After twenty five goddamn years we’re served up a true Leprechaun sequel. All the other films produced in the wake of the original acted more as reboots that didn’t acknowledge any previous events. But now, NOW!, we return to the house in the middle of nowhere North Dakota with the clover patch, the barn and the well where the Leprechaun melted. A couple of decades of neglect hasn’t changed the place much.
In typical rebootquel fashion the daughter of Jennifer
Anniston’s character, Lila (Taylor Spreitler (Amityville: The Awakening)),
comes to the house because it’s been turned into a sorority associated with the
local college. She specifically
transfers here and joins the sorority because of her connection. Her mother died recently crippled by the fear
of the Leprechaun potentially lurking in the shadows. Lila had to take care of her because she
refused to leave her house. By visiting
the ol’ homestead where all this shit started I think Lila’s looking for
answers as to what drove her mother insane.
Since the house is isolated and a fair distance from the
school the students are allowed to experiment with becoming self-sufficient as
part of their curriculum. So they must
grow their own food, provide their own electricity through solar, dispose of
their own waste and source their own drinking water. Additionally they haven’t gotten around to
setting up the equipment that would give them cell service and internet. So naturally there’s no calling for help when
shit goes down.
Now I know what you’re thinking, the well with the
Leprechaun carcass is gonna cause trouble.
Ok, yes but they kinda messed this part up in my opinion. First I should say that Ozzie (Mark Holton (Teen
Wolf)) is the only recurring character from the old cast. He’s the dimwit painter who accidentally
swallows one of the gold coins. He ends
up giving Lila a lift from the bus station to the house. When he gets there the well geysers up and
some water gets in his mouth which allows the Leprechaun to come back to life
and burst through his stomach. There’s
some bullshit the Lep spews about how he could return at his discretion and
only decided that now was the right time.
Look, you could’ve simply had Ozzie ask for a glass of water when he
drops off Lila and not realize it’s from the well, which presumably hasn’t been
used in twenty five years. The Lep’s
essence gets in the guy and slippitly slap he’s back in business. This is such an easy fix. Anyway, the Leprechaun wants his gold back
and attacks everyone at the sorority.
Getting a bit more technical the humor feels off. All the modern meta jokes I didn’t care for
that much and also a bunch of the characters behaving like assholes I think is
supposed to be funny. However, the
combination of the cinematography being dark and totally serious and the movie
opting to be pretty gory doesn’t completely add up. Comedy mixed with blood and guts can
certainly be a winning combo if done carefully but it doesn’t gel that well
here. Humor is extremely tricky to land
where camera setup, editing, performance, soundtrack and rhythm all need to
work together in a precise manner. And
it’s not that the other Leprechaun films are hilarious or anything it’s
just that this one seems like they’re trying hard to jam in jokes all over the
place where they don’t fit. The one gag
that made me chuckle though is when the Leprechaun is momentarily distracted by
disorganized shoes in a closet and goes to neaten them up. And when he gets to a pair of Crocs instead
of putting them away he just throws them in the garbage.
One major aspect that must be applauded is they chose to do
almost all of the effects practical. One
dude gets split in half vertically so the front part of his body and the back
part of his body separate and they do it with models and props and tons of fake
blood and everything. Even the few moments
where they use a green screen or CGI it doesn’t look terrible. The new design of the Leprechaun is cool and pointier,
heads roll, green blood flies, entrails spill, etc. This is easily the strongest aspect of the
picture and might be worth checking out for alone.
Overall this is pretty ok.
I had a decent enough time. It’s at
least as good as its predecessor and certainly better than parts 4-6.
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