Movie review: Hang up on dreadfully boring 'Black Phone 2'
Published in Entertainment News
It’s clear from the existence and execution of “Black Phone 2” that Universal and Blumhouse never expected 2021’s “The Black Phone” to be a hit. If there was an inkling this might have been more than a quick and dirty ‘70s-style riff on a boogeyman tale, there’s no way those in charge would have let their big baddie, the Grabber, be killed off at the end of the movie.
But a hit it was, and so for a sequel, the supernatural elements must be spun out, and ‘80s slasher classics consulted, especially since it’s now four years later, in 1982. Masked serial killer the Grabber, played by Ethan Hawke (apparently, we never really see his face though we do hear his voice), continues to haunt, torment, and maim children, despite the inconvenience of death.
Scott Derrickson and C. Robert Cargill co-wrote both films, with Derrickson behind the camera as director. The first was based on a short story by Joe Hill (the son of Stephen King), and is set in 1978 Denver, where plucky Finney Blake (Mason Thames) had to escape from the clutches of kidnapper the Grabber while fielding phone calls from the ghosts of the killer’s previous victims, offering tips and tricks. What distinguished “The Black Phone” was its shocking approach to violence with its young characters, who all sported entertainingly profane potty-mouths. While it was daring in its hard R material, and played on our basest, most basic fears, it didn’t reinvent the wheel, or even try to. However, the film’s supernatural phone conceit played well enough and young star Thames was outstanding.
In “Black Phone 2,” Finney’s a high school student, drowning his trauma in weed and schoolyard fights, now the bully himself. He’s protective over his sister Gwen (Madeleine McGraw), who has the gift of psychic sight, but mostly he just wants to check out from his own brain. But the sequel is primarily Gwen’s movie. She starts lucid dreaming and sleepwalking about phone calls from beyond — way beyond, like from their dead mother when she was a teenager, beyond.
The messages bring Gwen, Finney and her crush Ernesto (Miguel Mora) to a winter camp for Christian youth, Camp Alpine, now run by Mando (Demian Bichir) and his niece Mustang (Arianna Rivas). As it turns out, this camp is lousy with the ghosts of young dead boys — Finney, the phone is ringing and it won’t stop until you pick it up.
If “The Black Phone” dabbles in crimes that are taboo, even unforgivable in its depiction of brutality against innocent children, “Black Phone 2” commits its own unforgivable crime of being dreadfully boring. This movie is a snooze — and not just because all of the action takes place entirely during Gwen’s dreams.
The film can’t shake its lingering scent of “Stranger Things,” but for the sequel, the filmmakers turn for inspiration to another '80s icon: Freddy Krueger. The whole film is a “Nightmare on Elm Street” ripoff, with a disfigured killer stalking his prey through their subconscious. Those sequences are fine, action-packed if not entirely scary, but at least it’s something more rousing than the awake scenes, where the characters stand in one place and make speeches to each other about their trauma and character backstory. But the entire affair is monotonously one-note and dour, with only a few pops of wholly unintentional humor.
You realize almost immediately what the deal is with these ghost boys, but the film takes its sweet time explaining it all. It’s a fairly simple story, so you do understand why Derrickson gussies it up with grainy dream sequences and shaky 8mm flashbacks, and a pretty terrific electronic score composed by his son, Atticus Derrickson.
It’s also a bit surprising that the film turns out to be so pious and deeply Christian, which is a bit of an odd mix. For a film that’s this much about Jesus and the power of prayer, it also features a scene in which a kid’s face gets sliced in half with a windowpane. But horror’s trend toward the faith-based isn’t a surprise when you take a look at the success of the Bible-thumping “The Conjuring” franchise.
However, it seems like this might be the Grabber’s last hurrah. You’ll root for the characters to vanquish him only because then the drudgery might finally end. Who knows, maybe it’ll be a hit and they’ll figure out another way to reanimate this utterly uninspiring horror villain. Personally, I’ve had my fill of the Grabber’s grabbing.
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'BLACK PHONE 2'
1.5 stars (out of 4)
MPA rating: R (for strong violent content, gore, teen drug use, and language)
Running time: 1:54
How to watch: In theaters Oct. 17
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