made this a few weeks ago and forgot to post it
Basically act 2 of fd6
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Germany
seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from China
seen from Netherlands

seen from Switzerland
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Brazil

seen from United States
seen from United States

seen from Australia
seen from United States
made this a few weeks ago and forgot to post it
Basically act 2 of fd6
after rewatching all the final destination movies after watching bloodlines. i now have the headcannon that when bludworth would give the survivors “advice” he was just using them as pawns to test his and iris’ theories. like if 5 is the first movie, then he suggested to them that they should kill someone to get the time that they have left. and when him and iris saw that it actually worked they were like, nah too far lets try something else. and then in 1 he just gives them the information that there is an order, not anything more (not that i remember other than you can’t cheat death). iris and bludworth were probably like let’s see if this group of kids try something new and see if it works. and in 2 he tells this new group that only new life can cheat death. i want to believe he just said some cryptic shit to see what they would come up with, and him and iris just sat back and let the events unfold. and after it ended up working, they might have thought drowning was too risky so they didn’t try and waited for something else. and then when iris died in an effort to protect her family, bludworth accepted his faith and told her family outright that they have to die and be brought back
New! We take a look at all five of the FINAL DESTINATION film title sequences! Writer Alison Lang dives deep into each film’s opening sequence, providing a taste of the carnage to come and examining the clues and Easter eggs about death’s design.
Read all about it on Art of the Title: https://www.artofthetitle.com/feature/final-destination-the-title-sequences/
Recently Viewed: Final Destination Bloodlines
[The following review contains SPOILERS; YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED!]
The Final Destination franchise is horror at its most primal. Although the quality of its individual installments tends to be… inconsistent, to phrase it charitably, its overarching premise is near perfect, distilling the genre to its purest form. What, after all, could possibly be more universal than the fear of one’s own mortality? Death is inevitable, pervasive, and relentless; it hunts us from the moment we’re born, surrounds us every hour of every day, and always vanquishes its prey eventually. Regardless of when you read this sentence, somebody—many people, in fact—will have taken their last breath by the time you reach the punctuation mark. Yet we constantly defy this fundamental truth of nature, stubbornly (albeit not unreasonably) clinging to life—or at least struggling (in vain) to find some semblance of meaning amidst the senseless tragedies that we regularly endure. And Final Destination depicts this innately human impulse—survival at any cost—in the most literal, blunt, extreme manner imaginable.
The latest entry in the series, Final Destination Bloodlines, continues this proud tradition, elaborating on the themes of its predecessors without feeling like a shallow regurgitation of old material (a common flaw in belated sequels); indeed, it frequently subverts and deconstructs the familiar tropes that fans have come to expect, to both dramatic and comedic effect. The previous movies, for example, featured gloriously deranged set pieces that resembled blood-soaked Rube Goldberg devices—precisely calibrated machines of slaughter that ranged from needlessly convoluted to outright absurd, replete with deviously sadistic bait-and-switches and hilariously abrupt anticlimaxes. Here, filmmakers Zach Lipovsky and Adam Stein fully exploit that established foundation to generate maximum tension; their lens lingers on every potential threat, lending mundane, innocuous objects a sinister edge, thereby crafting a palpably ominous atmosphere. In one particularly suspenseful scene, our protagonists, having already witnessed plenty of incomprehensibly improbable carnage, briefly hesitate before navigating the perils of… an automated revolving door; in another, our heroine predicts an unlikely sequence of events that might culminate in a friend’s demise, and is so relieved upon apparently being proven wrong that she fails to notice the exact scenario that she described unfolding in the background of the shot mere seconds later (completely out-of-focus, to boot!)—the most deliciously unceremonious payoff in the history of cinema.
A word of caution: as I hope the above paragraphs have adequately conveyed, Final Destination Bloodlines is not for the faint of heart or the weak of stomach. The trademark opening premonition alone boasts multiple instances of defenestration, immolation, impalement, dismemberment (including an absolutely sick vertical bisection via malfunctioning elevator), and an especially gruesome degloving. It’s a deliberately confrontational introduction—an outrageously gory spectacle that immediately sets the tone for the story to follow, promising/warning that any subsequent violence will be equally graphic, excessive, and maximalist.
It serves its intended purpose with an almost unnerving degree of enthusiasm.
Gleefully grotesque, chillingly macabre, darkly humorous, refreshingly sincere (unlike Osgood Perkins’ gratingly irreverent The Monkey), and even surprisingly poignant on occasion (thanks in large part to the presence of the late, great Tony Todd—reprising his role as the no-longer-quite-so-enigmatic Bludworth—who contributes some much-needed gravitas to the narrative), Final Destination Bloodlines is a contender for the best chapter in the saga. I realize that probably sounds like a rather low bar to the uninitiated, but trust me: it’s very high praise.
The 'Final Destination' Franchise - Worst to Best
The ‘Final Destination’ Franchise – Worst to Best
In death there are no accidents, no coincidences, no mishaps, and no escapes. Like the ‘Saw‘ franchise, from 2000 to 2011, Final Destination became a cinematic tradition. Released every few years, the series hooked audiences in with the promise of ridiculously gory and over-the-top deaths. But it did this with a surprisingly consistent approach, establishing and updating it’s strict set of…
View On WordPress
I Have Reached My Final Destination of Ranking the 'Final Destination' Movies The best horror movies are the ones where you actually care about the characters, even though the fun of horror movies often has to do with the sadistic glee of reveling in fictional blood and guts.
My good friend @davidrmayhew and I at the #Bludworth film by @marioxcc33 #sandiegoskateboarding #legends #skatelife #Encinitas #lapalomatheatre #skatefamily 💯🤘🏾✌🏼👏🏼🤘🏻🎥🎥🎥 (at La Paloma Theatre)
In death there are no accidents, no coincidences, no mishaps, and no escapes.
Bludworth, Final Destination