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| Blu-ray - Wide Screen | $27.19 |
Closed Caption; Widescreen and full-screen versions of the film; "The Terror Gauge"; "Cheating Death: Beyond and Back" featurette; Fact track; Filmmaker commentary with director David Ellis, producer Craig Perry, and screenwriters Eric Bress and J. Mackye Gruber; "Bits & Pieces: Bringing Death to Life" featurette; Deleted/alternate scenes with commentary; Trailers; DVD-ROM content: link to original website; exclusive on-disc DVD-ROM content includes script-to-screen, wallpapers, "Chain Reaction," and more; exclusive content at infinifilm.com
Full Product DetailsSide #1 -- Widescreen
1. Main Titles/Death's Design [4:46]
2. Deadly Commute [11:50]
3. The Lucky Ones [4:21]
4. Household Hazards [8:53]
5. The Sole Survivor [8:54]
6. A Trip to the Dentist [6:06]
7. Expert Advice [6:04]
8. Route 23 Reunion [6:04]
9. Man With Hooks [4:31]
10. Loose Ends [7:27]
11. Scene of the Accident [4:40]
12. Code Blue [6:15]
13. Recognizing the Signs [3:44]
14. New Life/Epilogue [2:24]
15. End Credits [4:51]
Side #2 -- Fullscreen
1. Main Titles/Death's Design [4:46]
2. Deadly Commute [11:50]
3. The Lucky Ones [4:21]
4. Household Hazards [8:53]
5. The Sole Survivor [8:54]
6. A Trip to the Dentist [6:06]
7. Expert Advice [6:04]
8. Route 23 Reunion [6:04]
9. Man With Hooks [4:31]
10. Loose Ends [7:27]
11. Scene of the Accident [4:40]
12. Code Blue [6:15]
13. Recognizing the Signs [3:44]
14. New Life/Epilogue [2:24]
15. End Credits [4:51]
Can we really cheat fate? That’s the question posed in this suspenseful sequel to the surprise horror hit of 2000. It begins vividly, just like the first Final Destination, with the leading character having a precognition of disaster. Twentysomething Kimberly Corman (played by relative screen newcomer A. J. Cook) is driving with three friends in an SUV when she suddenly has a vision of an apocalyptic traffic accident. Her quick thinking later averts a tragedy just like the one she imagined, but when the people apparently slated to die in that accident subsequently meet death in grisly ways, Kimberly becomes convinced that a malevolent fate is responsible. The first film’s only survivor, the oddly named Clear Rivers (again played by Ali Larter), returns to do battle with the unseen force of destiny she believes to be stalking her. Director David R. Ellis knows his mandate: He expends his creative energies on the death scenes, which are numerous in variety and hideously gruesome in execution; although he does so at the expense of character development or any deeper focus on potential ambiguities in the narrative that would foster psychological terror. The special effects are unusually convincing -- so much so that viewers with queasy stomachs might be well advised to seek gentler entertainment. But diehard horror fans will enjoy this cinematic wallowing in blood and gore. Final Destination 2 is one of those rare sequels that delivers exactly what it promises, in quality and quantity greater than its predecessor's. Ed Hulse, Barnes & Noble
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