As per the franchise's tradition, Death won't be cheated and it starts to do anything - like toppling cans and letting waters drip - to create a ripple of events that would eliminate the survivors.ĭespite showing how lame entertainment can be entertainingly lame with 'Snakes on a Plane,' Ellis - who also directed 'Final Destination 2' - doesn't strive for an ounce of creativity, resulting to a terribly disposable fare that fails to hit its its mark despite aiming so low. Nick (Bobby Campo) experiences a premonition of a disaster in a race track and manages to get a few people out, who would have otherwise died. Ellis' body bag-fodder isn't mitigated by whatever shallow entertainment an additional dimension might have brought.Įric Bress' script wastes no time in shaping its interchangeable characters as, apparently, Death has to immediately dive into placing its cardboard victims in intricate fatalities that have been the series' central gimmick. Arriving on local theaters without the benefit of 3-D, the novelty of 'The Final Destination' goes doubly kaput, as it not only lacks inspired deaths and sympathetic characters, but also because the flatness of David R.
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