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Final Destination (Widescreen Edition)
Exclusive Date Score:
6/10
As a series of horror
movies Final Destination has a story to tell. Something of a ghost story
from times past. These two movies work well together and the run time
isn't overly long for both movies in the same night. Keep plenty of
drinks around and enjoy.
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Final Destination
While
hardly a spiritual upgrade of the slasher film, this high-concept teen
body-count thriller drops hints of The Sixth Sense into the smart-aleck
sensibility of Scream. Helmed by X-Files veteran James Wong, who cowrote
the screenplay with longtime creative partner Glen Morgan, Final
Destination is an often entertaining thriller marked by an unsettling
sense of unease and scenes of eerie imagery. It suffers, however, from a
schizophrenic tone and a frankly ludicrous premise. A high school
Cassandra, Alex Browning (Devon Sawa of Idle Hands), wakes from a
preflight nightmare and panics when he's convinced the plane is doomed.
His ruckus bumps seven passengers from the Paris-bound plane, which
immediately explodes into a fireball on takeoff, but fate hasn't
finished with these lucky few and, one by one, death claims them. Wong
brings such a funereal tone to these early scenes of survivor's guilt
and inevitable doom that the already far-fetched film threatens to veer
into unplanned absurdity. Thankfully, the tale loosens up with a playful
morgue humor: one of the victims winds up the splattered punch line to a
grim joke and elaborate Rube Goldbergesque chains of cause and effect
become inspired spectacles of destruction. Final Destination is a pretty
silly thriller when it takes itself seriously, and the filmmakers play
fast and loose with their own rules of fate, but once they stick their
tongues firmly in cheek, the film takes off with a screwy interpretation
of the domino effect of doom. --Sean Axmaker
Final Destination 2
Final
Destination 2 begins with a well-orchestrated multicar pileup on a
freeway--a horrifying accident that turns out to be a premonition, as
seen by a young woman (A.J. Cook) who saves herself and several other
people by blocking a freeway on-ramp. Thus, as in the first Final
Destination, a prescient vision disrupts the destined plans of death,
and death goes to extreme lengths to correct matters. What makes Final
Destination 2 entertaining is that the characters can only survive by
learning to recognize the signs of impending doom--and the signs are
basically the cinematic foreshadowing that moviemakers use to invoke
suspense. This, combined with some elaborately complicated and gruesome
deaths, fosters a ghoulish humor that's more entertaining than the
smirky self-referentiality of Scream. Final Destination 2 doesn't aspire
to be a great movie, but trash has its pleasures. Also featuring Ali
Larter as the only survivor of the first movie. --Bret Fetzer
The pace is racing for the most part,
leaving you hanging for the next "death misadventure', always startling,
sometimes expected. Enjoy - Robert Lee, aLoveLinksPlus.com
reviewer
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