logo
Tony Todd's ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines' Scene Is A Message To Fans

Tony Todd's ‘Final Destination: Bloodlines' Scene Is A Message To Fans

Forbes06-05-2025

Tony Todd as William Bludworth in New Line Cinema's 'Final Destination Bloodlines.'
While Final Destination: Bloodlines marks the rebirth of an iconic horror franchise, it's also a sad farewell to Tony Todd, one of its most legendary and few returning stars.
The gentle giant known for his distinctly deep and gravelly voice reprises his role as William Bludworth for a fourth and final time in the series, which has grossed $657.62 million worldwide to date. Todd, also known for playing the title lead in the original Candyman film franchise, passed away on Wednesday, November 6, 2024. His performance in Final Destination: Bloodlines was completed not long before his passing.
"We had known him for almost 28 years," explains co-producer Craig Perry during a Q&A at an early screening in Los Angeles. "Tony was generous, lovely, and present, and having him be on set was enough for everybody. You just felt his energy, his charisma, and his professionalism. He just was an endless pro, but more than anything, he was kind. It was wonderful to see a lot of the younger actors be able to show up and spend time with him."
Todd's performance was completed not long before his death. Final Destination: Bloodlines will be released exclusively in theaters on Friday, May 16, 2025, and is rated R.
"The thing that was most interesting is we threw out the script when he was exiting and said, 'Say what you want the fans to hear,' so everything that he says walking out was specifically meant for everybody in this room," the filmmaker explains. "That was from him, that was not scripted, and we all knew what was going on, so we wanted to make his last experience the most positive, comfortable, and joyful thing. I think we were able to deliver that thanks to all you guys, and hopefully that translates into your experience." Perry, the only producer of the series to have been involved in the production of all five Final Destination movies, also produced the American Pie movies.
Final Destination: Bloodlines co-director Adam Stein also discussed Todd's deeply meaningful scene in an interview with The Guardian.
"Everyone involved knew he was ill, and we weren't sure at certain points whether he would be able to participate," he recalls. "It was a really unique moment because talking about his own death for the movie on this meta level, he's speaking to the fans about his death. And so, in that moment when he had his final goodbye, we asked him if he would be able to kind of put the script away and do a take where he spoke from the heart about what death means and what life means. It's his honest words of wisdom direct to you." Todd's other celebrated works include films such as The Crow, Platoon, The Rock, Wishmaster, Hatchet, and Tom Savini's remake of Night of the Living Dead.
One thing is for sure, and that is that Todd wanted to play Bludworth again. However, in an interview with me for Forbes.com in 2019, he confirmed that he wouldn't just return for a paycheck. It had to be good.
"It would be dependent on the script," he said. "I have no interest in doing something just to do it. If the script is new and challenging and provides new light on characters I have already established, I'd want to be part of that."
It has been 25 years since the first Final Destination movie landed in theaters and 14 years since the last one, the fifth in the franchise, was released. The only one not to star Todd was Final Destination 3; however, he voiced an animatronic devil statue at the start of the film. All of the Final Destination movies are currently available to stream on Max. So, what has taken so long to bring Final Destination: Bloodlines to the big screen?
"There was a desire after five to do it, but we just want to get a little bit of breather, and we started the process about 2018," Perry recalls. "We had a draft, and then something happened, which was Covid, and then there were strikes, so there were circumstances that pushed this thing further. But I think what that did has made people like yourselves look forward to it even more."
Co-producer Sheila Hanahan Taylor continues, "We wanted to invigorate what everyone was waiting for. It was time to bring something new to the table. So then we had the great fortune of finding Jon Watts in the equation, who came up with the story, and there's nothing like a lifelong fan. He went on one of his first dates with his now-wife to see a Final Destination movie. He had the idea of the family, and that was the magic formula where we said, 'Okay, now let's move this forward to the next level.'"
(Left to right) Producer Craig Perry and actor Tony Todd pose at a screening of New Line Cinema's ... More 'Final Destination 5' at the Chinese Theater on August 10, 2011 in Los Angeles, California.
Avoiding spoilers, Final Destination: Bloodlines ups the ante when it comes to the trademark creatively killer demises that drive fans wild. However, this quest means many of them that seem great initially end up tossed for many reasons.
"It's this weird combination of an accessible location that we all find ourselves in, and then you have to start identifying what a mundane object in that environment we can imbue with a malevolence as if death is manipulating it," Perry muses. "We wrote a sequence for one of the earlier drafts that took place in a supermarket because everybody goes grocery shopping. It was eight pages long and very complex, and then we put it away and read it four days later. We were like, 'This is terrible.' It sucked because it was trying too hard."
"It was a good lesson because you can't automatically plug and play with Final Destination's sequences. You have to workshop them endlessly, right down to the finest point, because if one little piece doesn't connect, the whole thing falls apart. We have to make sure that everything is plausible and incredible, just enough so that when someone says, 'Oh, that would never happen. The chances are a million to one,' we can say, 'Yes, Final Destination lives in that percent of the million. That's where the franchise lives, on the razor's edge of plausible.'"

Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Inside the baffling murder that inspired 'Twin Peaks'
Inside the baffling murder that inspired 'Twin Peaks'

New York Post

time2 hours ago

  • New York Post

Inside the baffling murder that inspired 'Twin Peaks'

Her death inspired the cult 1990s TV show 'Twin Peaks.' Her ghost is said to haunt the woods where her body was found more than 100 years ago. And yet Hazel I. Drew remains a mystery. Drew was a pretty, vivacious 19-year-old blonde living in Troy, NY, when she disappeared near her uncle's farm on July 7, 1908. Locals spotted her body floating in a mill pond days later. 7 A scene from 'Twin Peaks,' with actor Sheryl Lee as Laura Palmer, whose death anchored the show — and was inspired by the real life Hazel I. Drew, murdered in upstate New York in 1908. Everett Collection / Everett Collection Advertisement Her death gripped the nation — reporters from the Big Apple to the Old West breathlessly covered the case. Was it a suicide? A murder? An accident? Rumors swirled. A few days before she vanished, Drew had abruptly quit her job as a governess for a prominent local family. In fact, her acquaintances whispered, Hazel had been acting sort of strange lately. She consorted with lots of men. She had fallen ill and gone away for a month. She had arrived at the door of her dressmaker one evening begging her to make her a new shirtwaist that night for a weekend sojourn to Lake George. The papers printed every sensational claim: Hazel had been pregnant! Hazel was a sex worker! Hazel was living a double life! As if the only way a girl could have gotten herself killed was if she had asked for it. 7 Another shot of Lee in 'Twin Peaks.' Although Drake inspired the show's development, she was seldom discussed during its production or years-long television run. ©New Line Cinema/Courtesy Everett Collection Advertisement 'It was a common trope in crime writing,' said Jerry C. Drake — a civil servant, former history professor and author of the new book 'Hazel Was a Good Girl' (CLASH, out June 10), which claims to solve Hazel's murder. 'This sort of archetype of the fallen woman, but in Hazel's case, it was absolutely untrue,' he told The Post. 'I wanted to give her justice.' 'Hazel Was a Good Girl,' however, also aims to restore Hazel's good name, to show the young woman behind the myth, to portray her as distinct from Laura Palmer, her dead-blonde 'Twin Peaks' doppelganger. 'Going into this, I thought even if I can't solve her case, I can at least fix her reputation,' Drake said. 'I can decouple her from Laura Palmer and rechristen her as who she really was.' Advertisement Hazel I. Drew was born in 1888, to a large working-class Irish-Methodist family in Rensselaer County, NY. When she was 14, she moved to Troy, where her aunt — a domestic servant for the city's well-heeled — helped Hazel get jobs in the homes of prominent members of the local Republican party. 7 'Going into this, I thought even if I can't solve her case, I can at least fix her reputation,' said author Drake. 'I can decouple her from Laura Palmer and rechristen her as who she really was.' Albany Times Union Hazel did not come from wealth, but she was educated — she was described as always having her nose in a book — and she soon advanced to being a governess. She enjoyed the privileges that came with working for the upper classes: fine food, nice clothes, opulent surroundings, access to the best doctors and dentists, as well as a library of books. She was vivacious and curious and eager to experience life. 'She liked nice things,' Drake said. 'She would have had disposable income, and she spent it on good clothes. She had expensive eyeglasses. She liked to go out with her girlfriends and spent the weekends skating and going to the amusement park. She traveled to New York City and Boston with friends. But she also went to church religiously — she would bring her dates to church.' Advertisement Her family members said she had various suitors, and one of her friends mentioned that she was seeing a man who worked at a dentist's office. Yet, Hazel didn't seem serious about any of these potential paramours. Her letters weren't flirtatious but friendly. She mainly seemed concerned with having a good time with her girlfriends. Yet something strange did seem to happen to Hazel in the months leading up to her death. She had been traveling across the Eastern Seaboard. She fell ill and had to convalesce at her uncle's farm. Her friends, family members and employers had conflicting accounts of where she was at any given moment. 7 Author Drake says he was 'obsessed' with David Lynch's 'Twin Peaks,' which was based on Hazel's murder. Getty Images for ABA Her mother — who later hired a psychic to help solve Hazel's death — said that she believed someone 'who was well to do' had 'Hazel in his control.' The district attorney investigating the case tried to rule it as a suicide, but the autopsy proved otherwise. Hazel had not drowned, the doctors revealed, but had died from a blow to the back of the head. Someone had hit her, or caused her to fall and hit her head, and then dumped her in the river. Locals wrote letters claiming to have solved the killing in their dreams. Someone claimed hypnosis was involved. 'It was very 'Twin Peaks,'' Drake said. 'But unfortunately, Hazel didn't have an Agent Dale Cooper helping her.' A month into the rollercoaster investigation, however, the DA closed the case. The press — formerly in a frenzy over who killed Hazel Drew — moved on to the next dead blonde. Even after her story compelled Mark Frost, whose grandmother grew up in Troy, to write 'Twin Peaks' with David Lynch, Hazel was rarely brought up again. 7 A snow-covered gravestone is a modest testament to Hazel's brief life. Courtesy of Jerry C. Drake, PhD Advertisement Drake loved 'Twin Peaks' and became obsessed with unsolved mysteries when it was on the air. And yet, he had never heard the name Hazel Drew until it appeared to him in a dream in 2019. In the dream, his friend — who had just moved to Troy — handed him a book, and inside there was a bookplate that read 'Ex Libris Hazel I. Drew.' When he woke up, he wrote the name down and later Googled it. He found a podcast about the legend of Hazel Drew and a short post from the site Find a Grave that said that Hazel's story had inspired 'Twin Peaks.' 'I just was like, 'Well, I'm obsessed with this,'' he recalled. 'I love David Lynch, I love this show, I love ghosts and mysteries, and my friend is now living in this town, so I was like, I'm going to take the week off, my wife and I will go to Troy.' Then things got really weird. Hazel appeared to him in dreams — introducing him to a family member as a guy 'working on my case' or leading him to a cafe. He experienced several spooky presences by her grave, including a rock thrown at him from out of nowhere. He woke up in mi an AirbNb in Troy after one of his dreams about her to find a black crow in his room. Advertisement Yet Drake said that none of these instances deterred him from pursuing his investigation, but only spurred him on. 'My feeling was this is a person who had unfinished business,' he said. 'They say that ghosts want their wrongs righted, and they maybe cry out from the other side for people who they think they can do that.' 7 Author Jerry. C. Drake Advertisement He said that he is confident that he has named her murderer — read the book to find out who — even if he doesn't have the definitive smoking gun. 'I hope it will stimulate people to ask rational questions about her killer,' he said, and maybe even give Hazel's ghost some peace and justice. 'That's why I ended up calling the book 'Hazel Was a Good Girl,' because everybody kept saying that,' he said. 'Her mom says that the doctors say it, it's, it's, there's even a clip of it on the cover. … So, I thought, 'I'm just gonna give her, her, her good name back.''

Sarah Jessica Parker admits she was ‘shocked' the ‘And Just Like That…' audience disliked Che Diaz
Sarah Jessica Parker admits she was ‘shocked' the ‘And Just Like That…' audience disliked Che Diaz

New York Post

time18 hours ago

  • New York Post

Sarah Jessica Parker admits she was ‘shocked' the ‘And Just Like That…' audience disliked Che Diaz

And just like that, Sarah Jessica Parker found out what the fandom really thought. The 'Sex and the City' alum, 60, who reprised her role as the iconic Carrie Bradshaw in the show's spinoff 'And Just Like That…' revealed she was 'shocked' to find out the audience didn't like Sara Ramirez's character Che Diaz. 'A friend of mine brought it up to me, and it's like: 'What are you talking about?'' Parker said in an interview with The Guardian on Friday. 'And he said: 'Yeah, there's all this conversation.'' Advertisement 7 Sara Ramirez as Che Diaz and Sarah Jessica Parker as Carrie Bradshaw in 'And Just Like That…' MAX Ramirez, 49, originated the character in 2021 during season one before becoming Miranda's (Cynthia Nixon) love interest in season two. They left the show after the second season wrapped. Parker explained to the outlet that she doesn't listen to backlash against projects she stars in. Advertisement 'I've been an actor for 50 years, and I've almost never paid attention to peripheral chatter,' the 'Hocus Pocus' star added, noting that when it came to Ramirez she 'Ioved working with them.' 7 Sara Ramirez and Sarah Jessica Parker in 'And Just Like That…' During Ramirez's run, fans took to social media to share their dislike of the stand up comedian. One viewer wrote on X, 'Stop subjecting us to che, they are making it really hard to get into and just like that…. Well, them, and all the other annoying things that have ruined a perfectly good cupcake of a show.' Advertisement A second social media user wrote, 'I've started to skip the Che Diaz scenes in And Just Like That but now the episodes are like two minutes long.' 7 The HBO drama 'And Just Like That…' Rounding out the annoyance, a third watcher said: 'Trigger warning for this week's episode of And Just Like That: it opens with Che doing stand up again.' Before Ramirez concluded their run on the spinoff, the 'Grey's Anatomy' alum wrote on Instagram, 'I am not the fictional characters I have played, nor am I responsible for the things that are written for them to say.' Advertisement 'I am a human being, an artist, an actor. And we are living in a world that has become increasingly hostile toward anyone who dares to free themselves from the gender binary, or disrupt the mainstream.' Ramirez also told Entertainment Weekly that they're 'actually nothing like' the person they portrayed on the HBO show. 7 Sara Ramirez and Cynthia Nixon in 'And Just Like That…' Craig Blankenhorn 'It was absolutely exhausting to bring this person to life,' they confessed. 'I had to stay in a bit of an extroverted mode in order to do that. So the efforts that it took to bring this character forth makes me feel really proud of what I've been able to deliver.' Although Ramirez was thrilled to see their character evoke chatter. 'I love that people have passionate opinions, that Che struck a nerve,' they said. 'I think it's really interesting to play a person who elicits such strong reactions and who can start much-needed conversations. If the storylines created major watercooler moments after each episode, then we did our job.' In May, Nixon, 59, divulged that she thinks 'And Just Like That…' works best when the core group of characters aren't in long term romances. 7 Che Diaz and Miranda. Advertisement 'I think our show is always at its most quintessential when as many of us as possible are single and dating and failing at it,' the actress stated in a conversation with Entertainment Weekly at the time. Now, with season three of the drama, which also stars Kristin Davis, Nicole Ari Parker, Sarita Choudhury and John Corbett, in full swing, viewers are in store for a whole new slew of relationships. So far, Rosie O'Donnell guest starred as a virgin nun who slept with Miranda during the premiere episode. 'Rosie and I have known each other for a long time,' Nixon told the outlet. 'I was like, 'Shall I text her?' And [showrunner Michael Patrick King] was like, 'Sure!' And she was wonderfully excited about the prospect, so we had a great time.' Advertisement 7 Sara Ramirez as Che Diaz. Season 3, Episode 1, titled 'Outlook Good,' saw O'Donnell, 63, take on the role of Mary, who meets Miranda a lesbian bar. The two then headed back to Mary's hotel room where they then have sex. 'One of the things that it meant was that Miranda was single again,' Nixon told E! News last month about Miranda's breakup from Che. 'And that the tensions between Miranda and Che—and also Miranda and Steve—had been quelled and quieted.' Advertisement 7 Sara Ramirez and Sarah Jessica Parker. Craig Blankenhorn 'Just speaking for Miranda,' Nixon explained, 'it meant that she was setting out on this new dating world having decided she wanted to date women and nonbinary people, but not really quite knowing how to go about that.' Also set to guest star is 'Law & Order' vet Mehcad Brooks. Advertisement 'The part of my personality that will do anything for a laugh that has no place on 'Law & Order,' I get to do it [on this show],' the 44-year-old gushed to The Post in May. 'One of the highlights of my career is that I get to act across from Nicole Ari Parker,' Brooks added. I've known her for 20 years, we've worked together before – but never in this just a joy to be around, I'm learning so much.'

Seann William Scott's Estranged Wife Claims He's Only Selling House Because of Her New Relationship
Seann William Scott's Estranged Wife Claims He's Only Selling House Because of Her New Relationship

Yahoo

time20 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Seann William Scott's Estranged Wife Claims He's Only Selling House Because of Her New Relationship

American Pie star Seann William Scott's plans to sell his house allegedly 'blindsided' his estranged wife, Olivia Korenberg, according to new court documents. Korenberg, 35, filed to modify the pair's custody and child support arrangement of daughter Frankie, 4, on Tuesday, June 3. She argued that Scott's previous motions in their divorce case contained 'numerous false statements,' including one regarding his attempts to sell their family home in California. 'When Seann emailed me on December 1, 2024, regarding his intent to sell the S. Drive home, I was completely blindsided,' Korenberg claimed in her court filing, obtained by Us Weekly. 'In the same email, he provided me with less than a month's notice to apply to private schools during a period of major instability where I had no idea where we would relocate or what I could afford.' Korenberg further alleged that Scott, 48, did not advise that he 'intended on selling his Malibu home and relocating to Venice.' Seann William Scott's Ex Claims He Wants to Evict Her, Daughter From Malibu Home 'Further, Seann states that his move was motivated by a desire to improve his commute, not by any consideration for Frankie's well-being — which speaks volumes regarding Seann's priorities,' she claimed. 'Seann, through his counsel, repeatedly emphasized that Frankie and I could remain in the S. Drive home until Frankie was 18 years old, yet our sudden eviction completely ignores Frankie's well-being and stability.' Korenberg believes that Scott's sudden desire to move and sell their Malibu house was 'wholly motivated by [her] new romantic relationship.' Scott filed for divorce in February 2024, with Korenberg alleging that he was still 'making romantic advances' toward her until October 2024. (Scott has not publicly addressed any of Korenberg's recent claims. Us has reached out for comment.) Celebrity Exes Who Lived Together Post-Split, Because Tom Sandoval and Ariana Madix Aren't the Only Ones Scott and Korenberg currently alternate custody of Frankie every two days, which the interior designer claims 'lacks stability and structure.' 'As Frankie grows, she will require a consistent educational routine and secure home base. His claim that he should be the primary custodian is not credible given his limited involvement in Frankie's daily life and unpredictable work schedule,' Korenberg's docs state. 'Most importantly, it would cause tremendous trauma to Frankie, who has a strong attachment to me and a clear preference for me, particularly when she is sick or in distress.' While Korenberg doesn't question Scott's 'affection' for their daughter, she maintains that she should be the primary parent. 'Furthermore, I have made consistent efforts to facilitate positive coparenting, in contrast to Seann's lack of reciprocal efforts,' she argues. '[It] demonstrates my greater inclination and ability to maintain a healthy coparenting relationship with Seann if I were permitted to move a further distance from Seann.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store