By the time the fifth Final Destination movie rolled around, even
the chaps at New Line Cinema (at least those that weren’t so embarrassed by the
fourth film they still thought about the franchise at all) must have realized
that the series’ basic idea actually lends itself very badly to it being a
franchise, what with its lack of a visible antagonist (which ironically was one
of the strengths of the first pre-franchise film) or much room for any
interesting plotting. Sure, you can do another round of Rube Goldberg device
style deaths interspersed with some more in your face carnage and invent another
new rule for death (or is it Death?) to follow and roll out Tony Todd
again to expose about it, but even an undemanding audience is going to
get bored by the shtick rather sooner than later, particularly since the fourth
and worst film already promised to be the last one. The film at hand actually
tries to get around that last problem with a particularly smug gotcha ending, so
I’ll probably have to at least give it credit for trying.
Otherwise, the producers kinda-sorta listened to their hearts and waved the
series goodbye with Steven Quale’s outing (written by Eric Heisserer who seems
to have specialized in nearly good scripts before hitting the big leagues in
critical acclaim for the nearly good script to Arrival) with kills too
full of references to the originals to be exciting for anyone not interested in
the minutiae of the franchise, a particularly ill fitting new rule for Death,
and said twist ending that would be clever if it weren’t so annoying in its
smugness.
The new batch of Death meat is okay enough – though I certainly prefer the
victims from films one and three – but I can’t say the film does terribly much
for me, seeing as it just repeats the stuff that was original in the first movie
and fun in the first three, and adds little to it but that most horrible of
things – continuity wank.
Tuesday, August 22, 2017
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