Final Destination Bloodlines Breaks 1 Of The Franchise's Most Important Rules
Brec Bassinger in Final Destination Bloodlines.
The premise of Final Destination is delightfully simple: If you somehow manage to cheat death, the grim reaper will claim your soul through a series of lethal, Rube Goldberg-esque traps. But like so many other long-running horror franchises, the rules that guide the Final Destination universe have become increasingly complicated over time.
In 2003, Final Destination 2 introduced the concept of “new life,” as an antidote to death (more on that later), while Final Destination 5 revealed that its doomed protagonists could kill innocent people to steal their remaining lifespans.
To be fair, not every movie in the series is as preoccupied with these rules, but Final Destination Bloodlines (which is now in cinemas), is weirdly obsessed with them. In the process, it’s broken the most important one.
What’s The Plot Of Final Destination Bloodlines?
Like every great Final Destination movie, Bloodlines begins with a massive, deadly set piece. In this case, it’s the 1968 grand opening of the fictional Skyview Restaurant, a soaring tower of steel, concrete and glass. We follow Iris (Brec Bassinger) as she and her boyfriend attend the opening-night event and die in a tragic accident that kills hundreds and brings the tower crashing down.
Except, as is typically the case in these movies, that initial scene was just a premonition. Iris sees the entire........
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