It’s too hard to talk
about these without spoiling everything all over the place, sorry.
What I Liked:
Unlike the Insidiouses and many other
ghost/haunting movies these do seem to have some rules and structure to
them. The first film looks at how the
demon possession goes down from the adult/parent perspective and the second
takes it from the child’s point of view.
To be clear though these are two separate cases and not the same
possession from two different standpoints.
The angle of the children being the killers is kinda
neat. This idea is not at all
unprecedented as evidenced by The Omen,
Children of the Corn, Firestarter, Village of the Damned (here’s my review
of John Carpenter’s 1995 version if you’re curious) and others, but it’s certainly
a weird way to go. Usually how you get
away with this is to have the kid be taken over by some sort of supernatural or
alien presence. That way you can say the
child isn’t just pure evil and killing everyone for no reason. The Sinisters
follow suit with a demon that’s really behind all of the deaths. A killer kid isn’t something I’d wanna see too
often but I’m glad the filmmakers went for the dicey twist.
What I Didn’t Like:
Using the old super 8 films to show us the grisly murders of the families in
the first one was fine because Ethan Hawke (The
Newton Boys) discovers the canisters and projector in the attic of his new
house. So it’s a mystery where they came
from and how they got there. In 2 the super 8 camera and films become
too central to the point where you have a small child running around trying to
film with this giant clunky device while attempting to kill people. It just looks stupid.
You have families being murdered in diverse and painfully
gruesome ways in the snuff films so these border on torture porn. The reason they don’t completely fall into
that category is because the victims aren’t actually tortured. They’re executed straight up without gore and
even very little blood. Ok, the one
where the killer places a live rat on people’s stomachs and covers it with a
bucket and then adds a hot coal on top to force the rat to chew through the abdomen
to escape is definitely pretty torture-y.
In fact it was totally used as a torture method in 2 Fast 2 Furious twelve years earlier.
The malevolent demon is called Bughuul (pronounced ba-ghool). That’s too damn silly sounding.
Dumbass jump scares.
Overall Impressions:
Not the worst set of demon possession movies I’ve come across but they’re not
that good either. They’re surprisingly
tolerable even though they follow the typical ghost picture spinning your
wheels formula of hearing creaky sounds and seeing visions of dead people
and/or demons with a snail’s pace progression of story development.
I think I liked 2
better because they changed it up by showing what the kid goes through during
the possession process. He has to deal
with peer pressure from dead children and I felt for the little bastard. Also I liked that they didn’t up and change
the rules on you to fit whatever terrible storyline they wanted. They stuck to what they laid out in the
original and changed the point of view to keep things fresh. That’s a good idea. But you kinda need to see the first one to
understand the sequel.
These aren’t must sees but if you’re into ghost stories
you’ll probably like them. If you aren’t
don’t worry about it, there’s better stuff out there.
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