How Many Final Destination Movies Are There
Death is Coming for our Family

Not everyone wants to enjoy the scene in darkness that we can say of horror movies or scenes of death. Final Destination is one of the horror franchises. The question is, how many final destination movies are there? No doubt there are 6 blockbuster horror movies by the final destination franchise.

Good News! For the final destination followers a new part has been released in the past few days of May 2025. I know you were waiting for it. Now your wait is over and Final Destination Bloodlines 2025 distributed by New Line Cinema.
You should watch this movie if you want to enjoy the horror scene with a big heart. Even the movie is totally related to death and instant death in a very dangerous way. Children who can not see the death scenes or parents who want to keep their children away from the blood, they should not watch it.
I just watched the most recent part of it, the “Final Destination Bloodlines” in the Universal Cinema. At start there are the pictures of the bloodlines movie cast. This movie is directed by Zach Lipovsky. This is the very amazing sixth instalment of the final destination series film.
Final Destination Bloodlines (2025 Film)

While I was watching Final Destination Bloodlines, The first scene is for the party where all cheers up for a cold drink. Drink dropped down on the vacuum machine and it leads to fire that suddenly appears as a fear for all.
The dialogue I enjoyed was “ Death is Coming for our Family”.
Next a man was killed by lead down under a sports car. Always you will be in a fear of death coming for someone. There was a great role for Grandma. IRIS asked Grandma “what happened to us?”.
Then Grandma told a story to IRIS about years ago |when she saw what death was about to do.” You just need to understand this scene very carefully for a better understanding of the whole movie.
Grandma saved a lot of lives that night. The next death scene is on the dance floor where IRIS announced everyone leave the dance floor. Grandma said “ Death does not like it when you mess with his plans.
Grandma gave a book to IRIS. This is the book that caught the full focus of us while watching the bloodlines on 16 May 2025. “ This book will show you everything you need to know to keep our family safe. “
STEFENI: It all started with Grandma, Now death is coming to us because we were never supposed to exist.
PRIEST (Tony Todd): Only by embracing death will pass you by.
Maybe death is not coming for our family…” cause that would be crazy.” DIED…..
PRIEST: Good Luck
Final Destination 5 (2011 Film): The Unseen End
The last movie that i had watched in my childhood was Final destination 5. I was in school and my father and whole family went to watch it in 2011. It was a great experience because earlier parts I did not see.
I am a little horror boy, that's why I did not watch it. But after 2011 I watched all the parts that had been released before the fifth part.
In final destination 5th part, the first death scene happened in the hospital. When Jacqueline MacInnes Wood (Olivia Castle) was in hospital and doctor was checking her eye. She did not want to miss anything.
Then the doctor did the setup for the operation and then went outside the room. A laser beam was set up to 4.9mW. It should not exceed 5. But it automatically exceeded the high of 8.2 gradually. Olivia Castle could not find the emergency stop button. And the first scene towards death had happened.
The next scene of death was at a dangerous bridge but visually it is OK.
The day started like any other for the group of friends, heading out to the yearly corporate retreat, a time to relax, bond, and escape the grind. But for Sam Lawton (Nicholas D'Agosto), a sudden premonition shatters the ordinary. On the bus, moments before the tragic accident, he sees a vision of a catastrophic collapse — a bridge snapping, tearing the group apart in an instant.
"Guys, get off the bus!" Sam shouts, his voice frantic. The group, including his friends Molly (Emma Bell), Peter (Miles Fisher), and Candice (Ellen Woglom), are all confused and frightened. But Sam’s urgency is clear, his body trembling. They flee just moments before the disaster strikes.
The bridge collapses in a thunderous explosion of metal and concrete, claiming the lives of many, but not Sam and his group. They’re safe, or so they think.
But death doesn’t give up that easily. As the days go by, the survivors begin to feel the weight of the curse. Each of them starts to die in increasingly bizarre and horrific ways, in patterns that mirror the chaos Sam had seen in his vision.
First, Peter, the carefree spirit, is the victim of a gruesome accident at the office, his body crushed under a falling metal beam. Then, Candice succumbs to an unfortunate kitchen mishap, her body caught in a deadly trap set by a malfunctioning appliance.
As death stalks them, Sam becomes desperate. The team begins to unravel the truth — they didn’t escape death; they simply delayed it. Now, they must find a way to break the pattern, or they will all face their final destination.
The intensity rises, the haunting music growing louder. Sam’s investigation into the survivors' fates takes them to the very edge of reason, where they learn that death is always watching, always waiting for the moment when it can strike. The eerie sense of inevitability takes over. Will Sam and Molly find a way to cheat death once and for all, or will they succumb to the curse of the bridge disaster?
The final scene is breathtaking. As Sam faces his destiny, the screen cuts to black, leaving audiences breathless, uncertain if anyone can truly escape their fate.
Final Destination 5: The Unseen End reminds us that no matter how much we try to outrun it, death will always find its way.
Warning: Don’t think you’re safe. Death is always watching, and it’s just a matter of time before it comes for you.
Final Destination 4 (2009 Film): The Fatal Race
The summer day was as wonderful as ever and for Nick O’Bannon and his friends, the local speedway hosted race events which were superb as they offered the perfect way to unwind from all the stress. Screeching tires and roaring vehicles were a constant thing while race events were underway. O’Bannon’s tourists were extremely clueless and ignorant of his decisions. Everything in this world appeared to be amazing until O’Bannon spotted the gigantic crowd that sent chills down his lower back.
Pure chaos, uncertain pandemonium and frenzy sums up Nick's life and the universe that revolves around him. As Nick’s mind cycles through hundreds of thoughts, his imagination suddenly showcases the jaw dropping crashes and jaw dropping pile up that he is left rationalizing. The explosion skimming through the racetracks, along with the gruesome cries of strangers tops the pile of audio. A vision is abruptly interrupted without warning and is accompanied with spine shredding screams.
“Get out of here!” Nick shouted as he yanked his girlfriend, Lori (Shantel VanSanten), from the stands. “We have to leave now, it’s going to happen!“
Lori was panic stricken and confused, but she did as he said. They literally ran for their lives right as the horrifying spectacle began to unfold in front of them. Nick’s imagination couldn’t have prepared him for how bad the crash was. Cars were blowing up, fire was erupting everywhere, and the sky was flooded with smoke, screams, and the smell of mad chaos. Luckily his group managed to escape the center of the battle…for now.
As it typically goes, Nick and his group paid dearly for their survival. Death was relentless, and cheaters of death like this were bound to get some consequences, and this incident did seem to have grisly bad endings for the survivors who could expect. These consequences came one after another, however in ever more brutal ways. Those who came out were bound to expect terrible endings while spiraling down these once beautiful cliffs – occurring in massacre of sorts replaying the vision Nick experienced.
Starting with her did take me aback, but I like honesty Janet (Haley Webb) found herself caught in a monstrous case of a loose tire hitting her while crossing the street. A hardly less brutal incident claiming the life of another friend to these beautiful yet twisted surreal scenes – Andy (Chris L. McKenna) met in a laundromat A fatal case of drawn in gears – a head-to-toe body serving collision with a washing machine.
"You can’t escape it," Nick came to terms with. “Death has a way of claiming us.” Every second felt like his last as he was unfolding the horrifying sequence in front of him, in desperation to break the `curse`, finding a way to unravel it through bleak research and odd coincidences.
Racing against the clock alongside Nick, Lori and the rest of the cast which comprises Hunt (Nick Zano) and Nadia (Sarah Lind), all tried to outsmart the grim reaper. ``Was there a way to halt the sequence of events bound to happen because they survived?`` As the final act unfolded, their lives were dangling by a thread.
Nick and Lori, in the highly charged adrenaline-filled climax accept the fact that they just can’t escape death and everything revolves around it. With shocking twists in between, as the dramatic pile up heads up, death’s stripping uncovering leading the deceiving ploy exposing the deadly trap built the moment they decided to ditch the racetrack calamity.
Final scream echoing the plot, in the last breath the screen blacks out leaving the viewers perplexed and dumbstruck.
Final Destination 4 - The Fatal Race demonstrates that when death is evaded, the outcome is often horrific. Regardless of speed, no one evades the inevitable, in the end.
*(Alert: No matter the distance, death is always lurking close by, ready to strike, and will not spare those who challenge its authority.)*
Final Destination 3 (2006 Film): The Last Ride

It was just another trip to the amusement park. My friends and I were heading to the Wildfire roller coaster, a new attraction everyone was hyped about. It was a gorgeous day, with clear skies and the scent of popcorn in the air. But little did we know, this ride would be the start of something much darker.
As we stood in line, I couldn't shake the feeling that something was off. You know that gut feeling when something bad is about to happen? Well, I got that feeling. It was like a warning from the universe. I had this overwhelming urge to get off the line, but I brushed it off.
"Come on, we’ve been waiting forever for this," my friend Wendy (Mary Elizabeth Winstead) said, trying to pull me back into the moment.
"Yeah, it’s going to be awesome!" shouted Kevin (Ryan Merriman), always the optimist. But something didn’t feel right.
As we boarded the roller coaster, the whole world seemed to slow down. I could hear the clanking of the metal tracks, feel the wind against my face, and then it happened.
I saw it. A vivid, terrifying vision.
The coaster was racing down the tracks, but something went terribly wrong. The metal bar in front of me snapped off, and the car flew off the tracks. People were screaming, bodies flying everywhere, and there was this massive crash. I saw flames, twisted metal, and screams of terror. It was the kind of vision that would haunt you forever.
"Get off! GET OFF!" I screamed, but it was too late. Everyone around me looked at me like I was crazy.
"Wendy, you have to listen to me!" I grabbed her arm. "We have to get off right now!"
But she was already strapped in, too focused on the excitement of the ride.
And then, the coaster shot up the first hill.
I closed my eyes, feeling the adrenaline rush as the ride zoomed down. But deep down, I knew what was coming. The vision was there, just waiting to unfold. My heart raced. I could barely breathe.
But something unexpected happened.
Just as the coaster approached the deadly drop, I snapped back into reality. In a blur, I managed to stop the ride before it reached the fatal point. Wendy, Kevin, and the others were all confused. I was just as panicked as they were. But we were all safe—at least for the moment.
"What's wrong with you?" Kevin laughed, shaking his head, still thinking I was overreacting. "It's just a roller coaster."
But I couldn't shake the feeling that something was terribly wrong. The terror from that vision was too real. I had seen it all—the fire, the wreckage, and the screams. And worse, I knew we hadn’t escaped death. We had only delayed it.
The days after that were pure nightmare fuel. I kept seeing it, over and over again—the bodies, the screams, the twisted metal. It was haunting. I was desperate to find a way out, to figure out what was going on.
That’s when the deaths started.
I remember when Erin (Alexz Johnson), one of our group, met her end. It was in the tanning salon, of all places. I tried to warn her, but she didn’t listen. The tanning bed malfunctioned, and the machine malfunctioned, trapping her inside, the heat escalating until it was too late. It was horrific. I couldn’t unsee it.
Then, the others started to go one by one. It was like death was taking what it was owed. Every single person who was supposed to be in that coaster crash seemed to fall victim to something worse. Each time, I’d see them, and then… they were gone. It was like the universe was punishing us for surviving.
Later, I remember this chilling moment when Wendy and I were talking by the lake, trying to figure out the pattern. "What if we were supposed to die on that roller coaster, and death’s just catching up to us now?" Wendy asked, her voice shaky, her eyes filled with dread.
I tried to stay calm, but I couldn’t. "We didn’t escape it, Wendy. We’re just prolonging the inevitable. Death is coming for us all."
I could feel the weight of the curse. It was closing in, and we were running out of time.
In the final act, I saw it all coming. Wendy was supposed to die, and no matter what we did, it seemed impossible to stop it. And just when I thought we had it figured out, I made a mistake. I thought I could save her.
But as I watched the final scene unfold in slow motion, I realized something: We could never outrun death. The more we tried to cheat it, the more it would fight back.
In a heartbreaking twist, Wendy dies in a tragic accident. Just when I thought we were free, just when I thought we could breathe, everything fell apart. The cruelest thing? It wasn’t over yet. The whole thing was a cycle. And the last scene of the movie hits you with a brutal realization: There’s no escaping death's design.
"Final Destination 3" was a terrifying reminder that fate is a relentless force. You can’t escape it, no matter how hard you try.
It was a roller coaster ride for the ages, but unlike the one in the movie, this is one ride I wouldn’t want to take again.
Final Destination 2 (2003 Film): The Road to Nowhere

I’ll never forget the day it all started. I was driving down the highway, just like everyone else, completely unaware that I was about to step into the nightmare of a lifetime. You know, the usual — a beautiful, sunny day, everyone going about their business. But for some reason, I couldn’t shake the feeling that something wasn’t right. The road ahead felt… wrong.
And then it happened.
As I was driving behind this huge truck loaded with logs, something inside me clicked. I looked at the truck, and it was as if I saw the accident play out in my mind. I could see it so clearly—one of those logs would come loose, smash through my windshield, and kill me. In an instant, I realized something worse. It wasn’t just me—everyone on the road was going to die. Everyone. The truck, the cars, the people. We were all going to be in the middle of a massive pile-up.
"Get off the road! GET OFF THE ROAD!" I shouted to myself, but I couldn’t move. I felt frozen.
Suddenly, the whole world around me seemed to slow down. It was like I was seeing the crash before it happened, and all I could do was sit there, helpless. I tried to steer clear, but it was too late. Just as I swerved away, the truck’s log came loose—just like I saw in the vision—and I was thrown into the chaos. The crash was a blur of screeching metal and blinding flashes. It felt like an eternity, but somehow, I survived.
And then, I woke up.
But I wasn’t alone. I remember looking around and seeing the others who were part of the pile-up. People who’d been on the highway with me—like Kimberly (A.J. Cook), who was in the car behind mine, and the others who should’ve been dead. They were all there, confused and shaken, just like me. We all survived by some miracle, and we thought we were in the clear. But I should’ve known better. You don’t cheat death. It doesn’t work that way.
"Did we just… escape?" Kimberly asked, her voice barely a whisper, still processing everything.
"We didn’t escape," I said, my voice thick with dread. "We just delayed it."
The following days were a blur. At first, we thought maybe we were lucky, but then the deaths started. One by one, the survivors from that crash were picked off in the most horrifying ways. It was like death was chasing us, waiting for the right moment to strike. I couldn’t get the image of that pile-up out of my head, and the more I thought about it, the more I realized that the crash wasn’t the end. It was only the beginning.
The first victim was a guy named Evan (David Paetkau), who’d been driving a car near mine. He ended up in a brutal accident with a gas station explosion. Then, it was Frankie (Jonathan Cherry) — one of the others who was supposed to be dead, but instead, he walked away from the wreckage. The next time I saw him, he was getting crushed by a falling piece of metal in a freak accident.
It wasn’t just freak accidents, though. It felt like something more sinister was at play. The visions kept haunting me. I could see the way they were dying, like pieces of some twisted puzzle falling into place.
Kimberly was the only one who seemed to get it, and we tried to warn the others, but no one listened. No one believed us, not until they saw it for themselves.
"You can’t outrun this, Kimberly," I said one night, as we sat in a diner, trying to make sense of it all. "Death doesn’t forget."
And I was right. The deaths continued, brutal and relentless. Every time we thought we had escaped, death found a new way to kill us. It wasn’t just a physical thing anymore; it was psychological, too. We started to fall apart.
The worst part came when we realized that there was a pattern. Death was using the same kind of accidents that happened in the original crash. A car explosion. A massive truck collision. A tree falling on someone. It was like a game, and we were the pawns. The tension was unbearable. It felt like we were all just waiting for our turn to die.
The turning point came when we learned that there was a way to cheat the system. There was a chance, a way to trick death and break the cycle, but we had to act quickly. Kimberly, me, and the others raced against time, trying to figure out how to stop the deaths from happening. But every step forward seemed to take us two steps closer to our demise.
In the end, we discovered that by saving someone else, we could potentially change the course of death's design. But it was too late. The trap had already been set, and even when we thought we had figured it out, it wasn’t enough.
The final twist? When I thought I had broken free, I realized something worse — death wasn’t done with us. The last scene was a brutal shock. In the most unexpected way, the cycle began again, this time with new victims. I looked around, horrified, as the pattern of death continued, knowing there was no real escape.
"Final Destination 2" wasn’t just a movie about death; it was a terrifying reminder that no matter what we do, we can't outrun fate. Death always finds a way to claim what it’s owed. And once it’s got its sights set on you, there’s no escaping it.
So yeah, if you think you can cheat death — you can’t. It’s always watching, always waiting. And when you least expect it, it’s going to come for you.
Final Destination (2000 Film): The First Escape
It all started with a school trip to Paris. You know how those things go—chaperones, students buzzing with excitement, everything’s supposed to be fun. But for me, something didn’t feel right from the start. I’m Alex Browning (Devon Sawa), and I’ve never been the superstitious type, but that morning, I got this sinking feeling. I can’t explain it, but I knew something bad was going to happen. I could feel it in my bones.
We were about to board a plane, and I swear, I couldn’t get the sense of doom out of my head. As I walked down the terminal, everything felt wrong—like something was off, like I was walking straight into a nightmare. Then, when I took my seat on Flight 180, the vision hit me.
It came out of nowhere, a flash of images so real that it felt like I was actually living them. The plane was mid-flight, and then—everything exploded. The engines blew, the plane broke apart in mid-air, and people were screaming as they were torn apart by debris. It was all so vivid, so terrifying, I could see it all like a horrifying movie in my mind. The moment I snapped back to reality, I was gasping for air, heart racing, cold sweat pouring down my back.
I looked around and could see it in my eyes. Something bad was going to happen.
"Get off the plane! GET OFF THE PLANE!" I shouted.
People around me were freaking out, wondering what was going on. But I couldn’t stay on that plane. I had to get out. In a panic, I grabbed my bag and ran for the door. My friend, Tod (Chad E. Donella), tried to stop me, but I couldn’t hear anything over the pounding in my chest. I forced my way off the plane, dragging him and a few others along. It felt like my heart was going to stop. And just as I stepped off the plane, it happened.
BOOM.
The plane exploded into flames, a massive fireball tearing through the air, taking out the terminal with it. I stood there, frozen, watching as the plane I was supposed to be on was consumed in flames. The sheer weight of it hit me all at once. We were alive… but we had cheated death.
The shock of it all was too much. We made it out, but then… we couldn’t escape the consequences. It was like we’d triggered something. Death wasn’t done with us yet.
We were all confused, trying to wrap our heads around what had just happened. How were we alive when so many others were gone? I remember talking to Clear (Ali Larter) about it, trying to understand.
"Why did we survive, Alex?" she asked, her voice shaky. "What does it mean?"
"I don’t know," I said, "But it’s not over. Death doesn't just let you go like that. We’ve only postponed it."
And I was right.
One by one, people started dying in the most bizarre and horrifying ways. First, there was Tod—my best friend. He was found dead in his own apartment, but it wasn’t just his death that haunted me. It was the way he died. He choked to death on his own vomit, but it was all part of the plan, part of the pattern. It felt like death was following us, waiting to claim each one of us.
Then, the others started going too. It was like a twisted game. First, the teacher Ms. Lewton (Lynda Boyd) died in a freak accident when she was impaled by a falling metal rod, a terrifying reminder that death could strike at any moment. Then, the horrific death of Carter (Kerr Smith), who had been skeptical about everything. His car exploded in a fireball that no one could have predicted. And just when I thought things couldn’t get worse, they did.
I started to realize that we were being hunted by death. It wasn’t random. Every death had a pattern. A plan. The survivors had only delayed their end.
"Why us?" Clear asked, her voice trembling. "Why do we keep surviving?"
"We were meant to die," I told her. "But we didn’t. Now death is coming for us."
I became obsessed with figuring out how to break the cycle, how to stop death from picking us off one by one. But every time I thought I figured it out, someone else would die. It felt like we were running out of time, like death was playing with us, toying with us as it closed in.
The final moments were the most intense, a race against time to break the pattern. Clear and I were determined to stop the chain of events, but I was too late. The last person to die was Carter. I couldn’t save him, and in that moment, I realized something even worse—death would keep coming, keep hunting us. Even after everything, there was no escaping it.
But then… in the very last scene, I thought I had finally figured it out. The twist hit like a ton of bricks. I realized that it didn’t matter what we did. The chain had already been set into motion. We could try to stop it, but in the end, it was always going to happen.
In the final moments, I barely escaped, but at what cost? Death’s shadow was never far behind. The movie ends with a chilling shot, leaving the audience with this lingering thought: death is always waiting, and you can’t outrun it.
"Final Destination" wasn’t just a movie. It was a terrifying reminder that no matter how hard you try, you can’t cheat death. You can only delay it—until it comes for you.
And believe me, it always comes.
About the Creator
Shoaib Rehman
From mind idea to words, I am experienced in this exchange. Techincally written storeis will definetely means a lot for YOU. The emotions I always try to describe through words. I used to turn facts into visual helping words. keep In Touch.


Comments (1)
I watched "Final Destination Bloodlines" too. That scene where the drink starts the fire was intense! It really sets the horror mood. And the grandma's role was interesting. I wonder how they come up with these creative death scenarios. Do you think the series will keep finding new and terrifying ways to show death?