close
close

Cheer the Reaper: The best death scenes from the final target films

ADVERTISING

In The final goal Universum, death may be creative – and everything, even a rubber fish, can become a potential catalyst for an agonizing death.

For those who did not know, the first film appeared in 2000 and became an immediate classic of horror from the Millennium era. The idea behind it is simple: a group of friends escape death after having a premonition-but the Reaper does not give up so easily and turns the world into a death trap in the Kevin McAllister style to correct their list.

Designed by the American screenwriter and director Jeffrey Reddick, it was originally written as a specification script for the X files, And inspired by a message about a woman who had skipped a flight after her mother had a premonition.

Most death scenes follow a Rube Goldberg recipe of (dark) chain reactions that play with our expectations. Everything and everyone becomes a potential threat: leaky pipes, precarious placed electrical appliances, a man who mows the lawn. The possibilities for dying are endless – and if they are carried out correctly, the core of the continuing attraction of the franchise.

The sixth rate, Final goal: blood linesis to be published on May 14th and recently records are broken off as the second -frequent horror film trailer any times. The conspiracy follows the pre -units of the studies Stefani (Kaitlyn Santa Juana), who discovers that they are an inherited curse – the cycle, which is doomed to fail, has to break once.

So far, we have classified the top ten Death scenes from the five films. There was a lot to choose from, and honorary mentions have to go into the clothesins strangulation End goalThe elevator capitation in Final goal 2and the evacuation scene of the intestine in The final goal (Slim selection from this).

If the following scenes have taught us something, they really cannot cheat death – but it is certainly fun/disgusting observation that people try.

10: Aircraft crash catastrophe (End goal)))

The death scene that began – Alex Brownings (Devon Sawa) Aircraft crash. This sets in motion what the premise of the franchises works so well: the gnawing feeling of fear through continuing recordings of specific details, such as the flight doors that are closed, and unstable overhead lockers. It cultivates a feeling of claustrophobia that signals dark forces in the game – but what this specific scene runs down is the actual death. A body flies out of the plane, a bloody splash, and a lot From fire that sizzles to Alex 'head to a crispy pulp (poorly aged CGI will be an issue here!) It is a chaotic rush that is not promoted to the tension – but still one of the most memorable openings of horror.

9. Airbag-outdated inflation (Final goal 2)))

After a car accident, Kat (Keegan Connor Tracy) is caught inside. When Emts arrives, the scene weighs us in a false feeling of relief and focuses on the focus between other characters. It is also unknowingly to prepare for the death of another character and to confuse the expectations. When death finally occurs – jaws of life causes the use of airbag, which causes the headproof through jagged pole – it grasps it completely unprepared with its suddenness. Randnote: This film really gave us so many complexes to be impaled in cars.

8. Suspension Bridge Sayonara (Final goal 5)))

After the disappointment ofThe final goalThe 5th film surprised the fans with its innovative strength. While a lot can be said for this end of twist (no 14-year-old spoiler here), the opening remains a highlight. They have a faster suspension bridge that crumbles faster than a moist biscuit, since the characters are piled up of sailing boat masts, fluid of melted tar and cut through a leaf metal in half. It is an amazing cruel freakiness – and even if the CGI is questionable, it is a lot of fun.

7. Uhoh Spaghettio (Final goal 2)))

The universe can be so cruel. Even if Evan (David Paetkau) is the type that microwaves during the day without first looking for magnets, he had just won the lottery and bought a few chic new accessories. Life looked – but like a twisted player of the Sims, death looked down. After Evan put his hand in the waste disposal plug and set the apartment on fire, Evan Last-Minute escapes through a fire exit … Then he slides on a few spaghetti and ends with a ladder through the eye apples. This setup is great because it is so stupid. A rush of comedic almost middle that never lose sight of your punch line.

6. Death gets the ultimate flex (Final goal 3)))

Fitness studio brothers will tell you that you will lift weights, everything solves everything – but death would not agree. While Lewis (Texas Battle) is aggressively pumping on a machine, whereby there are focal points (where is health and security in this place?), We also sweat through leaks and a shaky CD player. If the swords fall inevitably and cut the mechanisms of the machine, Lewis is miraculous. But when he screams: “Fuck death! That's all I do, baby, I just win!” – We know what's coming. The beats here are perfect and the last gruesome head gourd is funny.

5. Pigeon and disc disk (Final goal 2)))

The dentist is never fun, but Tims (Jim Kirk) Travel turns into an all-out albare when he almost cums on a rubber fish while pigeons in the window. What is great about this is that the setup is slowly and fully from the usual unstoppable premonition-but it also makes us think for a minute that death was beaten again. It is a current relief that is quickly shattered when a large glass panes fall on Tim's head and shakes it into a bloody puddle. We just never understand why his urge to meet these pigeons was so strong.

4. Death teaches a lesson (End goal)))

If death wants to achieve it, the kitchen must be one of the worst places. The poor teacher, Miss Lewton (Kristen Close), learns this on the hard tour because her upcoming death unfolds through a series of cartoons. A kettle whistles scary, a cup crack, vodka licks on a monitor that explodes – and sends a glass directly to Miss Lewton's neck. In a desperate scramble, she pulls a knife block on her before a falling chair throws the last blow. Continue pusheres through a falling chair when the rest of her house rises in flames to the sound of John Denver. It summarizes everything that is so much fun with these films – the characterization of death as an evil little freak.

3 ..Final goal 5)))

This really raised the bar (word game) End goal Death scenes. While Gymnast Candice (Ellen Wroe) is preparing to practice their routines, symphony combine potential disasters with warming up. The poles clatter and creak under pressure, shake screws on rays, overhead fan grumbling, while the liquid drips from a pipe to the exposed cable. Every moment is almost abused that the sudden brutality of Candice's death hit-a accident landing of the spine-umso feels more shocking.

ADVERTISING

2. Trauma for tanning bed (Final goal 2)))

If the risk of skin cancer was not enough to prevent people from being used with browning beds, this scene should be safe! Ashley and Ashlyn (Chelan Simmons and Crystal Lowe) are their classic hot hotties in Paris Hilton, who cooks a coat stand to fall and catch both after calling a Nokia. From the kitschy character details to the fast shift into their slowly burning terror, this death scene remains an outstanding passage for its creativity. It also gave us one of the most poetic transitions of the cinema: a recording of two burning tanning beds, which was replaced by the dark silent silence of two coffins. Excess, really.

1. Protocols of fate (Final goal 2)))

It's a bit of a distance, but you could say the block lady Twin Peaks Prophets this long before Kimberly (AJ Cook): “Close your eyes and you will break out in flames.” While Margaret's protocol did not judge – those in this scene have to be killed.

Some may argue that this is a cliché for number one, but the mere influence on an entire generation cannot be denied. How many of us are afraid to drive behind block wagons? It's not exactly a frequent event, but still!

It is really the best opening disaster of all films. The rapid escalation of the protocol palement in a catastrophic traffic disaster is full of violent chaos and explosions directly from an action film from the 90s.

ADVERTISING

Regardless of whether it is the novelty of a new fear, or the more realistic nature of a traffic accident, this scene has drawn our collective awareness. No insult, log trucker.

Final goal: blood lines is planned for the release in most European areas on May 14th and 16th.

Leave a Comment