Netflix I Still Know What You Did Last Summer
| I Still Know What You Did Last Summer | |
|---|---|
| Theatrical release poster | |
| Directed by | Danny Cannon |
| Written by | Trey Callaway |
| Based on | Characters by Lois Duncan |
| Produced by |
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| Starring |
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| Cinematography | Vernon Layton |
| Edited by | Peck Prior |
| Music by | John Frizzell |
| Production |
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| Distributed past | Sony Pictures Releasing |
| Release date |
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| Running time | 101 minutes |
| Countries |
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| Language | English |
| Budget | $24 million[2] |
| Box office | $40 million[three] |
I Nevertheless Know What You lot Did Last Summertime is a 1998 slasher film directed past Danny Cannon and written by Trey Callaway. Jennifer Love Hewitt, Freddie Prinze Jr. and Muse Watson reprise their roles, with Brandy, Mekhi Phifer and Matthew Settle joining the cast. It is the second installment in the I Know What You Did Last Summer franchise. The motion-picture show takes place one year after the events of its predecessor, and was shot in Mexico and California.
I Nevertheless Know What Yous Did Last Summer received negative reviews and grossed $xl meg on a budget of $24 million. A straight-to-video sequel, I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summertime, was released in 2006.
Plot [edit]
Ane year afterwards the savage murders of her friends, Helen Shivers and Barry Cox, past the vengeful fisherman Ben Willis (Muse Watson), Julie James (Jennifer Love Hewitt) is attending summer classes in Boston, but suffers from nightmares of the murders. Julie's roommate, Karla Wilson (Brandy), receives a phone telephone call from a local radio station and wins a vacation for four to The Bahamas, despite answering the question incorrectly. Julie invites her beau, Ray Bronson (Freddie Prinze, Jr.), who declines, just later changes his mind. That evening, Ray and his co-worker, Dave (John Hawkes), drive to Boston to surprise Julie, but terminate due to a body in the middle of the road. When Ray discovers the body is a mannequin, Ben appears and kills Dave with his claw. Ben then chases Ray in a truck, but Ray escapes and falls downwardly a hill.
The next morning, Julie, Karla, Karla's boyfriend, Tyrell Martin (Mekhi Phifer), and their friend, Will Benson (Matthew Settle), depart for the trip. The grouping arrives at the hotel in Tower Bay and checks in. That evening at the hotel'due south bar, Julie is singing karaoke when the words "I still know what you did last summer" roll onto the screen. Terrified, she runs back to her room. At the dock, Darick, the dockhand (Benjamin Brown) is tying upwardly the boat. He is attacked by Ben. Olga (Ellerine Harding), the housekeeper, finds bloody sheets while working and is then attacked by Ben. While the others get into the hot tub, Julie is in her room and notices that her toothbrush is missing. She searches her room before finding Darick dead in the cupboard. She finds her friends and they return to find no sign of Darick's body; Mr. Brooks (Jeffrey Combs), the hotel director, refuses to believe her story. By the pool, Titus Telesco (Jack Blackness) is assaulted. Ray, who has survived his injuries, heads out to rescue Julie.
The next 24-hour interval, the group finds Olga, Titus, and Mr. Brooks murdered and the two-style radio, their only way of contact, destroyed. Isolated, the group goes to the room of Estes (Bill Cobbs), the boat mitt porter, and finds that he has been using voodoo against them. Estes appears, explaining he was trying to protect them later on realizing that their reply to the radio station'due south question was incorrect. He tells them that Ben and his wife, Sarah, had two children: a son and a girl. Ben murdered Sarah when he found out about an matter. Estes goes missing and Will volunteers to find him, while Ray takes a boat to the island. Julie, Karla, and Tyrell return to the hotel and find Nancy (Jennifer Esposito), the bartender, hiding in the kitchen.
Ben appears in the kitchen and kills Tyrell. The girls retreat to the cranium, where Karla is attacked by Ben. Julie and Nancy rescue Karla and run to the storm cellar, where they find Ben'south victims. Will bursts in and takes the girls back to the hotel, stating that he saw Ben on the embankment. At the hotel, Volition tells them that Estes attacked him and he is bleeding from the stomach. Nancy and Karla get out to find a beginning assist kit, only find Estes impaled with a harpoon. Ben appears, kills Nancy, and attacks Karla. While Julie tends to Will, he reveals that it is not his blood and asks Julie what her favorite radio station is, revealing that he was the radio host and had killed Estes.
Volition drags Julie to a graveyard where he reveals that he is Ben's son. Ben appears and attacks Julie before Ray arrives and engages in a fight with Will. When Ben tries to stab Ray, he accidentally stabs Will instead. While Ben is distraught from killing his son, Julie shoots him dead. Back at the hotel, Karla is found live and they are rescued by the coast guard.
Quondam afterward, Ray and Julie get married and buy a home. Ray is brushing his teeth and the bath door is locked while he is occupied. Julie sits downward on the bed and looks in the mirror, seeing Ben underneath. She screams as Ben pulls her under the bed; the film ends, leaving the viewer to question if the attack was real or simply another of Julie's nightmares.
Cast [edit]
- Jennifer Love Hewitt as Julie James
- Freddie Prinze Jr. as Ray Bronson
- Brandy as Karla Wilson
- Mekhi Phifer as Tyrell Martin
- Matthew Settle as Will Benson/Willis
- Jennifer Esposito as Nancy
- Muse Watson equally Ben Willis / The Fisherman
- Bill Cobbs as Estes
- Jeffrey Combs equally Mr. Brooks
- Benjamin Brownish as Darick the Dockhand
- Ellerine Harding equally Olga
- John Hawkes equally Dave
- Sarah Michelle Gellar as Helen Shivers (uncredited) (photograph)
- Jack Blackness as Titus Telesco (uncredited)[iv]
Production [edit]
In Feb 1998, it was appear Danny Cannon would direct the sequel to I Know What Y'all Did Final Summer [5] In March 1998 it was announced Matthew Settle had joined the cast alongside returning cast members Hewitt and Prinze.[6] Jennifer Esposito joined the cast in Apr 1998.[7] While the film is set in the Bahamas, information technology was actually shot at El Tecuan Marina Resort Costa Alegre in Jalisco, Mexico, Los Angeles, California and Sony Pictures Studios in Culver Metropolis, California.
Music [edit]
| I Nevertheless Know What You Did Last Summer: Music from the Move Picture | |
|---|---|
| | |
| Soundtrack album (Digital download)/Audio CD by Diverse | |
| Released | November 17, 1998 |
| Length | 51:xiv |
| Label | Warner Bros. Records |
- "Sugar Is Sweeter" (CJ Bolland; Danny Saber remix featuring Justin Warfield) – four:57
- "How Practise I Deal" (Jennifer Love Hewitt) – 3:23
- "Relax" (Deetah) – 3:51
- "Hey Now Now" (Swirl 360) – 4:37
- "Blue Monday" (Orgy) – 4:32
- "Polite" (Bijou Phillips) – 4:25
- "Try to Say Bye" (Jory Eve) – 3:35
- "Testimony" (Grant Lee Buffalo) – iii:59
- "(Do You) Wanna Ride" (Reel Tight) – 3:33
- "Getting Scared" (Imogen Heap) – 4:51
- "Górecki" (Lamb) – 6:22
- "Julie's Theme" (John Frizzell) – two:52
- "That Girl" (Esthero) - 4:41
The soundtrack was released on Nov 17, 1998 by Warner Bros. Records. On January 19, 1999, "How Do I Deal" was released as a single, backed past Jory Eve's "Endeavour to Say Goodbye". A music video for "How Practice I Bargain" was made available to music idiot box networks.
- The song "Eden" past Belgian stone/pop group Hooverphonic was likewise featured in the picture show, merely did non appear on the final soundtrack. The song appeared early on in the flick, when Julie looked at the picture of Helen beside her bed.
Release [edit]
Home media [edit]
The flick has been released on VHS, DVD and Blu-ray.
Reception [edit]
Box office [edit]
The sequel made a gross $16.5 1000000 at two,443 theaters during its opening weekend. Unlike the original, the sequel opened at #2 at the box office and dropped to #5 a week afterwards. At the cease of its xv-week run, the film grossed $forty,020,622 in the United States.[3]
Critical response [edit]
On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes the motion-picture show holds an approval rating of 7% based on 57 reviews, with an average rating of iii.4/10. The site's critical consensus reads, "Irksome, predictable and insufficient of thrills or chills, I Still Know What You Did Concluding Summer is exactly the kind of rehash that gives horror sequels a bad name."[viii] On Metacritic the motion-picture show has a weighted average score of 21 out of 100, based on xix critics, indicating "by and large unfavorable reviews."[9] Audiences polled past CinemaScore gave the film an average grade of "B" on an A+ to F scale.[10]
Leonard Klady of Diverseness said: "Purists will find the pic's obviousness disappointing, but there's no question that the picture delivers a sufficient stupor quotient to satisfy its youthful target audience." It also won the honor for Worst Sequel at the 1998 Stinkers Bad Movie Awards.
Other media [edit]
Sequel [edit]
On 15 Baronial 2006, a direct-to-DVD picture show titled I'll Ever Know What Y'all Did Last Summer was released. The flick is unrelated to the two previous films and features no returning cast members. It was originally proposed to continue where I Still Know What You Did Last Summer left off. Instead, the film features an unrelated plot with a brief mention of the first two films.
Volume [edit]
In 1998, a paperback version of the screenplay for I Notwithstanding Know What You Did Last Summer was published by Pocket Books.
References [edit]
- ^ a b "I Still Know What You Did Last Summertime (1998)". shotonwhat . Retrieved 14 June 2019.
- ^ http://world wide web.mbc.net/en/mbc2/articles/I-Even so-Know-What-Y'all-Did-Last-Summertime.html
- ^ a b "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer (1998)". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 7 August 2011.
- ^ "I Withal Know What You Did Last Summer Blu-ray Review". IGN. 9 Jul 2009. Retrieved two August 2020.
Jack Black also chimes in with an uncredited cameo. He enjoys what fiddling screentime he has, simply does his best to annoy any [sic] and everyone around him.
- ^ "Summer II Cannonized". Variety. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
- ^ "'I Still Know' to star Settle". Diversity. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
- ^ "Esposito joins 'Summer' sequel". Variety. Retrieved September 28, 2021.
- ^ "I All the same Know What You Did Last Summer (1998)". Rotten Tomatoes . Retrieved 26 May 2021.
- ^ https://www.metacritic.com/movie/i-still-know-what-you-did-final-summertime
- ^ "CinemaScore". cinemascore.com.
External links [edit]
- I Still Know What You Did Terminal Summer at IMDb
- I Still Know What You Did Last Summer at AllMovie
- I All the same Know What You Did Last Summer at Box Office Mojo
- I Still Know What You Did Final Summer at Rotten Tomatoes
Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/I_Still_Know_What_You_Did_Last_Summer
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