Film Review
Despite its Grand Guignol excesses, paucity of plot and characters that
look as though they have been cut out of the flimsiest cardboard, this
exploitative gore fest manages to be a fairly respectable sequel to
John Carpenter's groundbreaking horror film,
Halloween
(1978). Eager to please in his directorial debut, Rick
Rosenthal makes every effort to replicate the style and format of the
original film, including the use of the handheld camera for
first-person perspective shots which contributed so much to the
atmosphere of that film.
The sequel is noticeably gorier than the original, as a result of
Carpenter's dogged insistence that this is what audiences wanted (the
substantially larger budget made it possible to
realise far more gruesome shock scenes). As a result
, Halloween II is much closer to
today's blood-drenched slasher movies, although it is very debatable
whether such an infusion of more explicit horror content makes the film
any more effective.
Jamie Lee Curtis and Donald Pleasence are both back to reprise their
roles and seem to be having the time of their lives.
Pleasance chews the scenery with such vigour that you wonder whether it
will still be standing by the end of the film. Such a histrionic
onslaught is entirely justified when you consider the dialogue he was
given. At least Pleasance brings some colour and life to the
film, which is more than can be said for ninety per cent of the
supporting cast. It is regrettable that Michael Myers is no
longer the mysterious shadow figure of the original film, but a stock
zombie that looks like it strayed off the set of a George Romero film.
Flawed as it is,
Halloween II
still manages to be an entertaining, highly suspenseful horror-thriller, vastly superior to
many of the slasher films that followed in its wake. It has more
than a touch of absurdity and provides a few unintentional laughs, but
redeems itself with its denouement, the extremely tense showdown
between Loomis and The Shape in the deserted Illinois hospital.
This was where John Carpenter intended to end the story, but audiences
wanted more, and so the
Halloween
saga continued, with other six sequels and two remakes, so far...
© James Travers 2009
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
Michael Myers has been shot dead by Dr Loomis, or so it seemed on that
fateful Halloween night in 1978. When Loomis and Sheriff Brackett
fail to find the killer's body, it is apparent that he is still very
much alive and will almost certainly strike again. In a state of
profound shock, Laurie Strode, one of Myers' near-victims, is taken to
Haddonfield Memorial Hospital, unaware, or perhaps half-suspecting,
that Myers is determined to get to her. After a few more random
killings, Myers finds his way into the hospital and sets about
slaughtering the entire night staff. Nothing will prevent him
from butchering Laurie. Having discovered the reason for Myers'
interest in Laurie, Loomis makes a desperate attempt to save her,
knowing that he is up against the human embodiment of pure evil...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by frenchfilms.org and must not be copied.