The Final Destination franchise will be back in theaters soon enough, as a planned reboot is in the works at New Line. Ahead of the upcoming remake, let’s take a moment to revisit the original film from 2000 with these killer facts you may not know…

2The film was initially meant to be an episode of The X-Files

In the beginning, the idea was not for Final Destination to be a feature film. When the story was first conceived, it was written as a spec script for an episode of The X-Files. Before the script was actually pitched, however, a friend of Reddick’s who worked for New Line became aware of the story. Impressed by the unique concept, the colleague insisted Reddick adapt the story as its own movie instead, and the decision was made to do just that.

Called “Flight 180,” the planned X-Files episode would have had a similar concept with a man visualizing a deadly plane crash just before it happens for real. To link it to the series, the character to have the premonition would be Dana Scully’s brother, giving the skeptical FBI agent a personal connection to the case. Another major difference is that the episode would have focused more on the relationships between Mulder, Scully, and Scully’s brother, with the supernatural elements of the story serving more as a backdrop.

Switching gears was clearly the right call for Reddick, as the concept was certainly unique enough to warrant its own film franchise.


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3 COMMENTS

  1. […] At the time, Final Destination was a breath of recent air within the horror film style. There was no slasher or ghost ingredient. Instead the killer was Death itself, stalking and taking the lives of those that managed to evade it the primary time round. The starting of the film reveals a airplane crash that occurs mid-air after the principle character convinces his buddies to disembark it. During the making of the film the choice was made to make use of the music “Rocky Mountain High” by John Denver and play it earlier than a number of the characters’ deaths. Eerily, John Denver himself died in a airplane crash in 1997 and his stays may solely be recognized by the use of his fingerprints. His demise is reminiscent not solely of the airplane crash within the film, but in addition the gruesomeness of the graphic dying scenes.[1] […]

  2. […] Na época, Final Destination era uma lufada de ar fresco no gênero de filmes de terror. Não havia elemento slasher ou fantasma. Em vez disso, o assassino era a própria morte, perseguindo e tirando a vida daqueles que conseguiram fugir da primeira vez. O início do filme mostra um acidente de avião que acontece no ar depois que o personagem principal convence seus amigos a desembarcar. Durante a realização do filme, foi tomada a decisão de usar a música "Rocky Mountain High", de John Denver, e tocá-la antes da morte de alguns dos personagens. Estranhamente, o próprio John Denver morreu em um acidente de avião em 1997 e seus restos mortais só puderam ser identificados por meio de suas impressões digitais. Sua morte é uma reminiscência não apenas da queda de avião no filme, mas também da horribilidade das cenas de morte gráficas.(1) […]

  3. […] Na época, Final Destination era uma lufada de ar fresco no gênero de filmes de terror. Não havia nenhum elemento assassino ou fantasma. Em vez disso, o assassino era a própria Morte, perseguindo e tirando a vida daqueles que conseguiram evitá-la da primeira vez. O início do filme mostra um acidente de avião que acontece no ar depois que o personagem principal convence seus amigos a desembarcar. Durante a produção do filme, foi tomada a decisão de usar a música “Rocky Mountain High” de John Denver e tocá-la antes da morte de alguns personagens. Estranhamente, o próprio John Denver morreu em um acidente de avião em 1997 e seus restos mortais só puderam ser identificados por meio de suas impressões digitais. Sua morte é uma reminiscência não apenas da queda do avião no filme, mas também da horrível cena de morte.[1] […]

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