etc.

It is held in high esteem mostly for its infamous raft sequence, but that only involves about 30 seconds and it’s not THAT phenomenal. At best, the movie might be as good as some of the “Friday” sequels, although the girls are subpar by comparison, albeit okay.

Nonetheless, “Burning” has its points of interest, like Brian Backer from “Fast Times at Ridgemont High” and, especially, a young Jason Alexander from Seinfeld with a full-head of hair. Production-wise, it’s low-budget but superior to, say, “Sleepaway Camp.”

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Friday itself was a knockoff, so that makes it a knock off of a knock off.

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They were both release in 1981 just like Halloween II...It's hard to know who copied who...

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The makers of Friday the 13th are pretty open about imitating Halloween.

They did add a lot to the genre though. That backwoods atmosphere mainly, which is what the burning went after.

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They did add a lot to the genre though.


Yeah, the whole summer camp location and everything that revolves around it, plus the evolving idea that Jason was more of a diabolic supernatural being than simply a mongoloid child who was thought to have drowned.

And it could be (rightly) argued that "Halloween" took elements of previous slashers like "Black Christmas" and "The Texas Chainsaw Massacre" -- both from 1974 -- and, of course, "Psycho" (1960), not to mention "Home For the Holidays" (1972) and "Schizo" (1976); and we can't forget about "A Bay of Blood" (1971) and "Silent Night, Bloody Night" (1972).

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Halloween copied several things from Friday The 13th also...

Friday added a kid (Tommy Jarvis) in Friday The 13th Part 4...Halloween added a kid (Jamie Loyd) in Halloween Part 4

Friday discontinued Tommy Jarvis in part 6...Halloween discontinued Jamie Loyd in part 6.

Friday part 5 was supposed to make Tommy the new killer...The ideal discontinued...Halloween part 4 was supposed to make Jamie the new killer...The ideal discontinued

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Good point. There was enough ripping-off to go around.

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True.

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They were both release in 1981 just like Halloween II...It's hard to know who copied who...


"Friday the 13th" came out in 1980 (and was shot in '79). "The Burning" was a knockoff that debuted a week after "Friday the 13th Part 2" in May, 1981. It's still a worthwhile slasher with its attractions.

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[deleted]

It's a pretty good knock off

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One of the best 'Friday the 13th' style films ever. It's better than many/most of the F13 franchise though probably a touch below the best handful of F13 films.

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In an interview with Tom Savini on the special features, he said Harvey Weinstein claimed they made this story up before Friday the 13th. Tom Savini also made this instead of Friday part 2 because he didn't like the idea of an adult Jason.

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