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Movie Review: Beware the blender! ‘Final Destination Bloodlines' makes the everyday item terrifying

Movie Review: Beware the blender! ‘Final Destination Bloodlines' makes the everyday item terrifying

A blender. A lawn mower. A ceiling fan. A garden rake. A vending machine. An MRI scanner.
These mundane items are supposed to ease us through life, helping us eat, clean, keep cool, stay healthy. They're not supposed to be evil.
But in 'Final Destination Bloodlines,' as in the entire 25-year franchise, ordinary objects become fearsome tools of murderous mayhem. And they do it through intricate sequences akin to Rube Goldberg machines — those contraptions that make simple tasks complex through elaborate chain reactions. We doubt Goldberg intended for a nose ring to interact with a ceiling fan in quite the way seen here, but whatever.
There's some ingenious chaos cooked up here by co-directors Zach Lipovsky and Adam B. Stein, who said at the film's premiere this week that they hope people will be watching this, the franchises's sixth installment (and 14 years after the last), through their fingers — but with smiles on their faces.
To which I must confess I muttered to myself: 'No way I'm going to be smiling.' I braced to feel jumpy and miserable for two hours.
But sure enough I was soon smiling, even giggling. Turns out, horror films are a lot easier to handle when they're funny. Even more so when they're witty. A spoonful of wit, as Mary Poppins might say, helps the bloody mayhem go down.
Part of the fun in these movies is that we all know what we know. The surprise is not whether people will die. Death is not to be cheated. The issue is HOW, and that's where creativity comes in.
The action starts with probably the most impressive sequence in the movie — an opening scene set in 1969 at the so-called Skyview tower, looking very much like the Space Needle (but filmed in Vancouver). It's opening night at the luxurious restaurant up top.
Lovely young Iris (Brec Bassinger) is brought here by her beau for a romantic evening and, though she doesn't know it, a proposal. In the elevator, Iris tries to calm her nerves. It doesn't help when the elevator guy boasts the project was completed months ahead of schedule.
Once upstairs, Iris' nerves persist, but she tries to quell them. When she nicks her finger and a bit of blood seeps out, she says with a smile, 'I'll live.'
Ha!
Soon enough, rivets are popping and the place is crumbling. Then people start dropping dead on the ground, to the befuddlement of parking valets listening to 'Raindrops Keep Fallin' On My Head' — written in 1969! — one of many musical jokes here.
And then a present-day college student wakes up.
Turns out this has all been a recurring nightmare of Stefani, who's in danger of flunking out because all she can think of is Skyview. Her sleep-deprived roommate urges her to go home and figure things out.
Which Stefani (an appealing Kaitlyn Santa Juana) does, determined to learn who Iris is. Turns out the woman is her grandmother. Uncle Howard tells her to stay away from the madwoman who years ago lost custody of her children.
Stefani suspects there's more to it. She tracks Iris down in the remote cabin where the reclusive woman has spent decades. She learns that Iris indeed survived a Skyview calamity — but thanks to her premonition, she actually saved many lives.
There's a catch, though. Every person who survived — thanks to Iris — ended up dying later. That's because they cheated Death, and became marked men and women. Their offspring are marked too — hence the movie's title — because they were never supposed to exist. 'Death is coming for our family,' Iris warns.
What does this mean for Stefani? It means she has to save everyone. And that everyday life becomes very dangerous.
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A family barbecue starts off happily, but then we see the spiked rake lodged just under the trampoline, and the huge glass shard in the blender. Someone will die. But who, and how?
And that's how the movie continues, upping the ante with each kill. A tattoo parlor hosts one of the more creative Goldberg-ian catastrophes. Even wilder is a scene with an MRI scanner. You know that giant magnet? Yeah, that.
Just as important are the non-deaths — the times you're sure something terrible will happen, but it doesn't. I found this silly phrase scrawled later on my notepad: 'Actually he doesn't die.'
Some people hate horror films of any kind. They're not the intended audience here. But for those who don't, or are mixed, it's true: You may watch 'Final Destination Bloodlines' through fingers covering your face. But chances are high you'll be smiling, too.
'Final Destination: Bloodlines,' a Warner Bros release, has been rated R by the Motion Picture Association 'for strong violent/grisly accidents, and language.' Running time: 110 minutes. Two and a half stars out of four.

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The deaths that are onscreen are created by the filmmaking … It's really the filmmaking that's coming for the characters, and as directors that was such a delightful opportunity.' Lipovsky says the pair are aiming to leave viewers traumatized by the time the last member of Stefani's family meets their demise. 'When things that happen in real life that aren't even part of Final Destination have weird circumstances around them, people say, 'That's a Final Destination situation.' That's a testament to the sticking power of these movies,' he says. Directors Adam Stein and Vancouver's Zach Lipovsky on the set of 'Final Destination: Bloodlines.' Photo by Eric Milner / Warner Bros. Pictures So a family barbecue turns into a bloodbath and an attempt by one family member to cheat death at a hospital ends up as a sequence that will disturb anyone with an MRI appointment coming up. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. They even find ways to turn a head-clearing jog on a residential street into a deadly situation. 'When we were brainstorming ideas, we kept thinking about things we could ruin for people,' Lipovsky says. 'After you see this movie, every time you see a lawn mower or cup full of ice … even a penny; you'll never look at those things the same way again .' Because the beginning scenes for Final Destination movies are always memorable (Stein cites Final Destination 2's gory log truck sequence as a classic), the twosome wanted to craft something that would leave a lasting impression. Set atop the fictional Skyview Tower, Iris gets her first hunch that something is awry. She can see a chain reaction that's about to happen when the glass starts to crack under the weight of all the guests and the structure is about to go up in flames. This advertisement has not loaded yet, but your article continues below. 'Final Destination: Bloodlines,' the sixth in the popular film franchise, opens with a 15-minute long spectacular and mayhem-filled scene set in a fancy restaurant atop a tower. Photo by Courtesy of Warner Bros. Picture Lipovsky says the idea for the horrific episode came from a visit he made to Toronto's CN Tower. 'I took a friend of mine who had lived in Toronto their whole life and had never been up the CN Tower because he was afraid of heights. I used him as inspiration for all the different things that (could go wrong),' he says. 'It took awhile to figure out all the details,' Stein adds. 'Basically, we wanted to tap into a visceral fear of heights. It was really cool to be able to bring that to the screen and make people feel like they were falling off this building, 400 feet in the air.' Final Destination Bloodlines is now playing in theatres. mdaniell@ Read More

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