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Final Destination

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Final Destination is also the name of a stage in the video game Super Smash Bros. Melee.
Final Destination is a 2000 horror film. Loosely based on the crash of TWA Flight 800 (which acts as a startout point for the rest of the film), the plot was based on an unused X-Files episode. Notably the director James Wong acted as a writer, producer and director of the series. The DVD of Final Destination was released on September 26th, 2000.

The film was the first in the Final Destination trilogy, and was followed by Final Destination 2 (2003) and by Final Destination 3 (2006). Distributed by New Line Cinema, it was directed by James Wong.

This movie also spawned a series of related novels, the Final Destination books.

Plot

On his way to a class trip to Paris, Alex Browning (played by Devon Sawa), has a vision that the airplane is going to explode after takeoff. He, along with a teacher and several students, are kicked off the plane. They soon witness the plane exploding right after takeoff, but they are now all stuck in a new vision as Death sets out to claim them once and for all.

Cast & Characters

Deaths

Death's original design is Tod, Terry, Ms. Lewton, Carter, Billy, Clear, Alex. The order in which they actually die is different because some get saved and moved to the end of the order. The actual order of death is as follows:

Death: Strangulation. First, a gust of wind blows through an open window and shuts the door to the bathroom while Tod is in it, so as to minimize intervention. Water leaks out of a poorly screwed pipe in the back of his toilet, creating a puddle that he does not notice while grooming himself in the bathroom and is listening to the radio. He then walks over to the tub and slips on the puddle, causing him to fall on a clothesline cord, which snaps off the wall and, pulled by the velocity of Tod's fall, wraps around his neck and strangles him in the tub, while he struggles to stand up, but only manages to kick over bottles of shampoo and soap, spilling them inside the tub and making it slippery and preventing him from getting to his feet. Upon his death, the water snakes its way back under the toilet and disappears as if it never leaked.
Death: Car accident. Terry stops in the middle of the street, cursing at Carter for always fighting with Alex, when a speeding bus hits her, splattering her blood on the others. Ironically just before the impact, she tells Carter if he was going to get into fights with Alex everytime he saw him, that they could "both just drop f***ing dead." before turning into the oncoming bus.
Death: Stabbing. She suffers the most violent and longest death. Edgy with nerves, Ms. Lewton decides to make a cup of tea. She sees the shadowy figure of death in the metal of the teapot, and becomes freaked out. Changing her mind, not thinking due to nerves, Ms. Lewton pours ice-cold vodka into a hot mug, causing the mug to crack. She then inadvertently holds it over her computer monitor, causing the liquid to leak into the monitor and spark the inside. When she sees the smoke, she goes to check on the monitor, which explodes, blowing a piece of glass from the screen into her throat. She pulls it out and attempts to hold the blood in. Meanwhile, the spilled vodka on the counter catches fire and eventually lights up the whole kitchen. She is weakened by her loss of blood and falls to the floor in her kitchen, and attempts to grab a cloth draped over a knife block. She pulls the cloth, thereby pulling down the knife block and causing a huge butcher knife to fall into her chest. At this point, Alex has entered the house to try and save her, but just as he reaches her, the stove explodes and a chair falls onto the knife, lodging it into Ms. Lewton, and killing her. The gas from the stove, among other things, is caught in the fire and the entire house explodes right after Alex comes running out of it.
Death (intervened): Train accident. Carter drives his car onto railroad tracks to prove that death does not have a pattern. When the train comes, he calmly proceeds to get out of the car, only to realize that the car is stuck in the locked position. Alex breaks the car window and pulls him out of the car just in time.
Death: Decapitation. Carter's car is smashed by a speeding train immediately after Alex pulls him from it, sending pieces of metal everywhere. While Billy is standing screaming at Carter that he was next and that he is not staying around him, a sharp piece of metal is whipped up and out by a chain dangling down from the speeding train, sending it flying through Billy's head as he is turning around, cutting off the top half of his head, killing him instantly.
Death: Blunt force trauma. Six months later, after Death's list was fully ran through, Clear, Alex, and Carter have finally got to Paris and are at a café. The long absence of close calls have led them to believe that all three had been skipped, and they can now have a chance at a full life. Alex is still pondering the chance of Death going after them again, but Carter assures him that as long as Alex is alive, Carter and Clear would be fine. Alex gets a feeling that something is about to happen (from signs such as a busker across the street playing Rocky Mountain High), and leaves the restaurant quickly, not wanting to endanger the others. As he's crossing the street, a passing bus swerves to avoid him and runs into a street lamp, which is knocked out of the ground and hits a large illuminated sign above the café, knocking it off its standpoint and causing it to swing towards Alex back on the ground. Carter pushes Alex out of the way just as the sign swings past him, saving him. As Carter stands up to wonder who is next in the design, the sign swings back across the street directly behind him, but the film cuts away to credits right before the audience sees Carter smashed by the sign.
Death: Head trauma. Since Carter saved Alex from death, Alex was skipped and put after Clear on Death's list. Alex and Clear do not die in this film, but Alex dies in between Final Destination and Final Destination 2. According to the sequel, Alex is killed in an alley by a falling brick that was pushed by a gust of wind.
Note: Again, Alex did not die in this film, but his death was not a major plot to the sequel, as it was mentioned only briefly. Since he died shortly after Carter, it makes sense to include his death for this film page. In an alternate ending, Alex actually dies saving Clear; he is electrocuted and then burned to death. Additionally, there was a scene filmed where Alex is decapitated by a stray rudder from a downed police helicopter, but it was decidedly cut from the film, thus allowing Alex to survive in this film.

Alternate Ending

The scene on the beach where Clear tells Alex about her family's past was extended. Clear was telling Alex how they must take action and do something big while they still had the time. Clear and Alex ended up making love, and Clear later becomes pregnant (the scene where she finds out was deleted.) When Clear is next on Death's list, Alex saves her from the exploding car, but sacrifices himself to do so and dies. Nine months later, Clear gives birth to a baby boy (which she names Alex) and by doing that, she ruined Death's design because Clear created life that was not meant to be. She and Carter became close friends and they visit the Flight 180 memorial. Clear states that even though they defeated Death this one time, they only won a chance at a full life, because for everyone, there is always that one day. A falling leaf drops and the credits roll.

This ending did not go well in test screenings as Clear becoming pregnant made the film's ending predictable. Also, the general audience disliked how a jerk like Carter gets to live and Alex ended up dying. When the second ending was test screened, many people clapped and cheered when Carter was smooshed by the sign. Although this ending became the official one, the filmmakers actually liked the original ending better. The concept of new life defeating death was incorporated into the storyline of Final Destination 2.

Note: In the original script for this, the ending had a much darker setting. Clear was able to defeat Death only because she had an innocent soul inside her. After giving birth to a baby girl (and now not having an innocent life inside), the hospital shakes, with suspense building up, and the camera zooms in on Clear's face, implying that Death had taken her.

Trivia

External links


 


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