While on a business retreat, Sam has a premonition that he, his co-workers, boss, and several other people will die in a horrific bridge collapse. When his premonition ends, he tries to make everyone get off the bus. Onl...
While on a business retreat, Sam has a premonition that he, his co-workers, boss, and several other people will die in a horrific bridge collapse. When his premonition ends, he tries to make everyone get off the bus. Onl...
The film is a pure horror genre piece focused on the supernatural concept of death and fate, with its central conflict and themes entirely devoid of political or ideological commentary.
The movie features a cast with visible racial diversity in supporting roles, but it does not appear to engage in explicit DEI-driven casting or race/gender swaps. The narrative maintains a neutral to positive framing of traditional identities, with no central DEI themes or critiques.
Final Destination 5 does not feature any identifiable LGBTQ+ characters or themes. The narrative and character arcs are entirely devoid of queer representation, leading to a determination of N/A for its portrayal of LGBTQ+ elements.
The movie does not contain any action or adventure elements.
Final Destination 5 introduces a new cast of characters for its storyline. The film does not feature any characters who were previously established in the franchise or source material as one gender and then portrayed as a different gender in this installment.
Final Destination 5 introduces a new set of main characters for this installment. The recurring character, William Bludworth, is portrayed by the same actor as in previous films, maintaining consistent racial depiction. No characters from prior canon or source material were re-cast with a different race.
Combines user and critic ratings from four sources