Why did Jason kill JJ?


She did not have premarital sex , she did not drink or do drugs,

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Because Jason is an unstoppable killing machine, JJ did not break the slasher movie rules but you can tell she was going to be a goner sooner or later.

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[deleted]

Jason took one look at JJ's boobs and ass and knew that premarital sex was in her near future. Why wait for a kill he knows has to happen.

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LMAO 

Poorly Lived and Poorly Died, Poorly Buried and No One Cried

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Rock and roll is/was associated with all those things you mention. Maybe Jason was just being racist.



Or, since her death is so early, maybe she did do all those things but we didn't get to see it.

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He couldn't stand the noise of her playing

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I have been going through this entire series for the first time. I have noticed that Jason really just seems to kill at random. Even many "innocent" characters get killed,

If you save the world, We can do it in the *beep*
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Because he's a homicidal maniac lol

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She did not have premarital sex , she did not drink or do drugs


Because there were never any such rules in the Friday the 13th movies, nor even in slasher movies in general. That's just a common misconception that was popularized by Scream (1996).

In part 2 the wheelchair guy gets killed while the people who went out drinking survived.

In part 3 Shelly gets killed.

In part 4 Rob gets killed, as does the fat girl (hitchhiker).

In part 5 the stuttering kid gets killed, as does the fat candy bar kid.

In part 6 the people playing paintball get killed, as does Tommy Jarvis's friend, the couple in the Volkswagen Beetle, the cemetery caretaker (he was a drinker, but he was well over the legal age), and a few cops.

In part 7 Tina's mother gets killed, as does the girl who lost her earring (and she even tried to dissuade her friend from doing drugs).

That's not even close to an exhaustive list of characters killed in the F13 movies who weren't ever shown to have broken any of the "rules".

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This. The rules are more like guidelines.

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They are more of coincidences.

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