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However, this is not always the case, and there are some interesting moments where a horror movie sequel is actually better than the movies that came before.
5) Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter

There aren’t many slasher movies better than the first Friday the 13th. However, when looking back at that original movie, it is really only a Friday the 13th film in name alone. While it introduced the idea of a slasher killer at a local campground, it was set up differently, with the murders happening from the killer’s POV. However, the big twist at the end is that it was a woman named Pamela Voorhees who was the killer all along, wanting revenge for the death of her son years before.
It wasn’t until Friday the 13th Part 2 that Jason Voorhees debuted as the slasher killer, surviving all those years after his apparent death at Camp Crystal Lake. That said, the best movie in the entire series, especially for fans of Jason, was the fourth movie, Friday the 13th: The Final Chapter. It has the best hero in young Tommy Jarvis (Corey Feldman), and the franchise began using a little more dark humor alongside the intense kills. Everything clicked here, and it was one of the ’80s best horror movies, regardless of genre.
4) Evil Dead II

The first Evil Dead movie was a masterpiece of indie filmmaking. What Sam Raimi accomplished with almost no money and a cast of college friends was astonishing. That is a movie that every aspiring filmmaker should watch to learn how to do practical effects and specialized trick shots for next to no cost. Evil Dead was also an incredible horror movie that had more heart put into its production than almost any other splatstick horror movie of its generation. However, Evil Dead II was just a little bit better.
Of course, what made Evil Dead II better was a decent production budget, which means more money, more experience from Sam Raimi behind the camera, and an improved Bruce Campbell in the lead role. It lacks a bit of the charm of the first Evil Dead movie, since it was more technically advanced, but it made Raimi a star director and remains listed among the best horror movies of all time.











