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Final Destination
File:Final Destination film series box set.jpg
DVD box set containing the first four films
Directed byFinal Destination 1, 3
James Wong
Final Destination 2, 4
David R. Ellis
Final Destination 5
Steven Quale
Produced byGlen Morgan
Warren Zide
Craig Perry
Toby Emmerich
Jeffrey Reddick
James Wong
Warren Zide
StarringDevon Sawa
Ali Larter
A.J. Cook
Michael Landes
Mary Elizabeth Winstead
Ryan Merriman
Bobby Campo
Shantel VanSanten
Nicholas D'Agosto
Emma Bell
Music byFinal Destination 1, 2, 3
Shirley Walker
Final Destination 4, 5
Brian Tyler
Distributed byFinal Destination 1, 2, 3, 4
New Line Cinema
Final Destination 5
Warner Bros.
Release dates
Final Destination
March 17, 2000
Final Destination 2
January 31, 2003
Final Destination 3
February 10, 2006
The Final Destination
August 28, 2009
Final Destination 5
August 12, 2011
Final Destination 6
TBA
Running time
Total (5 films)
455 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
BudgetTotal (5 films)
US$166-171 million
Box officeTotal (5 films)
US$$661,880,639

Final Destination is a series of horror films based on an unproduced spec script written by Jeffrey Reddick he originally submitted to the X-Files television series. Distributed by New Line Cinema, all five films are centered on the themes of fatalism, predestination, and precognition, in relation to death (i.e. how to foresee, avoid or control it). In a less abstract sense, each film features a group of people dying in a series of elaborate and often gory scenarios that frequently resemble Rube Goldberg machines in their complexity.

The series is noteworthy amongst others in the horror genre in that the "villain" of the movies is not the stereotypical slashers, monsters, creatures, beasts, ghosts, or demons. It is the entity Death itself (very occasionally 'seen' as a fleeting shadow), which manipulates the environment in deadly ways with the intent of "recapturing" those who somehow manage (usually through warning premonitions) to escape their fates the first time. The franchise has also spawned a related book series (published by Black Flame) and comic series (published by Zenescope Entertainment Inc).

Films

Final Destination (2000)

On September 25, 2000, Alex Browning (Devon Sawa) is going on his high school trip to Paris along with his fellow students and teachers. Before take-off, Alex has a premonition that the flight will explode on take-off, killing everyone on board. When events from his vision begin to repeat themselves in reality, he attempts to stop the flight leading to a handful of passengers being left behind including Clear Rivers (Ali Larter), Carter Horton (Kerr Smith), Billy Hitchcock (Seann William Scott), Valerie Lewton (Kristen Cloke), Terri Chaney (Amanda Detmer), and Tod Waggner (Chad Donella). After Alex and his friends are forced off the plane, the airliner explodes in mid-air, killing everyone left on it. When Tod dies in a bizarre accident only a month later, Alex begins to suspect that they were never meant to get off the plane that night. As the survivors begin to die one-by-one, those that remain struggle to find a way to cheat Death's plan. Six months later, Alex, Clear, and Carter relax in Paris having believing they've finally cheated Death. However, Carter is killed as he attempts to rescue Alex from a falling neon sign.

Final Destination 2 (2003)

One year after the explosion of Flight 180, Kimberly "Kim" Corman (A. J. Cook) has a premonition of a pile-up on Route 23, killing everyone involved. She stalls her SUV on the entrance ramp with her three best friends Shaina, Dano, and Frankie (Sarah Carter, Alex Rae, and Shaun Sipos). This stops police officer Thomas Burke (Michael Landes), Eugene Dix (T.C. Carson), Rory Peters (Jonathan Cherry), Kat Jennings (Keegan Connor Tracy), Nora and Tim Carpenter (Lynda Boyd and James Kirk), Evan Lewis (David Paetkau), and pregnant Isabella Hudson (Justina Machado) from entering the freeway. While Officer Burke questions Kimberly about the inconvenience, her vision becomes a reality and an 18-wheeler truck carrying cars crashes into Kimberly's SUV, killing Shaina, Dano, and Frankie. In the days following the accident, Kimberly learns of the crash of Flight 180 and teams up with only survivor, Clear, to try to save a new group of people from Death's plan. This time, the survivors are warned that only "new life" can defeat Death and are killed one-by-one as they attempt to protect Isabella as her delivery date draws closer. It is revealed that Isabella was never meant to die in the pile-up, and Kimberly drowns herself into the lake so that she may be resuscitated by emergency staff, and thus be granted "new life". The film ends with Kimberly and Officer Burke witnessing the death of a young boy who was saved by Rory during the course of the film, revealing that Death's plan is still in action.

Final Destination 3 (2006)

Six years after the explosion of Flight 180, Wendy Christensen (Mary Elizabeth Winstead), the school photographer at McKinley High School, visits an amusement park along with her friends Kevin Fischer (Ryan Merriman), Jason Wise (Jesse Moss), and Carrie Dreyer (Gina Holden). As Wendy and her friends board the Devil's Flight roller coaster, she has a premonition that it will crash, killing everyone on board. Wendy panics and manages to get off the roller coaster along with Kevin, Wendy's younger sister Julie (Amanda Crew), Ian McKinley (Kris Lemche), Perry Malinowski (Maggie Ma), Erin Ulmer (Alexz Johnson), Lewis Romero (Texas Battle), Frankie Cheeks (Sam Easton), and Ashley Freund and Ashlyn Halperin (Chelan Simmons and Crystal Lowe). Minutes later, the disaster occurs and Jason and Carrie are brutally killed in the resulting accident. A few days after the disaster, Kevin tells Wendy about the crash of Flight 180, and claims that the people who got off of the roller coaster will start dying in the same order they were meant to die in, just as Alex and his friends did. Once again, survivors die in a series of strange accidents, but Wendy, Kevin, and Julie come to believe they've avoided their own fates when Ian kills himself. Five months later, their attempts to survive later prove fruitless when all three cross paths and die in a bizarre subway accident.

The Final Destination (2009)

Nine years after the explosion of Flight 180, Nick O'Bannon (Bobby Campo) has a premonition in which multiple race cars will pile-up at the McKinley Speedway. He immediately persuades his friends Lori Milligan (Shantel VanSanten), Janet Cunningham (Haley Webb), and Hunt Wynorski (Nick Zano), security agent George Lanter (Mykelti Williamson), and spectators Andy Kewzer (Andrew Fiscella), Samantha Lane (Krista Allen), Carter Daniels (Justin Welborn), and Nadia Monroy (Stephanie Honoré) to leave the stadium, escaping seconds before Nick's vision becomes a reality. When Nick hears the deaths of the survivors, he learns about the previous disasters from the first three films and realizes that Death is coming for them. Once again, the other survivors are killed in a series of bizarre accidents except Janet, who is saved just moments before her death thanks to Nick's visions. This leads other survivors to believe they have beaten by Death until Nick has a premonition of a disastrous explosion at a shopping mall where he eventually rescues Lori and Janet. Although Nick manages to stop this disaster, he, Lori, and Janet are killed by a runaway semi in the cafe two weeks later.

it is also the first mainstream movie to show sex in 3D

Final Destination 5 (2011)

While on a business trip with his employees at Presage Paper, Sam Lawton (Nicholas D'Agosto) has a premonition that the bridge he is on will collapse. As the vision becomes reality, Sam manages to save his friends Molly Harper (Emma Bell), Candice Hooper (Ellen Wroe), Peter Friedkin (Miles Fisher), Isaac Palmer (P. J. Byrne), Nathan Sears (Arlen Escarpeta), Dennis Lapman (David Koechner), and Olivia Castle (Jacqueline MacInnes Wood). After Candice and Issac die in bizarre accidents, Sam is warned of Death's plans and told that his only means of survival are to kill somebody else and claim their remaining lifespan. Dennis and Olivia are killed before they have a chance to save themselves, but Nathan successfully claims the lifespan of a co-worker when he accidentally causes his death in a warehouse accident. Peter decides to target Molly, jealous that she survived instead of Candice. Peter eventually gains the lifespan of an investigating agent, but is killed by Sam while attacking Molly. Two weeks later, Sam and Molly are boarding Flight 180 to Paris for their job apprenticeship when they hear of Alex's premonition from the first film. They are too late to leave the plane, and killed in the resulting accident. Meanwhile, Nathan, who is in a nearby restaurant, learns that the construction worker he accidentally killed had a brain aneurysm that was likely to fatally erupt "any day now" and is immediately killed by the landing gear as it falls from Flight 180.

Future

On February 1, 2011, Tony Todd said in an interview with DreadCentral that if Final Destination 5 is a success at the box office, then two sequels would be filmed back-to-back.[1] On August 23, 2011, when inquired whether he will be directing a sequel, Stephen Quale elaborates, "Who knows. Never say never. I mean, it’ll be up to the fans. We’ll see how this one performs internationally and if it makes as much money as the fourth one, I’m sure Warner Brothers will want to make another one. And then the question for me will be just if we can get a script that can live up to this one because frankly I wouldn’t want to go backwards in the same way some sequels do – once they get into the whole franchising thing they can get worse." The film has performed very well at the box office and received great critical response [2]

Cast

List indicator(s)

  • (v) indicates the actor or actress lent only his or her voice for his or her film character
  • (f) indicates the actor or actress did not appear in any new footage for the film; footage from an earlier film was used.
  • (photo) indicates the actor or actress appeared in a photograph for the film.
  • (s) indicates that the actor did not appear, but a CGI skeleton represented that character and their mode of death.
  • A dark grey cell indicates the character was not in the film.
Character Film
Final Destination 5
(2011)
Final Destination
(2000)
Final Destination 2
(2003)
Final Destination 3
(2006)
The Final Destination
(2009)
William Bludworth Tony Todd Tony Todd (v)  
Alex Browning Devon Sawa (f) Devon Sawa Devon Sawa (photo)  
Clear Rivers Ali Larter (f) Ali Larter   Ali Larter (s)
Carter Horton Kerr Smith (f) Kerr Smith Kerr Smith (photo)  
Billy Hitchcock Seann William Scott (f) Seann William Scott Seann William Scott (photo)   Seann William Scott (s)
Valerie Lewton Kristen Cloke (f) Kristen Cloke Kristen Cloke (photo)   Kristen Cloke (s)
Terry Chaney Amanda Detmer (f) Amanda Detmer Amanda Detmer (photo)  
Tod Waggner Chad Donella (f) Chad Donella Chad Donella (photo)   Chad Donella (s)
Kimberly Corman A. J. Cook (f)   A. J. Cook A. J. Cook (photo; DVD release)  
Thomas Burke Michael Landes (f)   Michael Landes Michael Landes (photo; DVD release)  
Eugene Dix T.C. Carson (f)   T. C. Carson  
Rory Peters Jonathan Cherry (f)   Jonathan Cherry   Jonathan Cherry (s)
Kat Jennings Keegan Connor Tracy (f)   Keegan Connor Tracy   Keegan Connor Tracy(s)
Nora Carpenter Lynda Boyd (f)   Lynda Boyd   Lynda Boyd (s)
Tim Carpenter James Kirk (f)   James Kirk  
Evan Lewis David Paetkau (f)   David Paetkau   David Paetkau (s)
Wendy Christensen Mary Elizabeth Winstead (f)   Mary Elizabeth Winstead  
Kevin Fischer Ryan Merriman (f)   Ryan Merriman  
Julie Christensen Amanda Crew (f)   Amanda Crew  
Ian McKinley Kris Lemche (f)   Kris Lemche  
Perry Malinowski Maggie Ma (f)   Maggie Ma Maggie Ma (s)
Erin Ulmer Alexz Johnson (f)   Alexz Johnson Alexz Johnson (s)
Lewis Romero Texas Battle (f)   Texas Battle  
Franklin Cheeks Sam Easton f)   Sam Easton  
Ashley Fruend Chelan Simmons (f)   Chelan Simmons Chelan Simmons (s)
Ashlyn Halperin Crystal Lowe (f)   Crystal Lowe Crystal Lowe (s)
Nick O'Bannon Bobby Campo (f)   Bobby Campo
Lori Milligan Shantel VanSanten (f)   Shantel VanSanten
Janet Cunningham Haley Webb (f)   Haley Webb
Hunt Wynorski Nick Zano (f)   Nick Zano
George Lanter Mykelti Williamson (f)   Mykelti Williamson
Andy Kewzer Andrew Fiscella (f)   Andrew Fiscella
Samantha Lane Krista Allen (f)   Krista Allen
Carter Daniels Justin Welborn (f)   Justin Welborn
Nadia Monroy Stephanie Honoré (f)   Stephanie Honoré
Jonathan Groves Jackson Walker (f)   Jackson Walker
Cynthia Daniels Lara Grice (f)   Lara Grice
Sam Lawton Nicholas D'Agosto  
Molly Harper Emma Bell  
Peter Friedkin Miles Fisher  
Agent Block Courtney B. Vance  
Nathan Sears Arlen Escarpeta  
Dennis Lapman David Koechner  
Olivia Castle Jacqueline MacInnes Wood  
Isaac Palmer P. J. Byrne  
Candice Hooper Ellen Wroe  

Comic books

The first Final Destination comic book, entitled Sacrifice, was published by Zenescope Entertainment and came packaged with a limited edition DVD of Final Destination 3 sold exclusively at Circuit City. The premise of the story involves the survivor of a terrible accident, who continually experiences images of other people's deaths, isolating himself from the rest of the world to escape the visions that torment him. Zenescope later released a five issue miniseries, subtitled Spring Break, which involves a group led by Carly Hagan being stalked by Death after surviving a hotel fire and becoming stranded in Cancún, Mexico.[3] The miniseries was later released in a trade paperback collection, which included the Sacrifice comic as bonus content.[4]

Reception

Box office performance

Film Release date Box office revenue Box office ranking Budget Reference
United States Foreign Worldwide All time domestic All time worldwide
Final Destination March 17, 2000 $53,331,147 (47.2%) $59,549,147 (52.8%) $112,880,294 #1,130 $23,000,000 [5]
Final Destination 2 January 31, 2003 $46,961,214 (51.9%) $43,465,191 (48.1%) $90,426,405 #1,309 $26,000,000 [6][7]
Final Destination 3 February 10, 2006 $54,098,051 (46.0%) $63,621,107 (54.0%) $117,719,158 #1,110 $34,000,000 [8]
The Final Destination August 28, 2009 $66,477,700 (35.7%) $119,689,439 (64.3%) $186,167,139 #862 $43,000,000 [9]
Final Destination 5 August 12, 2011 $42,587,643 (27.0%) $115,300,000 (73.0%) $157,887,643 #1,440 $40,000,000 [10]
Total $263,455,755 $398,424,884 $661,880,639 $173,000,000

Critical reception

Film Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
Final Destination 33% (93 reviews) (4.7/10)[11] 36 (28 reviews)[12]
Final Destination 2 47% (107 reviews) (5.0/10)[13] 38 (25 reviews)[14]
Final Destination 3 45% (114 reviews) (5.1/10)[15] 41 (28 reviews)[16]
The Final Destination 30% (94 reviews) (4.3/10)[17] 30 (14 reviews)[18]
Final Destination 5 60% (126 reviews) (5.8/10)[19] 50 (24 reviews)[20]
Overall 43% 39

Final Destination 5 is regarded as one of the best of the series. It was best received by critics and fans of the film series, scoring a "fresh" 60% on RottenTomatoes.com which is the highest from the series[21].

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Exclusive: Tony Todd Talks Final Destination 5! Parts 6 and 7 Already in the Cards?". Dread Central. 31. Retrieved 22 April 2011. They expanded my part, and the producer told me as we were leaving Vancouver that if it opens at Number 1 – which statistically it has – they're going to shoot the next two simultaneously. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |date= and |year= / |date= mismatch (help); Unknown parameter |month= ignored (help)
  2. ^ Exclusive : Final Destination 6, Titanic 3D updates from Steven Quale | Moviehole
  3. ^ See: #Further reading
  4. ^ See: #Further reading
  5. ^ "Final Destination (2000)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  6. ^ "Final Destination (2003)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  7. ^ "Final Destination 2 Production Budget". The-Numbers. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  8. ^ "Final Destination 3 (2006)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  9. ^ "The Final Destination". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2009-12-01.
  10. ^ "Final Destination 5". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2011-08-15.
  11. ^ "Final Destination". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  12. ^ "Final Destination: Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  13. ^ "Final Destination 2". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  14. ^ "Final Destination 2: Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  15. ^ "Final Destination 3". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2009-12-01.
  16. ^ "Final Destination 3: Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2008-02-12.
  17. ^ "The Final Destination". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2010-03-30.
  18. ^ "Final Destination, The: Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2009-12-01.
  19. ^ "Final Destination 5". Rotten Tomatoes. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  20. ^ "Final Destination, The: Reviews". Metacritic. Retrieved 2011-08-14.
  21. ^ http://www.rottentomatoes.com/m/final_destination_5/

Further reading

External links

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