"FRIDAY THE 13TH" (6 P.M., AMC): AMC'S ANNUAL PRE-HALLOWEEN "MONSTERFEST" RETURNS, STARTING WITH A "DVD TV" SHOWING OF THIS 1980 TREND-SETTING SLASHER MOVIE. EXTRAS INCLUDE TEXT INFORMATION THAT WILL



"Friday the 13th" (6 p.m., AMC): AMC's annual pre-Halloween "Monsterfest" returns, starting with a "DVD TV" showing of this 1980 trend-setting slasher movie. Extras include text information that will appear below the film in "letterbox" format at 8 p.m.
"Inside the Actors Studio" (8 p.m., Bravo): The not-always-predictable Rosie O'Donnell chats about her life and work with host James Lipton. Though not primarily known as an actor, O'Donnell has appeared in some well-known movies, including "A League of Their Own" and "Sleepless in Seattle."
"Storm Stories" (8:30 p.m., The Weather Channel): Instead of the usual video of dramatic but often obscure weather events, tonight's episode focuses on a case that made big news. "Facing Cancer at the South Pole" tells how Dr. Jerri Nielsen, a Canfield resident, was rescued from Antarctica after she discovered that she had breast cancer.
"Enough" (9 p.m., CBS): Jennifer Lopez stars in this 2002 movie as a woman who flees her abusive husband only to find that he is stalking her. To fight back, she turns to martial-arts training. Billy Campbell plays the husband, and Tessa Allen is the daughter caught between them.
"Sherlock Holmes: The Case of the Silk Stocking" (9 p.m., PBS): A new "Masterpiece Theater" production stars Rupert Everett as Holmes, this time in the story of a serial killer who seems to be dressing his female victims in the clothing of the person he killed previously. Holmes knows he must find the first victim, the one who "always tells the detective more than any other." With Ian Hart as Dr. Watson.
"Desperate Housewives" (9 p.m., ABC): Perhaps the backlash was inevitable. After a sensational first season, "Desperate Housewives" finds itself dealing with a widely held perception that the show is experiencing a sophomore slump. But though some of the plots do seem to be clunkers (The Alfre Woodard story line is both exasperating and ludicrous), "Housewives" still rates as a must-see. For now, at least.