I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer

2006 "What he knows might kill you…"
3.4| 1h32m| R| en| More Info
Released: 22 August 2006 Released
Producted By: Screen Gems
Country: United States of America
Budget: 0
Revenue: 0
Official Website:
Info

Several teenagers in a small-town in Colorado concoct a July 4th prank based on a frightening legend that goes awry when their friend ends up accidentally killed; however, the teens agree to keep their involvement a secret from the authorities, who continue to search for the man who apparently killed their friend. A year later, with the July 4th celebration coming up again, the teenagers realize that they're being stalked by someone who clearly intends on keeping the horrible legend alive by killing them off.

Genre

Horror

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Director

Sylvain White

Production Companies

Screen Gems

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I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer Audience Reviews

Inclubabu Plot so thin, it passes unnoticed.
Ploydsge just watch it!
Micah Lloyd Excellent characters with emotional depth. My wife, daughter and granddaughter all enjoyed it...and me, too! Very good movie! You won't be disappointed.
Yash Wade Close shines in drama with strong language, adult themes.
Beejerman In this 3rd installment, the "Last Summer" franchise loses its footing and falls flat on its face. As the end credits rolled, I was left shaking my head and rolling my eyes. What a complete waste of time. Both in filming it and in viewing it."I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer" finds a fresh group of teenagers harboring a deadly secret and paying the consequences for keeping it one year later. This time around, the Fisherman finds himself in the middle of Colorado wearing his black slicker and slinging his fish hook around ... in an area devoid of any water. Apparently, he is no longer picky about where he may end up or how out of place he may look. His reputation does precede him, however. This small town does not have any urban legends of their own, so they had to borrow this one from a shoreline town miles and miles away from them.Everything about this movie was cookie-cutter, cliché, used and worn out. There were absolutely no scares. Everything was stilted and set- up. There were no genuine moments, or surprises. It was boring. A complete yawner. And, in some places, laughable. For example (and this is the one spoiler here), after our villain has sustained beatings, kicks, two shotgun blasts and being run over by a car, our heroin says with certainty, "He can be hurt! I know, because of what happened when I hit him with this hook!" HAHAHAHA!!! Wow, what a revelation! And then when he is dead, for sure this time, he appears for one last final scream scare at the end of the film ... on a highway in the middle of the Nevada desert (he knew exactly where she was going to stop - he is THAT good) - again nowhere near water.I would not only NOT recommend this movie, but I am putting a sticker on the cover that says, "Avoid at all costs!" Only the extreme die-hard horror fan might find this movie worthy of watching.
David Roggenkamp "I Know What You Did Last Summer" spawns a related sequel in typical horror movie fashion. What was supposed to be a death and cover-up in the last film, comes back to haunt the town inhabitants in this sequel. What starts out as a prank the year after the original, quickly turns into horror as one of the teenagers involved dies. They slowly, in typical teen slasher fashion, get picked off one by one until only two are left and survive – again in typical teen slasher fashion.What makes this movie so good is the fact that the teenagers involved, attempt to leave the past behind them and get on with their lives. This works quite well, until one of the teenagers, now an adult, is back from California, weird text messages and other events remind them of their grizzly prank gone awry, and now they are forced to deal with it. Clearly everyone must form a bond of trust with people they otherwise do not trust – anyone could be the suspect and anyone of them could die at any time.Unlike in previous teen slasher installments, this one pulls a few one shots that work quite well – the fisherman that is after them uses a hook to perform the murders and nothing else; this same hook is his demise as it seems to be able to inflict heavy damage to him, when otherwise guns and other methods of fatal wounds have no such effect. Several times throughout this movie, the hunted soon turn into the attacker as they try to take down the menace that would otherwise threaten their lively hoods – rare for a movie, especially the teen slasher genre. This however, is no thriller, as there is only suspense for the audience and lots of anxiety for the victims involved.Originally posted to Orion Age (http://www.orionphysics.com/? p=4618).
Jackson Booth-Millard The original Jennifer Love Hewitt film is obviously the only good one in the series, the sequel also with Hewitt was rubbish, and I was sure this third film straight to DVD instalment would be bad as well, directed by Sylvain White (Stomp the Yard, The Losers). Basically on July 4th, in the small town of Broken Ridge, Colorado, teenagers Colby Patterson (David Paetkau), his girlfriend Amber Williams (Brooke Nevin) and their friends Zoe Warner (Torrey DeVitto), Roger Pack (Seth Packard) and P.J. Davis (Clayton 'Clay' Taylor) are at a town carnival. At the carnival entertaining park they decide to play a prank, using the legend of the Fisherman that appears on July 4th to stalk and kill teenagers with dark secrets with his hook. They are successful in scaring a number of the people attending, however the prank gets out of hand and goes wrong when P,J. is performing a trick jumping with his skateboard, and an unexpected accident occurs, when P.J.'s body is found impaled on a pipe, the public believe it to the be the Fisherman behind the death, so Colby convinces the others to burn the evidence and make a pact that the secret will die with them. A year later, Amber receives 50 identical text messages on her cellphone, from an unknown number, saying "I Know What You Did Last Summer", she automatically gathers that this is referring to the accidental death they caused. Amber goes in search of Zoe and Roger, and Colby who she parted with, to find out if they told anyone else about what they said they would take to the grave, all have moved on into different career and personal circumstances, none of them have said anything to anyone, however P.J.'s cousin Lance (Ben Easter) also knows what they did somehow. Soon enough the situation gets worse when a man dressed as the real Fisherman wearing the dark slicker is chasing the teenagers with a hook to kill each of them, the killer is towards the end revealed to be the decomposed Ben Willis (Don Shanks), the man who brutally committed the original murders ten years ago, but even shoving his head into a thresher doesn't stop him reappearing a year later as the Fisherman to kill last survivor Amber. Also starring K.C. Clyde as Deputy Hafner, Michael Flynn as Sheriff Davis, Brittanie Nicole 'Britt' Leary as Kim and Star LaPoint as Kelly. The story may not be repeating what was seen in the previous two films, it is a completely new story as teenagers accidentally kill someone in different circumstances, and the gore created by the killer stalking the teens is still the hook, but it has a silly and rushed script, lame acting and a predictable plot, it's just another daft (more so than the second) sequel, a dreadful horror. Pretty poor!
OllieSuave-007 This movie was supposed to be made as a direct sequel to "I Still Know What You Did Last Summer," with a group of teenagers played by some obscure actors who in Colorado find themselves being menaced by the mysterious man with the hook, which is supposed to be the ghost of Ben Willis.The events of the first two movies were never elaborated or explained in this supposed sequel, which made this just another typical teen horror flick, but with a low budget, boring story and pretty bad acting. There is really no suspense or tension built-up in this film, just lots of running around, screaming and teenagers being jerks to each other (maybe a hint of some nice horror action here and there). Even on a slow day, I would recommend watching else.Grade D--