Then The Final Destination made $181 million worldwide, so this summer, we earned another sequel now hitting home video and the numbering system has been reinstated.
So has everything else. As has been the case over the course of the hit horror series, each chapter adheres to its tried-and-true template. In fact, it could be argued that the movies are written from a Mad Libs page, but the only variable to change is the epic disaster that kick-starts each one.
With airport, freeway, amusement park and racetrack exhausted, Final Destination 5 has filled in the blank with suspension bridge.
Thats where our supposed hero (Nicholas DAgosto, Fired Up!) convinces some cookie-cutter co-workers to get off the bus, because hes just had a vision that the structure is about to go all River Kwai on them. Of course, it then does, and the unseen Grim Reaper spends the rest of the film getting them anyway, in methods seemingly invented via collaboration between Rube Goldberg and the Marquis de Sade. (Dont watch the Blu-rays Circle of Death piece in the special features until after the movie, lest you want the sequences all spoiled for you.)
These five flicks and you can bet there will be more to come are critic-proof: Like the Saw series, either you like them or you hate them, and no amount of convincing is going to sway you to the other side. Despite all their flaws and admittedly, there are many I happen to like them.
On the downside, you have stock characters that fill labels more than roles i.e. Hot Girl, Token Black, etc. essayed by actors of limited talents. Hardly anyone is likable, but thats OK since none of them survive by the end credits. (Relax thats only a spoiler if youve never seen any of the previous four, which means youre never going to watch the fifth, either.)
DAgosto is as dull as his name is apostrophized; his meh presence is matched by a mopey, mousy Emma Bell, who was livelier in Frozen and season one of The Walking Dead. Briefly reprising his role as the sage-like coroner from all the chapters but the fourth is Tony Todd (TVs 24), and hes like Laurence Olivier compared to the expendable kids.
On the upside, you have the death sequences, even if they lack the creativity, cleverness or intricacy of its predecessors. The highlights here involve a folding gymnast, a Lasik machine gone haywire and more acupuncture needles than are comfortable.
Director Steven Quale (Aliens of the Deep) and screenwriter Eric Heisserer (the remake of A Nightmare on Elm Street) save their only true surprise of the show for the last.
Final Destination 5 is what it is. I quite enjoyed it, even if, after 48 hours, Ive mostly forgotten it. Rod Lott