I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer

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
348 Views


So you've all heard the story, right?

About what happens on July 4?

Whoa, Amber,

you want to freak everyone out?

No.

I just like hearing you tell it.

What are you guys talking about?

The fisherman.

Every 4th of July,

he gets out his hat and slicker,

he sharpens up his hook,

and runs wild.

But only after teenagers.

That's right,

the ones with dirty little secrets.

What about you, Zoe?

I bet you got some dirty little secrets.

Yeah. I heard you suck in bed.

Nice.

July 4.

Hey!

Seriously, a guy on my ski team knows

this girl who went camping last summer,

and they saw the fisherman.

Two days later,

two kids didn't make it out of the woods.

So he's kind of like Santa claus, huh?

Only in reverse.

He goes after the kids that are naughty?

No, he's more like Jack the ripper,

except the guy never got caught.

Well, I wouldn't worry.

Dude, it's broken Ridge, Colorado,

in the summer.

Even a psycho killer knows

to avoid this place.

Yeah, the guy would probably die

of boredom before he got any of us.

Hey, I heard you're running

some sort of field trip in September.

It's a photo shoot, really.

Why, are you interested?

Well, I figured since stud boy's

gonna be gone to college,

maybe you need somebody

to carry your tripod.

Very funny. Are you working,

or are you just hitting on my girlfriend?

Depends. You want to play?

Whoa, what, with your balls? No, thanks.

Come on, baby.

Win me a monkey.

Okay.

But if I win, you crash at my place tonight.

Tell your mom you're staying at Zoe's.

Is that a yes or a no?

- First win the monkey.

- All right.

Oh, yeah!

I'll take that.

Happy 4th of July, babe.

- I'm gonna miss you.

- I know.

You're the lucky one.

You get to take off

and I have to stay here another year.

It's weird, me in L.A.

What do you mean? It's brilliant!

And when I get there,

it's going to be the most amazing place

in the world for the two of us.

Yuck.

Marine candidate Davis, reporting for duty.

Yo, p. J!

Oh, my gosh, p.J.,

I can't believe you actually did it.

Well, just rotc.

You could say my daddy worked me over.

But guess who's next, little cuz?

Yeah, that's right, I give it another year

and he's coming after your ass.

- I don't think so.

- Come on, it's in our blood.

And plus, chicks dig the hair.

Okay, true. True.

- Get a picture, come on.

- Yeah, okay. There.

Okay, get close...

Run! Run! Run!

Run!

What was that?

What was that?

It's him, it's the fisherman!

What are you... no! Is your arm okay?

- I've never seen...

- There he is!

There's a killer on the loose!

Get out of here!

Run!

Watch out!

He almost got us!

P. J!

P. J! P. J!

Oh, my God, look!

Oh, my God!

- It's the fisherman!

- P.J., watch out!

Look out!

- Watch out, we're coming up!

- Police.

- Get out of the way!

- Get out of the way! Police!

Somebody's got to help him!

- P. J!

- P.J., run!

No!

Oh, God!

Come on, you have to go try to help him.

We can't leave him.

- Where'd he go, hafner?

- I don't know, he came up here.

- Oh, God, that was insane!

- I swear, he almost killed me.

- Sheriff Davis was on him.

- No. He got away.

Guys, behind you.

- How was I?

- Dude, you were awesome.

Awesome.

This stuff is sticky.

I am having a heart attack.

You guys said to make it real, so...

Yeah, you almost nailed us with that thing.

- 39 bucks on ebay.

- Sure it was.

Get this, the ad says this is the real hook,

straight from the legend.

Yeah, right. Okay.

Damn it!

Roger, give me the hook, man,

get undressed.

- How was p. J.'S move?

- It was awesome.

Oh, God, it was sick. Everyone saw it.

- So where is he?

- Yeah, where's p. J?

Who moved the mattresses?

What the hell are they doing there?

Whoa, whoa, whoa, hey, hey!

Right there, please.

Step back.

Clear a path, people.

Let's get this ambulance...

You should've double checked

the mattresses, Roger.

Somebody moved them.

- Anyway, that was p. J.'S job.

- Yeah, just pass the ball to him.

- This was your idea!

- What?

Hey!

Guys, we have to go to the police.

And tell them what? That it was a big joke?

- It was an accident.

- Was it?

What if we don't do anything?

The man's a genius.

Look, I want to go to college.

Everybody here

wants to get out of this hellhole.

And you're gonna be the next American ldol.

Screw you.

Look, everyone at that carnival

thinks that some psycho

in a raincoat did it, right?

- Why should they think anything different?

- We go to the police and what'll happen?

P. J.'S dad will try to nail us.

He never liked us to begin with,

and in this small-ass town,

innocent or guilty, we're dead.

So we tell him that we're not doing this.

Think about it, Zoe,

because we only get one chance at this.

Screw it, I'm in.

The guy came out of nowhere.

We ran for our lives just like p.J.

And everybody else.

Okay, but the only way we pull this off

is if we stick together

and we keep it a secret.

It dies with us.

You really think it's that easy?

Amber, telling the truth

isn't gonna bring p.J. Back.

Everyone saw him cut you.

Okay.

The secret dies with us. Say it.

- The secret dies with us.

- Secret dies with us.

Amber. Say it.

The secret dies with us.

Burn it.

- Look who's still in town.

- Hey, Lance. Thanks.

Why, I figured you'd be

long gone from this place by now.

Nope.

One more boring summer at broken Ridge

and then I'm free.

Oh, you're going to kick ass out there,

I know it.

Thanks.

And you'll probably sell a bunch

of artsy photos of your hometown,

get rich and famous,

make us look like a bunch of hillbillies

on the way up.

What about you?

What have you been up to?

Oh, you know,

working for the Mountain resort.

Grounds crew stuff.

Keeps me outdoors, so I like it.

Saved up for a new motorcycle.

It's fast as hell.

- I know, sounds boring to you.

- What? No.

You're doing your own thing.

There she is!

Kelly's got this new guy that she's after.

Sorry, sorry. He is so hot!

- Hot like the guy from the bike shop, hot?

- You ragging on me?

It's hard to keep them straight, kel.

Hey, who held your hand all year while

Mr. perfect boyfriend was away at college?

Okay, well, don't worry,

in a few weeks I'll be back with Colby

and you can forget all about me

and the hand-holding.

- What do you mean?

- Turn around.

Sc girls are freaks.

'Cause, you know,

most of them are de-clawed now.

Colby?

Amber, hey, what's up?

I was just gonna call you.

Hi. Could you excuse us? Thanks.

What are you doing here?

- The internship thing didn't work out.

- What?

Yeah, don't even ask.

I just figured

I'd come home and work at the pool again.

And this is how I find out?

Babe, chill.

At a party? In front of all of my friends,

like a total idiot?

You really want to do this now?

It's your freshman year,

maybe you shouldn't be tied down.

And this all just occurred to you.

We both felt it. What happened last summer

changed things!

Colby, moving to California was my idea.

- Hey.

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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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    "I'll Always Know What You Did Last Summer" Scripts.com. STANDS4 LLC, 2024. Web. 24 Dec. 2024. <https://www.scripts.com/script/i'll_always_know_what_you_did_last_summer_10539>.

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