Kinar (Keira Sabhira) is about to go on a field trip with her class,
but suddenly she has a vision of a fatal accident and leaves the bus in
panic. A few others get off the bus with her - and are all saved when the
bus has a fatal accident a short time later. When Kinar foresees another
death later on (one of the kids who got off the bus with her), she starts to freak everyone out with
her premonitions. More kids who left the bus with her die, and eventually,
Kinar begins to see a pattern according to which the kids are to be killed
in a certain sequence. With the last survivors she saved from the bus,
Kinar heads for a haunted house to investigate - where one girl who is
supposed to be the next in line to be killed starts murdering those
further back in line to break the sequence and save her own life ... but
it amounts to nothing when she hasn't done too good a job killing anyone
and dies herself when the haunted house caves in. More people die, and
eventually, Kinar faces the culprit in a graveyard: A girl with a burnt
face who got so angry that the kids escaped a fate similar to or worse
than hers that she started executing her own brand of divine justice.
Kinar and the girl get into a fight, and before long it seems that Kinar
has breathed her last - when the ghost of her boyfriend, who was the last
victim of the crazy girl, saves her and sees to it that the girl gets her
just desserts. Admittedly there are some nice ideas in Miracle:
Menantang Maut, but in all, it follows the slasher formula a bit too
closely instead of developing something original, resembles the less than
special Final Destination a bit too much, and both the
resolution (the girl with the burnt face as the culprit) and the finale
(the ghost of one of the dead seeking revenge) are almost a bit
ridiculous. In all, Miracle: Menantang Maut is surely not the worst film
you've ever seen, but it doesn't hurt too much to give it a miss either.
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