[2] Five years later, she takes a forensic psychology class taught by Marshall Kane, a world-renowned expert on deviant violent offenders.
[3] Also taking the class are Jason Korda, Chantal Etienne, Marisa Tavares, Eddie Sackman, Mary-Anne Nordstrom, Andrea Carter and Aaron Kroeker.
The unorthodox lesson prompts Aaron to reveal to Molly that he is aware of her past, which angers her as she does not want to discuss the trauma she endured.
Later that night, the group, excluding Aaron, meets for a study session which soon degenerates into an argument over Molly's overtly hostile attitude.
Chantal wakes up, panics, and drives the car forward into a tree which crushes Eddie's back, killing him.
Andrew Smith stated that "it's hardly the most original out there and can get a bit too pompous for its own good but it’s a cut above the normal standards for straight-to-DVD slash".
[5] Smith also stated that "Bruce Payne is the best actor in display here and manages to eat up the screen with a solid performance to give us a sense that not all as it may seem with him (although that may just be down to the fact that he looks like a nasty piece of work!)".
"[7] Ben Pollock stated that the film was "not the most original thriller available, but... is very entertaining nonetheless, and holds enough genuine thrills to sustain two hours of nail-biting".
[9] G. Noel Gross stated that "this latest Ripper ode is meant to coat-tail From Hell, but winds up resembling something unpleasant stuck to Johnny Depp's boots".
[10] In Richard Scheib's view "in the end, Ripper: Letter from Hell and its Jack the Ripper angle amounts to nothing more than another variation on the modern 90s/00s teen slasher films where the killer uses an improbable novelty motif – scary movies in Scream (1996), urban legends in Urban Legend (1998), Valentine’s Day in Valentine (2001) and so on".
[11] Ripper 2: Letter from Within is a 2004 British horror film featuring, again, the character Molly Keller, and it is about a treatment for her in a virtual world.