Sinister 2 backdrop
Sinister 2 poster

SINISTER 2

2015 CA HMDB
agosto 19, 2015

Después de que Ashley Oswalt descuartizara a su familia y desapareciera con Mr. Boggie, una madre y sus hijos mellizos se mudan a la casa donde unos niños poseídos cometieron los asesinatos. Mr. Boogie ha vuelto y acecha a uno de ellos.

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Equipo

Produccion: Jason Blum (Producer)Jeanette Volturno (Executive Producer)Brian Kavanaugh-Jones (Executive Producer)Charles Layton (Executive Producer)
Guion: Scott Derrickson (Writer)C. Robert Cargill (Writer)
Musica: Tom Hajdu (Original Music Composer)Andy Milburn (Original Music Composer)tomandandy (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Amy Vincent (Director of Photography)

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Francesco Mirabelli
Francesco Mirabelli
La joven Courtney, madre de dos niños y huyendo de un marido violento que busca desesperadamente la custodia de sus hijos, se muda a una casa junto a una iglesia desacralizada donde se cometió un terrible crimen ritual. Mientras tanto, el exsubcomisario So&So, ahora detective privado, busca lugares específicos de crímenes para destruirlos, ya que sabe que estos sitios son fundamentales para la perpetuación de la maldición del demonio Buhguul. Las historias de ambos inevitablemente se cruzan, y Buhguul muestra un interés particular por los hijos de Courtney. En 2012, "Sinister" fue uno de los primeros grandes éxitos de BlumHouse Productions, lo suficientemente potente como para dar lugar a una franquicia. Con una inversión mínima de apenas 3 millones de dólares y una recaudación que se acercó a los 100 millones en todo el mundo, el pequeño filme de terror protagonizado por Ethan Hawke representaba un excelente ejemplo de minimalismo aplicado funcionalmente a la construcción magistral de tensión. La historia del escritor obsesionado con los crímenes que documenta, al punto de convertirse en protagonista de una historia igualmente macabra y sangrienta, se actualiza en "Sinister 2" al centrarse en otros personajes. Una vez más, los niños están en el centro de la trama, pero de manera más prominente en comparación con el filme de Scott Derrickson. En esta secuela, la dimensión infantil es fundamental para explorar una trama que enfatiza la maldad, lo políticamente incorrecto y el gore. Consciente de los giros de "Sinister" y del mecanismo que lo sustenta, esta secuela sumerge al espectador directamente en el corazón de la historia desde una perspectiva diferente. Si en la primera película el protagonista descubría progresivamente los detalles del insidioso actuar del demonio, aquí vemos la historia a través de los ojos de un niño, víctima designada de Buhguul. Seguimos así la obra de persuasión que el monstruo prepara mediante los fantasmas de otros niños que ha corrompido para preparar el ritual que llevaría al sacrificio de una familia inocente. Con referencias muy evidentes a un clásico sobre jóvenes asesinos como "Los chicos del maíz" y una escena clave del clásico de George Romero "La noche de los muertos vivientes" que se muestra de forma profética en la televisión, "Sinister 2" avanza sin grandes sorpresas hacia un final demasiado apresurado. La efectividad de la película reside completamente en los aterradores vídeos snuff que el pequeño Dylan se ve obligado a mirar y que fueron la verdadera revelación de la primera entrega. El director Ciarán Foy es muy consciente de ello y apuesta mucho por este elemento, elaborando mini películas dentro de la película cada vez más crueles y elaboradas. "Sinister 2" tiene el mérito de hacer más aceptable la inclusión de niños fantasma en la trama, un elemento que en la película anterior tenía un aire de intrusión considerable, pero termina creando una secuela que, en realidad, no aporta nada nuevo respecto a su predecesora. ¡Apenas suficiente!
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RESEÑAS DE LA COMUNIDAD (3)

Frank Ochieng

In filmmaker Scott Derrickson’s original ‘Sinister’, this writer’s critical impressions toward the sub-par psychological yarn was rather blunt if not consistent with the steady diet of formulaic fightfests. The following passage pretty much sums up the cinematic sentiments from the movie’s critique:

'At best Sinister is a lukewarm twitchy tale that routinely teases the audience with the obligatory guessing game of whether or not the conjured up evil-minded spookiness is imagined…cheapened scare tactics, an ambiguous monstrous myth, transparent characterizations and a mixed bag of a supernatural storyline barely put any Sinister thoughts in our heads worth contemplating.‘

Well, say what you will about the first ‘Sinister’ outing but it at least had some slight star power in lead Ethan Hawke whose presence was one of the minor pluses in Derrickson’s shoddy shocker. In director Ciaran Foy’s (‘The Citadel’) tingling yet generic ‘Sinister II’, we hardly experience the essence of top-notch horror-induced hedonism. Feverishly flat, the creepily clichéd ‘Sinister II’ continues the tedious tradition of assembling sure-fire goose bump moments yet never really fortifying these mentioned moments with any heft of genuine suspense or titillating intelligence. At best, ‘Sinister II’ skillfully demonstrates its somber shell but horror movies in general, at least ones that strive for sophistication and coherence, should not continuously hide behind the sketchy synthetics of macabre mediocrity.

'Sinister II’ dutifully shares its symbolic connection with its predecessor. For starters, ‘Sinister’ alum James Ransone (the deputy from the first film) returns to the perverse playground while being blessed with a lead role in this frightful follow-up. After his dubious dealings with the Oswalt family in the first film’ where he was part of the police force’ the former law enforcer now works as a private investigator in his continued quest to combat that pesky spirit known as the demon Baghuul. Ransone’s ex-deputy is consumed with the shocking murders that took place previously, so it is his mission to eradicate the further Baghuul-instigated mayhem.

The newest family involved in the menacing mix consists of an Indiana farmhouse containing a mother named Courtney Collins (Shannyn Sossamon) and her two young sons (real-life brothers Dartanain Sloan and Robert Sloan). Unfortunately, Courtney is battling back and forth with her insufferable and indignant husband (Lea Coco) as her poor boys are caught up in the heated drama. The last thing that Courtney needs is a domestic distraction in the farmhouse that incorporates the spookiness of the Baghuul’s mischievousness. Thus, the hapless deputy-turned-PI must do what it takes to prevent the Baghuul from corrupting the psyches of this vulnerable family unit.

The film’s screenplay, written by Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill, plays up to its predictable strengths as the audience is already steeped in the ‘Sinister’ mindset. Unfortunately, the element of mystery and intrigue is already compromised because ‘Sinister II’ does not really leave much second guessing for its titillating tension since it already displayed the same kind of copycat gloom-and-doom blueprint as evidenced in the first installment. In echoing the familiar patterns of eerie scare tactics, this sequel merely mirrors the shady shenanigans found in the first showing that was not that innovative the original time around. Sure, the unsettling imagery does have some warranted punch that leaves somewhat of a horrific impact. The grainy and gruesome home film angle showing a family’s hanging is undoubtedly quite affecting but the shock factor is brief and oddly forgettable. One is left wondering if there are enough tingly tricks up Foy’s desperate sleeve to arm ‘Sinister II’ with more than just drab shadows and twitchy innuendo.

Indeed, ‘Sinister II’ is atmospheric and bleak and does a sure fire job of creating a dank and disturbing universe where the percolating peril steadily brims. However, that is the problem with ‘Sinister II’ as it settles for the surface-base hedonistic haunting without committing to anything morbidly motivating sans the convoluted creepy conventions. Ransone’s bid to expose the imposing beast Baghuul while protecting the fragile welfare of the vulnerable Collins is genuinely a number-by-number plotline that feels stillborn. Even the dastardly Baghuul is stripped of anything particularly mysterious or diabolical for the audience to get on board and become mortified. Resembling a late gray-bluish sandpaper-faced rocker in The Doors’ frontman Jim Morrison with long stringy hair and mod attire, the Baghuul does nothing to really stimulate the gory imagination of ‘Sinister’s movie-making mythology

Little beauty and the rock n' roll attire Beast is something being presented as quite SINISTER. Little beauty and the rock n’ roll attire Beast is something being presented as quite SINISTER. In the long run, ‘Sinister II’ sings a spooky song in many ways but arms its tepid tune with the continued cheap thrills and false jump edits that are so annoyingly common in contemporary creepfests. ‘Sinister’s crime is not so much the calculating presence of a haunt hipster looking to stunt the growth of bewildered housing inhabitants as it is following the pedestrian path of boofests with banal bangs of exhilaration.

Sinister II (2015)

Focus Features

1 hr 30 mins.

Starring: James Ransone, Shannyn Sossamon, Dartanain Sloan, Robert Sloan and Lea Coco

Directed by: Ciaran Foy

MPAA Rating: R

Genre: Horror/Psychological Thriller/Supernatural & Suspense

Critic’s rating: * * stars (out of 4 stars)

Reno

Reno

4 /10

What's the most dangerous? The dark force or the evil father.

The first film was good, I enjoyed it, but not scary. So a sequel was expected and it failed to live up to the standards of the original. I would say, it was a decent horror film, with more story and drama than the creepy atmosphere. One character retained from the previous and the core theme remained, but tried a different method of narration. Something like 'Goodnight Mommy' with two brothers and mystery events surrounding them.

It definitely lacks what a horror film required the most, and predictable too. But the story wise, it was decent, because the actors did a good job. So it is an average film. I expected a better ending and it did not conclude at its best leaving me disappointing. The way it ended might have been the suitable for the story, but I wasn't impressed. Again, another sequel is most certain, so I think this tale is not over yet and chances are very high that the story would follow with the same cast.

It was not a bad flick, but not a follow-up you would have wanted. If you're looking for a genuine horror film, then you should skip it. There's nothing brilliance to appreciate at any level. Overall, I too felt it should have been better in some places. So my advise is if you forget its genre and try to enjoy that you're watching some movie that you don't know its category then surely would have a decent time with it.

4/10

mattwilde123

mattwilde123

3 /10

Modern horror sequels are often failures. I thought that as the first film wasn't great that I wouldn't be as disappointed if this film turned out to be bad. I was wrong, Compared to this, the first instalment was a masterpiece and this made me realise how it was successful at achieving its goals sometimes.

'Sinister 2' was quite scary in places. No doubt, the cinema playing the film super loud helped elevate the jump scares though. The creepy depictions of murder in the first film were crazily overdone in this.

The screenplay was terrible. The main story was stale and predictable and the characters were unsympathetic and cold.

The performances were poor all over this film in particularly the ghost children seemed like they were performing a rubbish school pantomime.

Overall, I can't be too surprised with what I thought of this film but, sadly, I can see sequels for this being churned out more and more in the future.

★½

Reseñas proporcionadas por TMDB