Final Destination Bloodlines Box Office Day 6 India Trends
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"Final Destination Bloodlines" might be the series' first film to make fans cry. The new entry in the long-running horror franchise serves as a swan song for Tony Todd, the beloved "Candyman" star who died last November at age 69.
The first movie came out way back in 2000, and followed Devon Sawa’s character, Alex, after he had a premonition that the plane he and his classmates were on was going to explode — leading to a bunch of them to get off the plane and suffer grisly deaths after the plane did, indeed, kill everybody who had remained on board.
The new entry in the franchise known for its shocking, complex, and often wickedly funny kills one-upped itself with its best kill yet, involving none other than an MRI machine. And it doesn’t happen anywhere close to how you’d expect.
While Final Destination's specific brand of horror might be unique, these franchises offer similar thrills, gore, and creative kills.
There is no time wasted in getting to the good stuff in Final Destination Bloodlines. That counts double for its 4DX version, as there’s a whole bunch of subtle effects present while we watch young Iris Campbell (Brec Bassinger) interfere with Death’s plan to claim the lives of all present for the Skyview Restaurant’s opening night.
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"I don’t think the fourth one is good at all, actually it sucks," Perry said in an excerpt of Clark Collis’ new book 'Screaming and Conjuring: The Resurrection and Unstoppable Rise of the Modern Horror Movie’, shared exclusively with Entertainment Weekly.
Find out why the directors chose a blood-soaked ending over an alternate survival storyline in Final Destination: Bloodlines. What changed the film’s fate?