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7/10
This little light of mine...
allexand8 July 2009
Warning: Spoilers
Ryan and Jack recover a cursed lantern that reveals the location of buried treasure provided that the diver is incinerated by the lantern afterward. However, one fateful night when Micki is left alone in the store, the original owners decide they want the lantern back...

"Bedazzled" is a very original and inventive. Instead of the usual find-and-retrieve-the-antique plot, they begin the episode with the lantern locked away in the vault and Micki is left alone to defend the lantern, along with her own life, from its original owners when they break into Curious Goods to steal it back. It's always nice to see that some of these antique owners are not willing to simply let their most valuable possession get taken from them and Micki play the hero for once. This episode is very entertaining and suspenseful considering that it uses limited sets.

The supporting cast is pretty good here. The main villain was definitely the most successful as he was a pretty rotten guy and his dimwitted sidekick put in a good turn. The kid that she was babysitting was pretty annoying though, I kept hoping that he'd get killed.

The episode is pretty well-written. The struggle between Micki and her captors is pretty well done. She manages to outwit them in pretty creative ways, most notably they way she defeats the main villain. I did have trouble believing that she wouldn't know how to open the vault at this stage of the game. The policeman manages to actually kill one of the men rather than being instantly subdued like in so many other episodes. While plausible, it does make me laugh a little that they cut the phone lines as this was before the age of cell phones, but that's not the writers' fault. A mirror is even featured here that would come into play in a later episode.

My one major problem is actually one that's a recurring theme in almost every episode, but here it really stands out. Why don't the Curious Goods gang carry a gun, or at least some type of weapon? Given the fact that they regularly deal with desperate and dangerous individuals why would they choose to remain unarmed? Every time they have a showdown with an antique owner, this is always in the back of my mind, but what makes this instance so special is that they're fighting on their home turf. In such a dangerous line of work, it would seem a wise investment for them to keep a gun somewhere, be it under the counter, or in their nightstand. I would expect Micki, especially, to have learned her lesson after an antique owner broke into her bedroom in "Shadow Boxer." After all, the cop and the lantern owners had guns.

Glaring flaw aside, "Bedazzled" is a great episode because it really experiments with the show's tried-and-true formula and clears up any remaining doubt as to Micki's qualifications as an antique hunter. I really feel this episode was a major turning point for her character.
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7/10
The Cursed Lantern
claudio_carvalho26 March 2024
Jonah Harkness, Tom and the diver David Jones are searching for a treasure in a sunken vessel. After finding a chest with the light of an ancient lantern, they bring it on board. Jonah Harkness and David open the chest, which is full of jewels, and Jonah kills David Jones with a beam from the lamp. Out of the blue, Jack and Ryan arrive in the ship and steal the lantern, and are chased by Jonah and Tom. They lock the lantern in the vault and go to a astrologer's convention, despite the stormy night, leaving Micki alone in the Curious Goods. However, Jonah and Tom have followed Jack and Ryan and, after killing a worker that is repairing the phone lines, they pose of telephonic workers to enter in the shop. Micki receives the boy Richie to babysit him for her friend and the snoopy boy finds that the men are trying to open the vault. Now, Micki is pressed to open the vault to let the men recover the lantern.

"Bedazzled" is a good episode of "Friday the 13th: The Series", with a flawed but entertaining story. Micki is the lead in this show and succeeds to defeat the dangerous Jonah Harkness. The deaths of a telephonic worker, a police officer and two criminals are forgotten in the end of the plot with no consequence. My vote is seven.

Title (Brazil): "A Maldição" ("The Curse")
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6/10
Not Much There There
Gislef22 August 2020
Warning: Spoilers
Pros: The show breaks the "standard" format of the team spending the episode recovering the antique-of-the-week. They find it early, and the rest of the episode is the man they stole it from invading Curious Goods to get it back. So it's a nice break in tradition, even if it was a bit early in the show's run for them to have a "tradition".

The shot in the mirror when Jonah bursts into flames is a nice bit of cinematography from director Alexander Singer.

Cons: It's a pretty standard cost-cutting bottle episode, with a relatively small cast and the majority of the episode set in the store. The main villain, Jonah, doesn't have much of a personality beyond "evil" and is as indestructible as a movie Jason. He takes an electrical shock and a second-story fall, and keeps on ticking. The kid, Richie, is annoying and we never get any background on him or his mother Jenny. Who is a friend? Neighbor? Of Micki's. The antique isn't as imaginative as some we get later in the series, or even in the first season. It reveals treasure, as long as the owner kills someone afterward. There's no history on the lantern, or back story on it. It just... is.

The antique also has the bog-standard comic book weakness of several earlier antiques. The beam can be reflected, and kill the bad guy. Why not have an evil shadow that can be defeated by light? Oh, wait, they already did that.

The excuse of Jack and Ryan going off to an astrologers' convention is pretty lame. Jack says it's the only time in years the convention is in the city. But then later they're seen driving through the countryside. A radio announcer mentions a "tropical hurricane". So they're in the tropics? Never seen that before or since.

Why doesn't the police officer (Kennedy, according to the credits) never call for backup? And doesn't anybody wonder why there are three corpses--including a police officer--at the store? And how does Jonah find the store? Yes, he sees the car's license plate as Jack and Ryan drive off. Is he really so connected that he can call at someone at the DMV in the middle of a "tropical hurricane" and get the car's location?

So "Bedazzled" is a decent earlier episode. It's better than the lackluster early-early episodes, but it's not as good as either the preceding "Tales From the Undead" or "Faith Healer", or subsequent episode like "Brain Drain" and "The Electrocutioner".

But that's just my opinion, I could be wrong. What do you think?
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8/10
Good entry
mattkratz14 December 2019
I think this was a good entry in the series as the gang recovers the cursed antique at the beginning of the episode, and the owner tries to get it back. Mickie has to defend herself against a nasty villain. The rainy night adds to the atmosphere, and I liked the cursed lantern that helped retrieve buried treasure. The little kid was a nice addition, and I loved the showdown. The episode was overall terrific.

*** out of ****
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