HALLOWEEN II (2009)
Reviewed by Jerry Saravia
Clearly the original "Halloween" movies are too innocent for today's jaded tastes. And maybe today's younger audience needs to be pummelled by relentless, grisly violence in order to stay awake. But I look for more in a horror film than gore - I love menace, atmosphere, imagination, interesting characters and, yes, some blood-curling fun to make your palms sweat. Rob Zombie's "Halloween II" is not any fun at all, though it is remotely imaginative and it does have an eerie atmosphere. It is the characters populating this atmosphere that make me vomit.
Zombie's sequel begins competently enough with a brief flashback to a young Michael Myers discussing white horses with his mother (Sheri Moon Zombie). Then we flashforward to the dreaded Halloween night where poor Laurie Strode (Scout Taylor-Compton) is clutching a handgun and is in a blood-drenched fever state after allegedly killing the one and only Michael Myers. So far, not bad. Then the ambulance picks up Michael Myers' supposedly dead body and we get one killing of a lecherous medic who has a passing interest in having sex with corpses, followed by the driver who is killed on impact after crashing into a cow! Then we get a hospital sequence where deadly Mike Myers arrives, chases Laurie, but not before he can lunge his knife repeatedly into a nurse. Then there is another gratuitous killing, and suddenly Laurie wakes up and is in her bedroom. She lives with the Bracketts, which include ponytailed Sheriff Brackett (Brad Dourif) who has a fond remembrance of Lee Marvin, and Annie, the sheriff's daughter (played by Danielle Harris, a Halloween series veteran) who survived Myers' wrath.
"Halloween II" pushes forward with the return of Dr. Loomis (Malcolm McDowell), Mikey's former psychiatrist, as he has written a book about Myers and has become something of a celebrity. In the book, he reveals that Laurie is actually Angela Myers, which would be Michael Myers' sister! A big no-no since poor Laurie is unaware of her identity. Loomis himself seems to relish being famous, which is an askew transformation from the subdued Loomis of the original (though McDowell's acting was more over-the-top there in the first film). McDowell, however, is in top form here - he can play an obnoxious prick better than anyone and does it with class.
Most of "Halloween II" is certainly a significant improvement over the Zombie original, a putrid work that was scarier in its prologue than anything following it. Unfortunately, Zombie can't let his gore fans down and we get several grislier-than-thou killings, most of them unnecessary and simply marking time. Most alarming is a strip joint sequence where a naked woman's head is repeatedly thrust against a glass surface and a man's face is relentlessly stomped by Michael. The sequence is just an excuse to see Michael getting his violent fix since the characters have no relation to anything else in the story, nor are they mentioned earlier in the film. Such bloody mayhem takes away from the beautiful, truly hypnotic shots of Sheri Moon as Michael's mother, dressed as a white angel with blonde curls and standing next to a white horse (one reviewer pointed out that this movie is a semi-remake of "The Blue Bird" with Shirley Temple). These are Michael Myers's visions and they are startling to watch, and shared by Laurie during her many feverish dreams, but they add up to little (though there is an early musical accompaniment that includes "Nights in White Satin" by the Moody Blues). The visions of Michael's angelic mother tell Mikey to continue killing, which is confounding, but since this is Michael's demented mind, I guess we shouldn't be surprised.
And for all the outrage Laurie expresses about Loomis' book and of trying to get past her trauma, she has a Charlie Manson poster above her bed! And all she wants to do is party! Since the film barely develops her character or her traumatic nightmares, she is simply another anonymous victim for Mikey. She does have a haunting moment at the end where she emits a devilish smile. Unfortunately, it seems dimly haunting when you consider how little we really know about Laurie.
And what is it with Michael Myers in this film? At times, he wears the infamous William Shatner mask, and other times he wears no mask, has a full beard and looks like Rob Zombie's doppelganger! Plus he grunts every times he punches a hole through a door, a wall or someone's face.
"Halloween II" has oodles of atmosphere and some fantastic footage of a Halloween party that adds tension and a level of wickedness - unlike the Zombie original, at least it seems to actually take place on Halloween. Outside of McDowell's performance and Dourif's scenery-chewing lines and some occasional suspense in the finale, "Halloween II" nevertheless amps up the gore and keeps resisting its wicked visuals and some truly heart-stopping feverish montages for blood-splattering murders. And Laurie's relentless high-pitched screams, not to mention several unsavory characters that only last on screen long enough to be decimated, brings tedium to a somewhat more ambitious "Halloween" sequel than anyone could have expected.



