《《》》Storyline
On their way out of the city in a convertible, Daniels was seized, and although he offered up his sacred canopic jar to Imhotep, he was also sucked dry - fully regenerating the Mummy creature back to human form.This film, sometimes criticized as over-rated, was Spielberg""s biggest blockbuster up to that time.It also popularized Reese""s Pieces candy, Kuwahara bikes, and red hoodies.Observant audiences noted the film""s many merchandising tie-ins and inside "film jokes."While the film was regarded by some as a religious allegory or parable, the film more clearly identifies with many childhood experiences: a troubled, broken family with a single parent and no positive role-models, a lonely, disenfranchised boy lacking emotional fulfillment, a boy""s fierce caring for an equally-lost, stray creature or pet (also ""broken away"" from his family), the need for friendship, he malevolent world of grown-ups and the perils of childhood, miraculous healing, wish-fulfillment, courage, transcendence, and homesickness.Voorhees"" severed and mummified head (plus sweater and pants) on a makeshift candle-lit table-altar.The identify of the camp""s grotesquely-deformed stalker-killer was revealed o be Jason Voorhees (Steve Daskawitz) who had survived the drowning and had maintained the shrine to revere his beloved mother.Breck spoke about the problems he was having in the cities: "the rising tide of disobedience, the outright defiance among the servant apes.