I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer Page #4

Synopsis: On July 4th, in the small Broken Ridge, Colorado, the teenagers Colby, his girlfriend Amber and their friends Zoe, Roger and PJ play a prank with the legend of the Fisherman that kills teenagers with dirty little secrets with his hook in an entertaining park. However, when PJ jumps with his skateboard, there is an unexpected accident and PJ dies. The group stays together and makes a covenant to keep their secret. One year later, Amber receives 50 messages in her cell-phone saying "I Know What You Did Last Summer" and she gathers her friends to find who might have told about their pact. They find that PJ's cousin Lance also knows what they did. Sooner they find that a dark man wearing slicker is chasing them with a hook to kill each one of them.
Director(s): Sylvain White
Production: Sony Pictures Home Entertainment
 
IMDB:
3.6
Rotten Tomatoes:
0%
R
Year:
2006
92 min
323 Views


I mean, say some freak did pop out

of the woodwork,

- it doesn't mean he actually knows anything.

- I know!

That's what I told Amber, but she...

So why are you coming down here

busting my balls?

In case you and I are wrong.

- I'm sorry, it's not my problem anymore.

- I always knew you were a dick.

I got it.

My towel back.

That guy is hot!

- You okay, miss?

- Yeah.

- What happened?

- Oh, I just had a problem with my bike.

Well, listen, it's about to storm,

so you better get down the hill.

- Let me get you a lift.

- Okay.

I'm telling you, that's the hook.

If you say so.

What makes you think you're not next?

He sent you a message, too, Colby.

Come on, Amber, you want us to believe

you got attacked on a gondola?

- Fifty feet in the air?

- Oh, why am I even talking to you?

So who do you think is doing this, Amber?

Maybe somebody who was close to p.J.

Is trying to punish us.

Roger's right.

We have to go to the cops now

before they get the story

from somebody else.

Roger won't even return our call.

That's how much he gives a sh*t.

- Roger's whacked.

- How whacked?

So how was I?

- It was an accident.

- Was it?

What if we don't do anything?

We had our chance to tell the truth, Roger.

Somebody knows now.

- This was your idea!

- What?

After we lied to everyone's faces?

It was an accident.

It was an accident.

The secret dies with us.

The secret dies with us.

The secret dies with us.

The secret dies with us.

Hello?

Hello?

Who's here?

Who's here?

Coat.

Oh, my God!

- There's blood here, too.

- He was living here.

Holy sh*t!

He killed himself.

Freeze!

We found him here with this.

He killed himself.

What are you all doing here?

- Rawlings.

- Yeah.

Take care of this.

Make sure you contact the boy's family.

I'll take care of it.

So he didn't tell you about any of it?

The fights in college, failing classes?

Leave of absence? Anti-depressants?

We didn't hear from him much this year.

I guess he couldn't get over

what happened last summer.

If there's anything you guys

want to add to your statements,

anything you think I should know...

No.

- Okay. We're done here.

- Thanks, officer.

Call me.

I know that you're alone for the weekend

and

I don't have to worry about you, do I?

No. No.

I'm okay.

Don't worry. This is over.

You can go home.

I'll call you.

- If I have any more questions. Yeah.

- Yeah.

- Rawlings.

- Yeah.

Get that to the sheriff for me. Thanks.

I can't believe Roger was behind this.

I can't believe

he got the hook out of the lake.

This was not our fault.

Someone else is dead now.

- Yeah, and we're all safer for it.

- How do you just move on?

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Lois Duncan

Lois Duncan Steinmetz (April 28, 1934 – June 15, 2016), known as Lois Duncan, was an American writer, novelist, poet, and journalist. She is best known for her young-adult novels, and has been credited by historians as a pioneering figure in the development of young adult fiction, particularly in the genres of horror, thriller, and suspense.The daughter of professional photographers Lois and Joseph Janney Steinmetz, Duncan began writing at a young age, publishing two early novels under the pen name Lois Kerry. Several of her novels, including Hotel for Dogs (1971), I Know What You Did Last Summer (1973), Summer of Fear (1976), and the controversial Killing Mr. Griffin (1978), have been adapted into films. In addition to her novels and children's books, Duncan published several collections of poetry and non-fiction, including Who Killed My Daughter? (1992), which detailed the 1989 unsolved murder of Duncan's teenage daughter, Kaitlyn. She received the 1992 Margaret Edwards Award from the American Library Association for her contribution to writing for teens. After her daughter's murder, Duncan would distance herself from the thriller and horror genres, shifting her focus to picture books and novels aimed for young children. Her last published work, a sequel to Who Killed My Daughter? titled One to the Wolves, was published in 2013. more…

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