V/H/S/2 (VHS 2) backdrop
V/H/S/2 (VHS 2) poster

V/H/S/2 (VHS 2)

V/H/S/2

2013 US HMDB
giugno 6, 2013

Alla ricerca di uno studente di cui si son perse le tracce, due investigatori privati irrompono nella sua casa abbandonata e trovano una raccolta di misteriose videocassette. Nel visionare il contenuto delle registrazioni, si renderanno conto che dietro alla scomparsa vi sono motivi molto terrificanti.

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Troupe

Produzione: Kyle David Crosby (Producer)Robin Cowie (Executive Producer)Rob Cotterill (Producer)Simon Barrett (Executive Producer)Gary Binkow (Producer)Tom Owen (Executive Producer)Adam Wingard (Executive Producer)Kimo Stamboel (Producer)Roxanne Benjamin (Producer)Chris Harding (Producer)Rangga Maya Barack-Evans (Executive Producer)Zak Zeman (Executive Producer)Adam Jenkins (Executive Producer)Brad Miska (Producer)Jamie Nash (Producer)
Sceneggiatura: Gareth Evans (Writer)Timo Tjahjanto (Story)Jason Eisener (Writer)John Davies (Writer)
Musica: Aria Prayogi (Original Music Composer)Fajar Yuskemal (Original Music Composer)James Guymon (Original Music Composer)Steve Moore (Original Music Composer)
Fotografia: Tarin Anderson (Director of Photography)Seamus Tierney (Director of Photography)Abdul Dermawan Habir (Director of Photography)Jeff Wheaton (Director of Photography)Stephen Scott (Director of Photography)

RECENSIONI (1)

Roberto Giacomelli
Due investigatori privati stanno indagando sulla scomparsa di uno studente. Dopo essersi intrufolati nella sua abitazione, trovano una moltitudine di videocassette. Così, mentre uno va ad esplorare la casa, l’altra comincia a guardare il contenuto dei VHS. Primo VHS. Un uomo subisce un intervento chirurgico sperimentale in seguito a un incidente. Gli viene applicato un occhio bionico, ma oltre alla normale vista, l’uomo acquista anche la facoltà di percepire le presenze ultaterrene che lo circondano. Secondo VHS. Un biker sta facendo un’escursione in un parco ma viene attaccato da quello che sembra essere a tutti gli effetti un morto vivente. Da quel momento il biker si trasforma a sua volta in uno zombi a caccia di carne viva. Terzo VHS. Una troupe televisiva riesce a concordare un’intervista esclusiva in un palazzo in cui c’è la sede di una misteriosa setta indonesiana. Mentre il giornalista sta intervistando il guru della setta, nell’edificio si scatena letteralmente l’inferno. Quarto VHS. Una ragazza, il fratellino, il ragazzo di lei e gli amici di lui stanno passando una nottata brava in casa. Nel bel mezzo di una festa improvvisata, accade qualche cosa di strano e inquietante: un blackout è seguito da fastidiosi rumori e strane figure si riescono a intrufolare nell’abitazione: un’invasione aliena è in atto! Dopo il buon successo ottenuto da “V/H/S” nel 2012, grazie soprattutto al passa parola sul web, Brad Miska, boss del celebre portale web dedicato al cinema horror BloodyDisgusting.com, tenta la carta del sequel. Stessa struttura ad episodi, stessa tecnica del mockumentary e un regista confermato, Adam Wingard, per un proseguo che per diverse ragioni riesce a superare il prototipo. Quello del cinema a episodi e della tecnica del mockumentary sono diventati i territori prediletti del panorama horror low bodget e indipendente, dunque il proliferare in ogni dove di film di questo tipo sta ovviamente offuscando l’alone di novità che inizialmente ammantava queste produzioni sperimentali. La relativa “novità” che poteva star dietro a “V/H/S” è dunque scomparsa in questo secondo capitolo, vista anche la riproposizione in carta carbone in tutto e per tutto del film originario. Eppure in “V/H/S 2” si percepisce un miglioramento, un aggiustamento del tiro su alcune questioni che avevano convinto meno nel film precedente. Innanzitutto c’è una maggiore qualità generale degli episodi, che diventando quattro (più la cornice), rendendo più fluido e compatto l’intero film. Si comincia allo stesso identico modo del precedente, ovvero con una cornice che possa giustificare e unire tra di loro le storie che vediamo. “Tape 49”, questo è il titolo, porta la firma di Simon Barrett, già autore degli script di “Dead Birds – La casa maledetta”, “Frankenfish – Pesci mutanti”, “You’re Next” e di un segmento del primo “V/H/S”. In questo caso, pur non colpendo particolarmente per tecnica e inventiva, la cornice sembra avere una maggiore funzione narrativa all’interno dell’opera, cogliendo con maggiore efficacia la tradizione del mockumentary di matrice soprannaturale. Il primo episodio, “Phase 1: Clinical Trails” è il peggiore del quartetto dal momento che ricorda in maniera sospetta un episodio della prima stagione del serial antologico “Black Mirror”, che a sua volta ricordava in maniera altrettanto sospetta l’episodio diretto da Tobe Hooper di “Body Bags”. A dirigerlo c’è Adam Wingard, regista di “You’re Next”, che possiede giusto la buona intuizione di giustificare il POV mostrandolo proprio come innaturale video soggettiva dell’occhio bionico del protagonista, che tra l’altro è interpretato dallo stesso regista. Per il resto, si abbonda in presenze fantasmatiche dentro casa che ricordano troppo mille altri film visti negli ultimi anni, non riuscendo mai ne a spaventare ne a coinvolgere. Il secondo episodio, “A Ride in the Park”, porta invece la firma di Eduardo Sànchez, celebre per essere parte del duo di “The Blair Witch Project” e per aver diretto i notevoli “Altered” e “Lovely Molly”. Questo episodio è molto interessante perché riesce a trovare un punto di vista interessante sulla stra-abusata tematica degli zombi. La novità dov’è? Mostrare tutto il film dalla soggettiva di uno zombi! O meglio, di un poveraccio che viene attaccato da uno zombi, muore e resuscita, trasformandosi in un morto vivente a sua volta. Seguiamo il protagonista nel suo frenetico girovagare e nella sua caccia, che culmina in un vero bagno di sangue. Innovativo e divertente. Il terzo episodio, “Safe Haven”, è il vero colpo di fulmine del film. Al timone abbiamo l’inglese Gareth Evans, passato alla ribalta con lo stupefacente action indonesiano “The Raid”, con il quale questo episodio di “V/H/S 2” ha diversi punti di contatto. Anche qui tutta l’azione si svolge in un condominio, ma stavolta non abbiamo un vespaio di criminali esperti di arti marziali, bensì una setta che gioca con il Diavolo e che cova al suo interno demoni mostruosi e sanguinari. Questo episodio, che è anche il più lungo dei quattro, ha un’azione frenetica che ne rende ben riconoscibile la mano di Evans e riesce a precipitare nel delirio più totale, con creature mostruose e splatter a livelli incredibilmente alti, con persone che esplodono e smembramenti. Da solo vale l’intero film! Per concludere c’è un altro episodio meritevole, “Slumber Party Alien Abduction”, di Jason Eisener, ovvero il regista del folle “Hobo with a Shotgun”. Qui si unisce l’horror adolescenziale con il film sui rapimenti alieni con una rara efficacia che porta a momenti davvero ricchi di tensione. Anche qui il ritmo è frenetico, con una prima parte incentrata sulle bravate dei ragazzini che festeggiano dentro casa e una seconda con la venuta di inquietanti “grigi” che sono preannunciati da un fastidioso boato. La novità maggiore sta nella soggettiva, che è quella del cagnolino di casa, su cui uno dei ragazzi ha montato a inizio film una videocamerina. Niente male davvero! Insomma, “V/H/S 2” è un sequel di qualità, ha il limite di riproporre nel medesimo modo le idee che erano già dietro il primo film, però allo stesso tempo riesce a raddrizzare il tiro con maggior compattezza e una più alta qualità generale degli episodi… poi c’è quello firmato da Evans che da solo rende questo film assolutamente consigliabile. Aggiungete mezza zucca.
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RECENSIONI DALLA COMMUNITY (2)

LastCaress1972

Are you just about done with the anthology horror mini-revival? Sick to death of cinéma vérité? Well... I was about to say, "Move along, then; there's nothing for you here," but that wouldn't be fair on this movie OR you. If you're through with first-person perspective found-footage portmanteau horrors then fine, but just stay for one more. Please? Because it's a belter, this one.

Last year's V/H/S was IMO terrific, but it had its flaws. The wraparound story and the first story proper gave the movie a disturbing early feeling of misogyny thanks to both stories' protagonists having sexual gratification of one manner or another as their principal reason for filming their actions, the film's running time struggled to cope with six tales being told, and the shaky first-person cameras were the shakiest of shaky, nausea-inducing cameras in the history of the first-person perspective. Thankfully for the sequel, nobody's shooting footage for the sake of amateur pornography (an early tit-shot establishes our wraparound-segment protagonist as a private investigator, but that's it until some much lighter, more jocular sex-filming exchanges in the last segment, of which more later), V/H/S/2 is telling five stories in all rather than six (hopefully by V/H/S/3 they'll have learned a further lesson: The wraparound stories are completely redundant, so let's ditch 'em), and that extra time is put to good use, and the shaky-cam... it's still there of course - goes hand-in-hand with the territory - but it's just nowhere near as bad. For the most part.

So, to the stories themselves:

"Tape 49" - The wraparound segment, directed by Simon Barrett (who wrote the wraparound segment for V/H/S - "Tape 56" - as well as the segment "The Sick Thing That Happened to Emily When She Was Younger" for that earlier movie; he also wrote You're Next and the IMO excellent horror/western Dead Birds). Concerning a private eye and his partner on the trail of a missing student, they come across a house not unlike the one in the first picture, full of not much but stacks of old switched-on CRT televisions and VHS cassette players, and even larger stacks of VHS tapes themselves. They find a laptop with footage of the missing boy, sitting in that very room and explaining about how watching some of these VHS tapes in a certain order will... affect people. Quite how, I'll not say. Suffice to say though that while our private dick searches the house, his partner sits and watches the tapes (these are the four segments making up the main body of V/H/S/2), and trouble abounds. It's a big upgrade on the unlikeable wraparound from the first movie but it's still largely unnecessary and despite some good horror action towards the very end, it made little sense and was subsequently by virtue of its nature the weakest tale of the lot.

Segment 1. "Phase I Clinical Trials" - Directed by Adam Wingard (You're Next, V/H/S segment "Tape 56", The ABCs of Death segment "Q is for Quack"), this is a fairly straightforward and derivative piece (The Sixth Sense? The Eye?) about a guy who, following an eye operation to replace his blind right eye with an experimental electronic eye which for the purposes of data collection records everything it "sees" (a fairly ingenious if slightly laboured use of the first-person perspective I thought, also neatly sidestepping the thorny "Why are they still FILMING?!?" issue that besets all of these sorts of films), starts seeing - you guessed it - dead people. Nothing original to see here in terms of the story, but Wingard's ever-improving directional skills keep the tension levels up and interesting throughout. Not an especially strong start, but a decent start.

Segment 2. "A Ride in the Park" - Co-directed by the criminally-underrated Eduardo Sánchez (yes, him. Co-director of found-footage great-grandaddy The Blair Witch Project; also did the absolutely fantastic Altered, plus Seventh Moon and Lovely Molly) and his long-time producer buddy Gregg Hale, and co-written by Sánchez and his long-time writing partner Jamie Nash, this one came with heavy expectations and it didn't disappoint at all. A cracking flat-out zombie fest filmed almost entirely from the perspective of a cyclist's helmet-mounted Go-Pro camera. Our - hero? - Mike takes his bike out for a lovely early-morning spin through the park and is immediately attacked and bitten by a zombie, one of several ambling through these woods. He escapes, runs away, staggers, falters, drops to the floor and dies. Then he gets up. From there on in it's a zombie's-eye view of the carnage and gore, finishing with a flourish on a surprisingly touching note. For zombies, like. Excellent short story. Probably the best segment not only of this movie so far (it's certainly that) but of the V/H/S franchise so far.

Until...

Segment 3. "Safe Haven" - Another strong directorial collaboration here, this time between Gareth Huw Evans (The Raid) and Timo Tjahjanto (The ABCs of Death segment "L is for Libido"). Taking up 30 minutes of V/H/S/2's entire runtime (and worth every second), Safe haven concerns a documentary news crew who - using both conventional professional cameras and mics plus hidden "button"-cams - go to film the shenanigans at a remote Indonesian compound, in which is housed a "Heaven's Gate"-style Doomsday cult comprised of their enigmatic leader - The Father - his "family" of wives/lovers and (many) children plus other assorted cult members. It is implied that "The Father" is promoting and engaging in underage sex with some of the members, and it's this angle the news crew most want to pursue. They end up however with something very different.

Managing to look and feel like an exquisite blend of the co-directors' other works The Raid and "L is for Libido" with a good dollop of Doom 3 or some other survival horror game thrown in for good measure, this short represents the best thing that either V/H/S movie has offered us thus far. It's creepy, then it's tense, then it's frantic and as gory as gore gets (all justifiably and within the context of a good tale well told, I might add). If there's a teeny-tiny criticism it could be that a practical visual effect at the very very end of the short (you'll know it when you see it) doesn't quite work and against the otherwise staggering look of all that preceded it, it's quite jarring. However, I'm nitpicking. "Safe Haven" is a superior piece and with a few dollars thrown at it could make an excellent and terrifying expanded movie in its own right.

Segment 4. "Slumber Party Alien Abduction" - directed by Jason Eisener (Hobo With a Shotgun, The ABCs of Death segment "Y is for Youngbuck"). Eisener seems to be a bit of a "love him or loathe him" director. I WANT to like him but I find his output as frustrating as it is novel, and this is no exception. Essentially, a bunch of kids of varying ages have free reign over their lakeside house, and fill their time with happy, video-based tomfoolery including strapping a camera to their dog to see what he films, blasting one another with urine-filled water guns and busting in on one anothers' "intimate" time, be that one of the girls with her boyfriend or one of the doofus young teenagers with his hand, a porno and some time to kill. So far, so goofy. Until a violent attack by a band of hostile classic "Grey" aliens kicks off. It's a good idea and the story itself is fine, but this is the one short in the pack that continues to suffer badly from the first movie's shaky-cam syndrome. Once the action starts, you'll struggle to see what's happening. Good stuff, but frustrating. And coming as it does after two truly excellent segments, just a trifle deflating.

So, segments 1 and 4 are of a standard comparable to the first movie, the wraparound piece is an improvement, but the middle two shorts are worth the ticket money on their own and elevate V/H/S/2 above its older sibling and above much of today's horror fare in general. Well recommended.

Gimly

Gimly

5 /10

In the past I have only ever reviewed anthology films as a whole, and by-and-large that's probably what I'll go back to doing in the future, but having just watched the last three quarters of the original V/H/S, then V/H/S/2 and V/H/S: Viral all in one sitting, it all sort of bleeds together and I mostly can't remember which one belongs where, so at least for now, I'm gonna try giving some very, very short reviews for each segment, rather than the overall films.

Tape 49: The framing device. These were always the silliest part of the franchise. It doesn't work very well as a jumping off point, and it doesn't work at all as a self-contained narrative.

Phase I Clinical Trials: Much better stuff from Adam Wingard, has some of the intensity found in the first V/H/S. One of the shorts I think would best translate to a full feature. Could benefit from some better acting though (could be said of all the segments, and isn't a deal breaker for me).

A Ride in the Park: Really just one thing going on here, but that's fine for a short film that's just one part of an anthology. A first-person zombie movie shot from the perspective of the zombie is a pretty dope idea. Could have commited to the formula harder, preferably, but the way it is shot I guess makes sense in terms of the larger V/H/S narrative.

Safe Haven: The best of what V/H/S/2 has on offer. Not perfect, and unexpectedly made me bring out my glasses to read the subtitles, which I guess arguably clashes with not only the other segments but indeed the "Found Footage" idea overall. Still, solid entry.

Slumber Party Alien Abduction: Probably the weakest. Weird choice to go out on. Tries to have fun but unfortunately just doesn't have the time to carry that idea to fruition before the desperate scramble for the "horror" in this found footage horror short.

Final rating:★★½ - Had a lot that appealed to me, didn’t quite work as a whole.

Recensioni fornite da TMDB