Ajouter une intrigue dans votre langueIn the aftermath of a tragedy at a summer camp, a group of camp counselors find themselves fighting for their lives against a masked killer.In the aftermath of a tragedy at a summer camp, a group of camp counselors find themselves fighting for their lives against a masked killer.In the aftermath of a tragedy at a summer camp, a group of camp counselors find themselves fighting for their lives against a masked killer.
- Réalisation
- Scénario
- Casting principal
- Récompenses
- 1 victoire au total
Bishop Ali Stevens
- Deputy Henry
- (as Bishop Stevens)
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Final Summer has been ridiculously praised as a tribute to Friday the 13th. This horrendous movie is merely a flat-out rip-off from that highly successful film franchise.
With its' simplistic dialogue and atrocious acting while witnessing buffoons as they wander aimlessly through the woods, Final Summer also compares to the cemetery scenes of Plan Nine from Outer Space.
Ed Wood at the least created an unintentionally hilarious good-bad movie. Far more than John Isberg had accomplished with Final Summer.
Of course, no lame slasher flick would be complete without the obligatory scenes of a masked maniac seemingly incapacitated and the intended victims running off instead of killing him. No surprise whatsoever when the maniac then arises, takes hold of his weapon which was conveniently lying next to him and easily continues his killing spree.
Call it a tribute if you wish, but Final Summer then manages an obvious variation to a storyline copied directly from the conclusion from Friday the 13th.
A quote from Oscar Wilde states, "Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery" Final Summer however is a completely pointless and absurd fiasco.
With its' simplistic dialogue and atrocious acting while witnessing buffoons as they wander aimlessly through the woods, Final Summer also compares to the cemetery scenes of Plan Nine from Outer Space.
Ed Wood at the least created an unintentionally hilarious good-bad movie. Far more than John Isberg had accomplished with Final Summer.
Of course, no lame slasher flick would be complete without the obligatory scenes of a masked maniac seemingly incapacitated and the intended victims running off instead of killing him. No surprise whatsoever when the maniac then arises, takes hold of his weapon which was conveniently lying next to him and easily continues his killing spree.
Call it a tribute if you wish, but Final Summer then manages an obvious variation to a storyline copied directly from the conclusion from Friday the 13th.
A quote from Oscar Wilde states, "Imitation is the sincerest form of flattery" Final Summer however is a completely pointless and absurd fiasco.
I agree with everything previous critiques said. The plot is the biggest failure here, running neck and neck with the visual quality of the film.
I did not understand how "everyone knew who was responsible" when there wasn't any real backstory on the camp yet, other than "accidents" that plagued the camp for years. Which makes no sense, because even in the 70s & 80s, a camp THAT notorious would've been closed down easily.
Add to that the visual quality I mentioned, I don't know what that was about. Is he trying to make the actors look younger with a failed soft focus technique? Is he trying to make it look like a movie from the early 90s (which would've been shot on film and not on video)? If so, color correcting it to look like an older movie and adding noise and a film effect overlay might've gone a lot further and wouldn't have been super expensive.
Instead, we have a movie that looks like the director just discovered this thing called depth of field, and manhandled the technique throughout the feature. Instead of being interesting or helping the movie look old, it only serves to distract.
It's too bad, too, because low budget doesn't guarantee a bad movie. Lack of imagination and poor filming choices sure will, though.
I did not understand how "everyone knew who was responsible" when there wasn't any real backstory on the camp yet, other than "accidents" that plagued the camp for years. Which makes no sense, because even in the 70s & 80s, a camp THAT notorious would've been closed down easily.
Add to that the visual quality I mentioned, I don't know what that was about. Is he trying to make the actors look younger with a failed soft focus technique? Is he trying to make it look like a movie from the early 90s (which would've been shot on film and not on video)? If so, color correcting it to look like an older movie and adding noise and a film effect overlay might've gone a lot further and wouldn't have been super expensive.
Instead, we have a movie that looks like the director just discovered this thing called depth of field, and manhandled the technique throughout the feature. Instead of being interesting or helping the movie look old, it only serves to distract.
It's too bad, too, because low budget doesn't guarantee a bad movie. Lack of imagination and poor filming choices sure will, though.
I know this was not easy to film so I will give it some credit...but it is definitely in my least favorite horror movies.
The Kills were horrible, barely showed them. Almost all of them were off screen.
I don't understand the random tree shots, they were there for no reason.
The acting... dont even get me started... There was barely any character development, and the acting was horrible.. def trying a little too hard.
And now the killer... He was literally Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees inbred little cousin...
My opinion doesnt run the world so yall do ya thing but...idk this is just my opinion.
The Kills were horrible, barely showed them. Almost all of them were off screen.
I don't understand the random tree shots, they were there for no reason.
The acting... dont even get me started... There was barely any character development, and the acting was horrible.. def trying a little too hard.
And now the killer... He was literally Michael Myers and Jason Voorhees inbred little cousin...
My opinion doesnt run the world so yall do ya thing but...idk this is just my opinion.
I know camp counselors in horror movies are supposed to be down right stupid, but this one goes to extremes. I would give a zero in intelligence to these characters and the person who wrote the story. Let me add, most are such cowards that pity for the next victim. Plenty of chances to help each other, heck, but why bother, it doesn't occur to any there is strengh in numbers. Then there is a thing called closing doors, a concept too advanced for these brainless people. You would think that some would have at some time in the past watched a summer camp horror movie. Super predictable ending. What a waste of time.
Final Summer looks and acts like an homage, this is clearly from the poster, plot, cast and soundtrack. If specifically to Friday, I couldn't really say, because one of the cheapest horror genre is campers the woods type.
So we have Friday, but also The Burning, Sleepaway Camp, Final Girls and so on, movies that act in a specific way, one that isn't replicated here. You see, nothing worked for Final Summer and you really can't blame it on the budget.
After movies like Blairwitch or Evil Dead, this kind of horror doesn't require a big budget, but inspiration and dedication.
The dialogue here is bad, the characters stereotypical and annoying, acting is quite sub par, killshots barely visible, no gore, no nudity, one very sad excuse for a twist and the absolute worst killer I've seen, being taken down many times by the others. Just, never finished. There is some sort of fighting choreography that looks silly and fake at the same type.
So yes, you can indeed notice the fact that the people involved in Final Summer really did their best, they had their heart in the right place, but even for a starter project, this fell flat. No impact.
Thus not recommandable, do skip it and try something else. Plenty of fish out there, leave this one be.
Cheers!
So we have Friday, but also The Burning, Sleepaway Camp, Final Girls and so on, movies that act in a specific way, one that isn't replicated here. You see, nothing worked for Final Summer and you really can't blame it on the budget.
After movies like Blairwitch or Evil Dead, this kind of horror doesn't require a big budget, but inspiration and dedication.
The dialogue here is bad, the characters stereotypical and annoying, acting is quite sub par, killshots barely visible, no gore, no nudity, one very sad excuse for a twist and the absolute worst killer I've seen, being taken down many times by the others. Just, never finished. There is some sort of fighting choreography that looks silly and fake at the same type.
So yes, you can indeed notice the fact that the people involved in Final Summer really did their best, they had their heart in the right place, but even for a starter project, this fell flat. No impact.
Thus not recommandable, do skip it and try something else. Plenty of fish out there, leave this one be.
Cheers!
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesWhile he doesn't appear in the film, Tom Atkins lent his image to the character of "George Krug" featured in a painting by artist Rob Csiki for a brief scene in the film.
- ConnexionsReferences Génération perdue (1987)
- Bandes originalesGet Me Off This Ride
Written by Rob Newhouse
Performed by The Elvis Brothers
1992, Now Dig This
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- How long is Final Summer?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Sites officiels
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Последнее лето
- Lieux de tournage
- Camp Drake, Fairmount, Illinois, États-Unis(Camp Silverlake)
- Société de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 1h 22min(82 min)
- Couleur
- Rapport de forme
- 2.35 : 1
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