Final Destination - All Five Parts Portable
A year after Flight 180, a new group of survivors is connected not by a plane, but by a horrific multi-car pileup on Route 23. Kimberly Corman (A.J. Cook) has a vision of the crash, blocks the on-ramp, and saves several lives. She discovers that by saving them, she has forced them onto Death’s "revised" list. To survive, she consults the sole survivor of Flight 180: the traumatized Clear Rivers (Ali Larter).
Steven Quale Premonition: North Bay Bridge collapse Protagonist: Sam Lawton (Nicholas D'Agosto)
. This installment is famous for the gruesome "tanning bed" scene, a peak example of the franchise's Rube Goldberg-style death traps. The Evolution: 3D Spectacle and Prequel Twists Final Destination All Five Parts
| Victim | Method | Iconic Moment | |--------|--------|----------------| | Hunt Wynorski | Eviscerated by a pool drain | His intestines sucked out (3D effect) | | Carter Daniels | Exploded by a car engine block | The tire hitting his face first | | Samantha Lane | Killed by flying debris from a cinema explosion | The metal shard through the eye | | Lori & Nick | (Vision) Coffee shop explosion | A false "happy ending" subverted |
Released during the post- Avatar 3D gold rush, The Final Destination (dropping the number in marketing) prioritizes gimmick over substance. The plot is a carbon copy of Part 2 , but the characters are paper-thin, and the CGI is noticeably cheaper. This is the only film in the series where the acting feels like a parody of the franchise. A year after Flight 180, a new group
The series began with high schooler (Devon Sawa), who has a vision of Flight 180 exploding shortly after takeoff. After he and several classmates are removed from the plane, it explodes exactly as predicted. The survivors soon realize that "Death's Design" has been disrupted, and they begin to die in the order they were meant to on the plane. This first installment introduced the cryptic mortician William Bludworth (Tony Todd) and earned $112.9 million worldwide. 2. Final Destination 2 (2003)
In the third installment, (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) has a vision of a roller coaster derailment at an amusement park. A unique mechanic in this film involves "clues" hidden in digital photos Wendy took before the crash, which foreshadow how each survivor will die. Notable sequences include the infamous tanning bed accident. It was a commercial hit, grossing $118.8 million. 4. The Final Destination (2009) She discovers that by saving them, she has
Two vapid characters, Ashley and Ashlyn, decide to use high-end tanning beds. Death, however, has other plans. A loose screw causes the beds to overheat, the wooden coffins catch fire, and the glass lids lock. The audience watches them burn and blister alive. It’s gratuitous, excessive, and utterly memorable.
If the first film was a mystery, Final Destination 2 was an adrenaline shot. Directed by David R. Ellis, the sequel is often cited by fans as the best entry in the franchise for one specific reason: the pile-up.
