Final Destination Bloodlines (2025)
5/10
Starring
Kaitlyn Santa Juana
Teo Briones
Richard Harmon
Owen Patrick Joyner
Directed by Zach Lipovsky and Adam Stein
I can say from the start, the acting didn’t amaze me. The cast all felt very B-movie-like and didn’t seem strong enough to carry the film. Steph, played by Kaitlyn Santa Juana, was the only actor who seemed to have a little bit of the A factor. Also, the first death, that of Iris, I didn’t get the shock I expected, and I felt the casting overall wasn’t the best they could’ve done. Steph looked Hispanic, and her brother looked more like a mix of their parents (Asian and White), so the casting there was off.
So, from the start, I wasn’t feeling the movie. The whole thing with Iris locking herself up, always being one step ahead of death, and trying to pass a message to Steph didn’t give me the eww horror factor I think the director and writer were hoping for. All these bad vibes could be because I’m so used to the franchise and didn’t get to feel what I was supposed to feel.
The movie picks up after the second death. The moment you think the third death is coming, that’s when it finally got my attention. I sat up like, here we go, this is the Final Destination creativity I wanted to see.
So, what’s the plot about? Well, if you know Final Destination, it’s the same idea—someone foiled death’s plan, and now death is circling back to clean the slate of everyone who escaped.
The one who foiled death’s plan is a woman named Iris, who later got married and had kids—just like the hundreds of people she saved that day. But then one day, Iris, now a mother, finds out death is circling back, and after the death of her husband, who was supposed to have died in the original event. She goes a bit psycho, and this cause her family to be taken away from her. Years later, Iris has been tracking the people she saved and has a book detailing how death has picked off all of them—and every family member that was not meant to be born, if the person in question had died in the original event.
Iris’s granddaughter Steph has been struggling with a persistent dream about what happened to Iris. So, she goes to find her. When she does, Iris scares her off with her behaviour, but wanting to prove death is after her, Iris leaves her safe haven and dies immediately. Then her firstborn dies in a gruesome way. Steph finally reads the book, pieces everything together, and writes down the order in which her family members are going to die. So here we are, watching how death is going to go about finishing the job.
The movie has an annoying start, but it picks up the moment death catches up with the third person, and from there it takes a nice turn.
Now, the ending was good. It caught me off guard. I thought everything was settled, but the writer and director didn’t want us walking away without something to think about.
Will I call this a good movie? Well, no. Sadly, even though I got through it, I can’t honestly tell anyone to go see it. It’s not fun.