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In Theatre : January 29, 2010
Director(s): unknown
In the scenic and remote country of Rocky Branch, Texas, the Workley ranch house would become the infamous scene known internationally on the internet as âThe Final.â
Dane, an awkward student with a deadly vendetta and suicidal tendencies, leads a group of outcasts who plot to avenge the years of humiliation they faced by the popular students at Hohn High School. Employing ideas inspired both from their classes as well as from horror films they watched, the outcast turn the tables on the popular students who made sport of them.
After receiving a lake-house granted to him in his uncleâs will, Dane and his friends, Jack, Ravi, Andy and Emily prepare for a single night that will leave their tormentors scarred for lifeâ¦physically and emotionally
Now, remember: you don't aim a gun at a man unless you intend to shoot him. And, you don't shoot a man unless you intend to kill him. No warning shots. Hey, you listening to me? No warning shots. Warning shots are bullshit. You shoot to kill, or you don't shoot at all.
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sounds good, but not very original
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This reminds me of that Columbine stuff... nice!
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This sounds pretty cool, maybe not an original idea, but not an overused one either, and something with a spin on it. I have a feeling this could be the first good'n of the new decade! >.>
âThe Fright Night remake is a film which taps into the audienceâs deepest rooted fears, such as those of vampires throwing motorcycles at them. I dread the thought of a vampire throwing a refrigerator or a deskjet printer or... Iâd better stop before I give myself nightmaresâ
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hello, justice!!! this i wanna see.
[SIZE="5"]Dark fields of pain are running...am I, am I, am I dying?[/SIZE]
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Isn't this one of the films they are planning to use in the 2010 Horrorfest? If it is, I'll see it. I go to the event every year.
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This does sound like that Columbine stuff meets revenge movies. I'll make sure to check it out.
"The conquest of fear lies in the moment of its acceptance. And understanding what scares us most is that which is most familiar, most common place"
- Chris Carter
Please check out my blog: The Paradise of Horror
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I got to see a this at a screening here in Dallas. The production company that made it is based here so we had the producer, director, writer and some of the stars on hand for it. The writer told me after the screening that he was definitely shooting for something along the lines of Columbine - or more specifically, what motivated those kids to take the actions they did. But he also wanted to try to avoid doing something that was like the usual teen horror flick, but also different from what it could be closely compared to: "Saw." Remarkably enough, he mostly succeeds. There are parts of it that are eye-rollingly cliche and parts that make you go, "OK, that's pretty nice."
All in all, not a bad little movie. Not a lot of blood. No nudity. No sex. No good guys. No bad guys. Everyone's a victim. Not a perfect film, but it's thought provoking and a good kind of different.
The Jaundiced Eye
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02-11-2010, 11:58 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-12-2010, 09:19 AM by Zach.)
The Final
Review by: Zach
A group of high school outcasts host a costume party and employ an arsenal of physical and psychological torture to avenge the humiliation and torment they faced at the hands of the popular kids. Beyond the break you’ll find the official one sheet for Joey Stewart’s The Final, one of the “8 Films to Die For” in the fourth annual After Dark Horrorfest. In the film arriving in theaters January 29, a group of high school outcasts host a costume party and employ an arsenal of physical and psychological torture to avenge the humiliation and torment they faced at the hands of the popular kids. Also arriving in theaters are The Graves, Dread, Lake Mungo, Hidden and ZMD.
The Final is a disturbing, mean-spirited teen revenge fantasy about a normal day at a normal High School. The jocks and mean girls terrorize the misfits. The misfits capture their tormentors and proceed to torture, mutilate, and murder them. The point of the picture seems to be that incidents like this can happen but after Columbine, everyone already knows that. Though it played at Horrorfest.
I'll go ahead and say that first and foremost, this movie is not for everyone. If you can't stand torture, you will simply not like The Final, but we are Horror fans so I am sure you will like it... lol. For those who do, this movie is a rare gem that didn't rely on the gore factor, but earns its praise through terrific acting. I was really looking forward to this movie as a part of Horrorfest, but expected the acting to bring its quality down a peg. I was dead wrong, other than some stuck-up cheerleader types who were played a little over the top for my taste, the actors playing both hunter and hunted did a tremendous job. There are a few moments where you'll say "why doesn't so and so do this to escape" or "what's going on behind the scenes here". Some minor characters had flaws as well, but were given little to work with in their respective roles. I don't really believe there are more than a handful of 10/10 movies out there, and this one just doesn't make that cut. I give it a 7 because I would've liked to see more development, and there were truly things I would've changed in the script. Overall though, a great job building tension and suspense.
The Final is not really a horror film though it’s presented and directed like one. It seems to be a response to the student shooting sprees that made headlines in the late 1990s, but it wants to offer easy explanations and use obvious stereotypes to make it’s point. The Final tackles a sensitive issue in an exploitative way and the result is uncomfortable but surprisingly compelling drama. The central character of The Final is Dane (Marc Donata), an awkward student with a deadly vendetta and suicidal tendencies. Dane leads a group of fellow outcasts (socially inadequate dweebs such as the goth chick, the mistrusted mid-eastern kid, etc) in a plot to avenge the years of humiliation they faced by the students at their High School who wield the social power of deciding who is in and who is out. They lure the popular students (clichéd dumb jocks and foxy cheerleaders) to a remote farmhouse on the pretense of a Halloween party. There they drug them, chain them up, and hold them hostage. Employing ideas inspired both from their classes as well as from horror films they watched, the outcasts turn the tables on the popular students who made sport of them using guns, acid, swords, garden pruners, acupuncture needles, and a compressed air-powered bolt gun (gee, I wonder where the filmmakers got that idea?). The Final, which claims to be loosely based on true events (a claim I’m not buying!), takes a kitchen sink approach to the horror genre, throwing in elements from all types of similar films. It’s a teen revenge movie, a siege movie, a hostage movie, a ‘torture porn’ movie, and a study of teen social castes. The result is a story that feels original as a whole, but looks derivative when broken down into pieces. Stir Revenge of the nerds, heathers, saw, elephant, and mean girls into a bloody stew and you’ll come out with something that closely resembles the final. In an era where just about everything in film is ripping off someone else, I’m not sure that’s really a negative. The fact that director Joey Stewart and writer Jason Kabolati have managed to put so many different things into this pot and bring them to a fresh boil is actually something of a worthy achievement. Setting up a scenario where everyone is, either literally or figuratively, held hostage is clever and the filmmakers use their knowledge of teen-movie clichés cunningly. The weakest thing about The Final is that they’ve cast characters out of the stock pool of ‘pretty people’ knocking around Hollywood. Their cruelty comes from a clichéd mold only found in movies about vicious High School kids, but this lack of realism works in the film’s favor. Since the second half is basically a series of tortures and cruelty, maybe a more authentic approach would have been too much for any audience to handle (or certainly an audience looking for a fun night at the movies). The camera doesn’t shy away from the violence these kids inflict on one another. It’s right up there on the screen, completely integral to the story so perhaps it’s better that these victims personalities are so shallowly developed. The terrorism inflicted by the teenage bigots in the form of bullying, which is rarely forgotten or forgiven, has triggered a dramatic enough response. The message in The Final is clear: there is no explanation for school massacres like Columbine and no easy fix for a shocked society in attempting to point the blame in the traditional directions like heavy metal music or violent movies. Viewers looking for a dark comedy with a biting edge to it look elsewhere for The Final is deadly serious.
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