If there was ever a film that proved you can throw together an all-star cast, a high-concept premise, and Joel Schumacher’s neon lighting fetish and still end up with cinematic CPR that never quite takes—Flatliners is it. On paper, this should have been a sleek, terrifying exploration of mortality. Instead, it’s the cinematic equivalent of watching five medical students dare each other to lick a frozen pole until their tongues stick, all while pretending it’s profound.
The Premise: Goth Jenga with Defibrillators
The setup sounds deliciously twisted: five ambitious medical students decide that studying for exams is boring and that the best way to spend their free time is to literally kill themselves in turns. Not permanently, mind you—they have their buddies zap them back to life after a minute or two. The stated reason is to “see what lies beyond death,” which is apparently worth risking permanent brain damage. Because nothing screams “future doctor” like using a hospital defibrillator the way frat boys use a keg.
Nelson (Kiefer Sutherland) spearheads the project, because every group of idiots needs one alpha idiot. His crew includes Julia Roberts, Kevin Bacon, William Baldwin, and Oliver Platt. With this lineup, the movie should have been unstoppable. Instead, it flatlines right alongside its characters.
The Afterlife: Hallmark Channel with Extra Guilt
So what happens when they die? Surely some grand cosmic revelation, right? Nope. They get haunted by their childhood traumas, like a cross between a slasher movie and a very expensive group therapy session.
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Nelson sees a boy he bullied as a kid, who proceeds to beat him up every time he closes his eyes. Yes, the afterlife is apparently a middle school grudge match.
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Kevin Bacon’s David sees a girl he taunted as a kid, Winnie, who still hasn’t gotten over being called names. She shows up to roast him like it’s an eternal open mic night.
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William Baldwin’s Joe is haunted by a parade of women he secretly videotaped having sex with him. His “hell” is basically being canceled before cancel culture was even a thing.
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Julia Roberts’ Rachel relives the trauma of her father’s suicide, which is played with all the subtlety of a daytime soap opera.
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Oliver Platt’s Randy doesn’t flatline at all, proving he is the only smart character in the movie. He’s basically the guy in Jaws who says, “Maybe we shouldn’t go swimming with the killer shark,” and everyone else ignores him.
Instead of deep, existential terror, the afterlife turns out to be a personalized episode of Maury, hosted by your guilty conscience.
The Tone: Self-Important Nonsense
Joel Schumacher directs this movie like it’s the Sistine Chapel of horror, drenching everything in blue neon lighting and thunderous organ music. Every scene feels like it should end with Batman swooping in. It’s a story about five kids playing with death, but Schumacher treats it like Shakespeare: “Alas, poor Nelson, I knew him well—pass me the paddles.”
The problem is the film thinks it’s profound, but it’s about as deep as a kiddie pool filled with Mountain Dew. What lies beyond death? According to Flatliners, it’s guilt, melodrama, and a lot of slow-motion running through hallways.
The Characters: Overachievers in Idiocy
Each cast member is wildly talented, but the script gives them little to do except pout, shout, and occasionally convulse.
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Kiefer Sutherland: Plays Nelson like a man auditioning for “Most Punchable Face in Chicago.” He struts around like the self-appointed messiah of near-death research while looking like he hasn’t slept since kindergarten.
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Julia Roberts: Somehow manages to deliver lines about dead dads with straight-faced conviction, proving she was destined for better movies.
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Kevin Bacon: Spends half the film being guilty about bullying a girl in the third grade. Imagine risking brain death over a childhood yo-mama joke.
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William Baldwin: His storyline is basically a sleazy VHS copy of Porky’s with extra shame.
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Oliver Platt: The voice of reason who constantly asks, “Are we sure this is a good idea?” and then goes along with it anyway. He’s the horror movie equivalent of the guy who brings chips to a murder party.
The Horror: PG-13 Ghosts with Daddy Issues
Despite its R rating, the scares are as limp as a corpse with rigor mortis. The ghosts aren’t scary; they’re just petty. A little kid punches Kiefer Sutherland in the face. Women taunt William Baldwin about his sex tapes. Julia Roberts’ dad keeps showing up like an awkward relative who doesn’t know when to leave Thanksgiving dinner. This isn’t horror—it’s Casper with trauma.
And the jump scares? Forget it. By the time a hallucination popped up, you were more likely to yawn than scream. The scariest part of Flatliners is the haircuts, which look like they were styled by Edward Scissorhands on his day off.
The Message: Don’t Be a Jerk, or Ghosts Will Annoy You
Eventually, the group realizes the way to stop their hauntings is by apologizing. That’s right—the great mystery of death, the ultimate secret of the afterlife, is basically Chicken Soup for the Guilty Soul. Say sorry, and the ghosts stop bothering you. It’s less “face your mortality” and more “send an apology text.”
Kevin Bacon apologizes to Winnie, who forgives him instantly like she’s been waiting her whole life for this mediocre redemption arc. William Baldwin gets dumped by his fiancée, so poof, his problems vanish. Julia Roberts cries about her dad, who explains he was addicted to morphine, and she’s cured. Kiefer Sutherland apologizes to the ghost of the kid he killed, who graciously forgives him after nine minutes of cardio-arrest cosplay.
So the moral of the story? Death is real, the afterlife exists, and it’s basically a cosmic HR department.
The Ending: Flatlined for Real
The climax involves Nelson flatlining again to face his bully’s ghost. Meanwhile, his friends try to resuscitate him in a sequence that drags on so long you start rooting for the flatline. But alas, Kevin Bacon zaps him back, and Nelson survives—now a slightly less awful person. The group walks out into the Chicago daylight, all smiles, like they didn’t just waste weeks playing Ouija board with medical equipment.
Final Thoughts
Flatliners isn’t scary, isn’t profound, and isn’t nearly as cool as it thinks it is. It’s a glossy, overblown after-school special wrapped in neon lights, starring some of Hollywood’s brightest young actors forced to play the dumbest med students in history. The concept of flirting with death for knowledge could have been a chilling meditation on mortality. Instead, it’s a lecture about bullying with a side of ghostly slapstick.
The title is fitting: this movie flatlines early and never gets resuscitated.

