
Alex digs deeper and discovers his companions are being killed by strange coincidences in the order they would have died from the explosion on the flight. Days after the crash, the survivors begin to die in unusual manners-almost as if a curse of death was placed on them for cheating demise. "Final Destination" is creative and full of variety we witness the plane crash from two different perspectives, as a passenger and an observer. The dramatic premise is horrific and revealing, playing like an extended "The X Files" episode without paranormal detectives. Whereas the character's personalities are clear, we feel little remorse for many of them. The rushed opening leads to lack of character development. The film wastes no time depicting its setup. Lewton and Alex watch from the airport as their late flight bursts into flames within minutes after takeoff-leaving these characters suspiciously confused about fate. Donella), other peers Billy (Seann William Scott), Clear (Ali Larter), Ms. Students Carter (Kerr Smith), the ignorant jerk and girlfriend Terry (Amanda Detmer), Alex's best friend, Tod (Chad E. This leaves him no choice but to cause a small riot leaving him and six other passengers thrown off the flight. As the plane is about to descend, Alex notices his illusion gradually comes to life. Once on the plane Alex begins to experience a dream-like vision of the jet exploding in midair killing all of its passengers. He and his French class are at an airport flying to Paris for a field trip with their teacher, Ms. Devon Sawa ("Idle Hands," "Wild America") is a high school senior named Alex Browning.


The film's atmosphere provokes cringe through a presumably omnipresent force stalking the characters, producing audience participation whether the Grim Reaper is footsteps away from us all. "Final Destination" is a perfect thriller for skeptics, detailing seven confused individuals who accidentally escape demise, discovering the impossibility of defrauding their destined time. Most are weary in some way regarding decease. I think it is safe to say every individual has different feelings about death. Rated R (for terror violence and language). Written by Jeffrey Reddick, Glen Morgan and James Wong. Donella, Amanda Detmer, and Kristen Cloke. Starring: Devon Sawa, Ali Larter, Kerr Smith, Chad E.
