Critical response Review aggregator
Rotten Tomatoes reports that 64% of 137 critic reviews are positive, and the average rating as 5.9 out of 10. The site's critical consensus reads, "It's still only for the gore-thirsty faithful, but
Final Destination 5 represents a surprising return to form for the franchise."
Metacritic, which assigns a weighted score, gives the film a score of 50 out of 100, based on 24 critics, indicating "mixed or average reviews". It was the highest-rated film of the franchise on both sites before being overtaken by
its successor. Audiences polled by
CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of B+ on an A+ to F scale.
Richard Roeper stated in his review "From the opening credits to the final kill this film displays a great use of 3D." Todd Gilchrist of Boxoffice Magazine has declared the film in his review for being "the best 3D horror movie ever made." He described
Final Destination 5 as "a clean, glossy thriller shot in native 3D (not post-conversion) that maximizes the technology without straining the audience's credulity or their constitutions." He also stated "Calling anything the 'best 3D horror film' has the ring of crowning the world's tallest midget, but Quale uses 3D almost shockingly well." In a review for Toronto.com, Linda Barnard has stated "this could be a case where the 3D-shot movie is worth the extra few bucks to see". The visual effects were praised for improving on the
CGI from the previous installment. Betty Jo Tucker of ReelTalk Movie Reviews said in her review "The film boasts some of the best visual effects ever, especially the bridge-crumbling sequence at the beginning of the film." In his review of
Final Destination 5,
Roger Ebert said "[...] the special effects do an excellent job of beheading, incinerating, vivisecting, squishing and so on." "
Final Destination 5 contain some of the most fun effects ever seen that purely enhance the thrills and bloody spills, rather than detract from them," stated Lisa Giles-Keddie from uk.real.com. The death scenes in the film have been praised as being suspenseful, creative, and shocking. Boxoffice Magazine said in praise, "viewers connect to both the relatable pain of everyday injury and the gory gratification of a well-constructed, larger-than-life set piece."
San Francisco Chronicle said that the characters are "killed in gruesome and spectacular ways". The gymnastic set piece has been praised as "anxiety-filled", "a beautiful example of successful comic suspense", and "inventively grotesque". Film.com stated in their review "The subsequent deaths are hit-or-miss, but they all show some creative spark. Quale sets them up like a cross between a joke and a magic trick, carefully establishing crucial details." The opening bridge collapse has garnered considerable critical acclaim, with many stating it as being on par with the pile-up sequence from
Final Destination 2. It has been said to be "one of the single best sequences of any film all year" by Boxoffice Magazine. and
Daily News deemed it "terrifying".
USA Today commented on the sequence, saying "The effect is terrific and reminiscent of the bridge destruction from
Mission: Impossible III." Betsy Sharkey, a
Los Angeles Times film critic stated in her negative review "I will say, the bus, and the bridge it must cross, does make for a pretty incredible wham-bam opening sequence," and further added "The big crumble is a stunner of an opener." In a review for
MSN.com, Kat Murphy said "the fifth chapter starts out with a slambang catastrophe", then stated that the bridge collapse is "skillfully orchestrated", and "this sequence is actually enhanced by 3D: Holes in the disintegrating bridge seem to pull the gaze down—dizzyingly—to the river below, and jagged camera angles on hanging railings and sliding debris muddle our sense of what's up, what's down." Kirk Honeycutt of
The Hollywood Reporter praised "This film's opening sequence is undeniably spectacular."
Aaron Hillis from
The Village Voice called the bridge collapse "breathtakingly staged".
The Advocate stated that "Director Steve Quale and writer Heisserer stage the bridge's collapse in swift but exacting detail."
The Austin Chronicle said the bridge collapse sequence is "spectacularly gruesome". In 2017, John Squires, writing for
Bloody Disgusting, gave five reasons as to why
Final Destination 5 is the franchise's best sequel, highlighting the opening sequence, the inventive death scenes, the level of
gore in the film, the new mythology to defeat Death and the ending encompassing scenes from the first film. == Sequel ==