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Urban Legend / Urban Legend: Final Cut - Final Cut (2 Pack) (2000)
Front Cover Actor Back Cover
Anthony Anderson Stan Washington
Michael Bacall Dirk Reynolds
Hart Bochner Professor Solomon
Jessica Cauffiel Sandra Petruzzi
Matthew Davis Travis Stark/Trevor Stark
Loretta Devine Reese Wilson
Joseph Lawrence Graham Manning
Eva Mendes Vanessa Valdeon
Jennifer Morrison Amy Mayfield
Anson Mount Toby Belcher
Jennifer Morrison (II)
Joseph Lawrence (II)
Jared Leto
Tara Reid
Alicia Witt
Rebecca Gayheart
Robert Englund
Joshua Jackson
Movie Details
Genre Horror
Director John Ottman; Jamie Blanks
Producer Gina Matthews; Neal H. Moritz
Writer Scott Derrickson; Paul Harris Boardman
Studio Columbia TriStar
Language English
Audience Rating R (Restricted)
Running Time 198 mins
Country USA
Color Color
Plot
Urban Legend
An attractive young woman is driving her car on a dark country road and singing along to the radio. She's running out of gas and so she pulls into a gas station (run by a jittery, stuttering Brad Dourif), but then flees what seems to be an attack, only to find the real threat in her backseat: a hooded killer with an ax who takes her head off with a well-aimed swing. You've heard the story before? Not surprising, given that it's one of the more famous urban legends borrowed for Urban Legend, a post-Scream exercise in self-referential horror. The students at an ivy-covered New England college are turning up dead, the victims of a serial killer who murders in the fashion of the "apocryphal" modern myths. It's all for the benefit of good girl with a dark secret Alicia Witt, the sole witness to most of the killings. Doe-eyed Rebecca Gayheart, as her gullible best friend, and Jared Leto, the ambitious campus journalist who tracks down the secret that hangs over the school, lead a cast of pretty young women, hunky guys, and campus characters, notably the suspicious professor Robert Englund, a genre legend in his own right as the star of seven Nightmare on Elm Street films. Take away the cheeky remarks and self-awareness and it's a throwback to the 1970s' rash of teen slasher movies, where sexually active teens are sliced, diced, and otherwise slaughtered in elaborate and ingenious ways. The increasingly preposterous film is no Scream, but the modestly stylish production has its moments. --Sean Axmaker

Urban Legends: Final Cut
While Urban Legends: Final Cut is not nearly as terrifying or inventive as some of its predecessors, the film does offer up a fairly suspenseful whodunit that fans of the teen horror genre will likely appreciate. Amy Mayfield, the film's heroine (played by fresh-faced Jennifer Morrison), is the daughter of an Oscar-winning documentary filmmaker trying to make a name for herself at Alpine University, "the greatest film school that ever existed." Along with several other students she is competing for the coveted Hitchcock award, which virtually guarantees the winner a successful career in Hollywood. When the film school's resident genius and likely winner of the award is found dead, suspicions arise. As other film students are killed off one by one, everyone becomes a suspect. Would someone kill to win the prestigious award? While striving to be Hitchcockian in theme (as evidenced by its multiple references to the director himself), the film never quite moves beyond cliché. Many scenes are a little too reminiscent of other popular teen horror flicks like Scream (the anonymous masked killer, though not nearly as frightening), The Blair Witch Project (Amy is chased through desolate woods by her stalker), and Friday the 13th (Amy hides from the killer in a lake setting eerily similar to the one where Jason died so many years ago). These elements seem just a little worn out. Morrison gives a serviceable performance, and Loretta Devine, from the original Urban Legend, adds humor as a Foxy Brown-worshiping security guard. The film manages to keep you guessing until its conclusion, and a sequence set in an abandoned amusement park is truly creepy. But ultimately Urban Legends: Final Cut lacks the originality to make a name for itself among the many films of its genre. --Mindy Ruehmann

Personal Details
Seen It Yes
Index 767
Collection Status In Collection
Links Amazon US
DVD Empire
Product Details
Format DVD
Region Region 1
Screen Ratio Fullscreen (4:3, Letterboxed)
Fullscreen (4:3, Pan & Scan)
Layers Dual Side, Single Layer
UPC (Barcode) 043396063853
Chapters 56
Release Date 2/13/2001
Subtitles English; French
Packaging Keep Case
Audio Tracks Dolby Digital 5.1 [English]
Nr of Disks/Tapes 2
Extra Features
Urban Legend:
Interactive Menus
Filmmakers Commentary
"Making-Of" Featurette
Theatrical Trailer
Scene Selections

Urban Legends: Final Cut:
Director's Commentary
Deleted Scenes With Optional Commentary By John Ottman
Making-Of Featurette
Gag Reel
Website Links
Theatrical Trailers
Talent Files
Production Notes
Interactive Menus
Scene Selections