Post by Toasted Cheese on Dec 1, 2017 1:01:46 GMT
Nancy did also bring Freddy out of her dream state into reality in the first so she could defeat him. I thought this was one of the weakest parts of the first entry, with all those silly traps and devices she concocted in such a short amount of time and then we just have Freddy running around comically after her in the house getting caught up in them. It was a creepier and better sequence in 2, with Freddy\Jesse attacking the teens at the pool party, compared to the climax of the first. It then got a bit weak again, with the steelworks sequence.
The ending of both film's doesn't make much sense either, with the dream state sequences. As we hear and learn in 2 and 3 though, Nancy was screwed up, and as for Jesse, well he would have been arrested and would not be freed from the evil he inflicted via Freddy. Jesse's gf's motivations were also ambiguous. Did she want him to fight his homosexuality so he would desire her, or was she just helping him to come out and accept who he was?
At least Part 3, made a more solid attempt with the dream state sequences and it was a nice touch how they all went into together to defeat Freddy and "only within" the dream state. With a little help from Neil and Nancy's dad of course. It all came across as so much more effective and still manged to be fresh and original.
It's absolutely cringeworthy to think that this entire time, Part 2 was all about Jesse fighting his homosexuality. Hence, Freddy is essentially Jesse's gayness.
I didn't mind that gay touch, being gay myself, and it was an interesting subtext and should not really be viewed as subversive. That only endorses homophobia and the scorn and contempt many still feel for it. It wasn't exactly subtle, but confusingly handled, so not exactly obvious to those who might take their sexuality for granted. It deliberately blurred the line, so as not to make people cringe about Jesse's sexuality..."Oh my Gosh, he likes dudes! That is more shocking than the graphic violence and horror portrayed before me".

