The plot is ridiculous and full of holes, but never pretends to be otherwise.
Urban Legends: Final Cut (2000)
Tomatometer
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Reviews Counted:77
Fresh:7
Rotten:70
Average Rating:3.1/10
Consensus: This teen horror movie brings nothing new to an already exhausted genre. And it's bad. Really bad.
Runtime: 1 hr 38 mins
Genre: Horror/Suspense
Box Office: $8,505,513
Synopsis: At the prestigious Orson Welles Film School at Alpine University, students are preparing their submissions for the Hitchcock Award, an honor that virtually guarantees the winner a Hollywood career.... At the prestigious Orson Welles Film School at Alpine University, students are preparing their submissions for the Hitchcock Award, an honor that virtually guarantees the winner a Hollywood career. Amy Mayfield (Jennifer Morrison), daughter of a famous documentary director, decides to make a different kind of film: a thriller in which college students are killed in ways resembling various urban legends. Despite the backstabbing and jealousy of her fellow students, Amy begins to plan and cast her movie, with help from a pair of special effects geeks and a suave European cinematographer. As filming progresses, however, a series of unusual deaths occurs that the police dismiss as accidents. Is the killer a psychotic madman or a student hoping to eliminate the competition? Amy must struggle to learn the truth or else risk becoming another "accident" herself. This sequel to the 1998 horror hit URBAN LEGEND features a different cast (except for the return of security guard Reese) and an all-new take on the notion of urban legends coming true. UBBAN LEGENDS: FINAL CUT was directed by John Ottman, the composer and editor of such films as THE USUAL SUSPECTS, who supplies numerous clever touches and layers to the world of films-within-films. [More]
Starring: Jennifer Morrison, Matt Davis, Loretta Devine, Jessica Cauffiel
Starring: Jennifer Morrison, Matt Davis, Loretta Devine, Jessica Cauffiel, Hart Bochner, Michael Bacall, Joseph Lawrence, Anthony Anderson, Marco Hofschneider
Director: John Ottman
Director: John Ottman
Screenwriter: Paul Harris Boardman, Scott Derrickson
Producer: Gina Matthews, Neal H. Moritz, Richard Luke Rothschild
Composer: John Ottman
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Reviews for Urban Legends: Final Cut
A relatively classy horror picture, and director John Ottman has proven that he can successfully cross over from being, not only a gifted composer, but also a respectable filmmaker.
This is pleasantly much less insulting than most films in the genre ... and far more entertaining than it has any right to be after its dire predecessor.
Morrison's gratifying performance, and her ability to knock down the boundaries of her formulaic role, that carries Legends past its forgettable predecessor.
A gripping ride into terror, embracing the horror genre wholeheartedly and giving us a nail-biting, heart-jolting experience.
You're smarter than this, but occasionally it tricks you into thinking it might be up to something you haven't considered, like an above-average, extra-bloody episode of Scooby Doo.
As if there weren't enough self-consciously cute postmodern horror flicks already in existence, along comes Urban Legends: Final Cut to further fill that nonexistent void.
The embodiment of all that is wrong with the horror genre today . . . avoid it like raw plutonium
There are so many killings early on (remember, we've got three movie's worth of killings happening at once) that we have great difficulty settling in with a storyline.
What ensues is painfully horrific and reprehensible as entertainment.
Derivative slasher movies, as a genre, are over, and you don't have to be a film school student to know that.
For a movie set at a film school, Final Cut is pretty much a textbook case on how not to make a movie.
Mr. Ottman doesn't have the firm grasp of tone necessary to make his deliberate ambiguities seem other than simple confusion.
Wants to be like a Hitchcock thriller. Wants a kick in the pants, too.
Latest News for Urban Legends: Final Cut
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