Monday, January 31, 2011

Hamlet the Vampire Slayer - review

Director: Jason Witter

First released: 2008

Contains spoilers

I should hate it. By all that is right in films this should go straight to the bottom of the pile. Take Hamlet and then throw in a right royal splash of Buffy the Vampire Slayer. Film it on a budget so small that micro seems too big a description and then you have…

Actually you have something that, as long as you know it’s going to be a ‘B’ movie, actually works rather well. Shot in Black and White (bar a couple of colour scenes) and lifting the Hamlet story in a completely recognisable way we have…

George Bach as Horatio
Let’s start at the beginning and Horatio (George Bach) tells us that once in every generation… actually I’m guessing you know the speech. There has to be three takes as Hamlet (Kevin R Elder) is clearly not a female. Though he does want to be a male cheerleader. Cut to a girl, tooling up and hunting vampires, it would seem, down the local Goth club. Yet, after the killing she states that vampire’s do not exist – unlucky for her as Enrique Claudio (Doug Montoya) is there and he is a vampire.

Kevin R Elder as Hamlet
The gatekeepers are role playing geeks, the ghost (Elias Lee Francis IV) of Hamlet’s dad less floats around and more trudges, before telling Hamlet that his mother’s, Gertrude (Summer Olsson), new Latin lover… his own brother… is a vampire and killed him. Laertes (Chet Stillwood) is off to cheer-camp – though Polonius (Steve Lucero) wants him to go to military school. Ophelia (Leslie Nesbit) is vapid.

the rap video's the thing
Rather than the play being the thing, in this the rap video, featuring The Playa King (Rusty Rutherford), is the thing. A not-too subtly subtitled video (far from the subliminal effect Hamlet is after and one of the colour moments) that rather than getting a reaction from Claudio actually gets Ophelia admitting guilt! Rosenchad (Daniel T Cornish) and Guildenbrad (Scott Bryan) are turned into vampires and are taken out by the Scooby-team equivalent of Macbeth (Nick Lopez) and Othello (Andy Brooks).

beware the posion pom-pom
The gravediggers are actually robbing graves to create a zombie army featuring singing zombies. There is the occasional poo gag that we could have done without because the audacity of what Witter created was just so bizarre that faeces jokes seemed more puerile than normal and rather redundant. The duel between Hamlet and Laertes is actually a cheer-off with a poisoned pom-pom. I kid you not.

The acting is better than you would expect, for the most part. The core actors seemed comfortable in their roles, dialogue – modern, Buffy-speak or Shakespearian actually being delivered well. Ophelia bugged – but I am guessing that she was meant to. However there were moments that were genuinely funny. The self-effacing voice-overs and intertitles showed filmmakers who knew just how cheeky they were being.

a cheeky vampire, and a cheeky movie
After all that I have to give a score and, I am afraid, it won’t be high. I mean it can’t be. For all its charm and audacity, as a piece of cinema it is still poor. However – and this is important – sometimes a score can be low but the review is positive. We cannot deny films that are a guilty pleasure a viewing simply because they do not set the world of cinema alight. Sometimes we need a film that is amateur in many of its aspects but absolutely unapologetic with touches of genius showing through. There are actually moments that cinematography-wise look rather nice, like the Horatio opening (bar the poo-related intertitles) but they do lose their way occasionally - the Polonius death scene went on too long, I could see the idea behind it but it was too lengthy. 3 out of 10 is as high as I can go score wise but if you can live with a budget that is low, a film that is most definitely B and love audacity then this should be seen. I, for one, do not regret the time I spent watching it.

The imdb page is here.

Sunday, January 30, 2011

Kindaichi Case Files Special: The Case of the Vampire Legend Murder – review

Director: unknown

Release date: 2007

Contains spoilers

The Kindaichi Shounen no Jikenbo series has been a long running manga, and has spawned both anime and live action versions. This particular incarnation was one of two TV specials and was based on one of the manga case files.

It centres on Kindachi Hajime (Matsuno Taiki) a young man who seems a little lazy and slovenly but is in actual fact a genius and ace detective. In this he is travelling with Kenmochi Isamu (Kosugi Jurota) and Nanase Miyuki (Nakagawa Akiko).

crap bat bottle label
The start of the episode sees them having dinner in the Ruins hotel. Miyuki seems disgusted with his general manners and Isamu seems intent on getting drunk on the vampire wine (my interpretation of the crap bat on the bottle, anyway) that the hotel’s one staff member, Minato Aoko (Mitsuishi Kotono) brings up. Outside a stranger approaches through the rain.

the abandoned hospital
The episode then cuts back. The three are looking for a hot spring but apparently are lost and the rain is torrential. They reach a village that seems abandoned and take shelter at the front of an abandoned hospital. Just then a coach pulls up and offers them a lift. The driver is Hirakawa Toru (Nakao Ryusei), the owner of the ruins hotel, and his one passenger is Nekoma Junko (Higashi Saori), a journalist. As they pull away we see figures in the hospital.


Hiiro arrives
 At the hotel, which is dilapidated to say the least, we meet other guests. There is Futugami Ikuku, a doctor, and her companion Kaitani, who have come because of a letter sent to Ikuku. A last minute arrival comes in and scares Ikuku, he is the stranger we saw and is called Hiiro Keisuke (Ikeda Shuuichi). Miyuki goes to take a bath as Toru tells the tale of the vampire in the village.

the vampire
It seems that 100 years before a vampire came from Transylvania to Japan and killed at least one person. The family lived in the mansion that is now the hotel. Six years ago an incident occurred in the mansion again. The owner of the hotel died leaving his daughter who had a heart condition. She was admitted into the abandoned hospital to try to cure her. The villagers found her in the mansion, her neck bitten and staked her. Her body, they discovered, had been drained of blood.

Miyuki bound
The girl was called Yuria (Hisakawa Aya) and her portrait bears a striking resemblance to Miyuki. Miyuki, meanwhile, has been grabbed by the vampire and wakes bound in a room where she sees Ikuku on a bed and the vampire coming towards her, she passes out again. When she is found she has two punctures on her neck and Ikuku is dead. Everyone has an alibi and the phones are down. It’s up to Hajime to solve the crime…


bath of blood
 This was alright, given that I am not au fait with the series. We get a ruined, gothic hotel, a murder mystery, a bath of blood and a convoluted solution that I am not going to spoil. However, it isn’t the best anime I have ever seen and because it is the average length of an OVA – 45 minutes – it seems a little rushed in places.

All in all it deserves an above average 6 out of 10.

Saturday, January 29, 2011

The Hitchhiker: New Blood – review

Director: Joël Farges

First aired: 1991

Contains spoilers

Sometimes called The Hitchhiker and sometimes Deadly Nightmares, this was a series of short morality plays akin to anthology series such as the Twilight Zone. Most episodes went to the dark side of the human spirit, a few introduced a supernatural element.

This one had a supernatural twist – as it is being reviewed hear you already know what it is! The common theme through them all was the hitchhiker (Page Fletcher), who appeared (in scene) at the beginning and end of the episode, bookending it in a Rod Serling sort of way.

performance art
This episode concerned Leesa White (Rae Dawn Chong) an artiste. It begins with her performing a performance art piece called Darkness (that truthfully was a wee bit rubbish). By the end of it she turns to her suited friend Stephane (Jean-Philippe Chatrier) for his opinion. When his words seem unenthusiastic to her she turns on him and calls their love a joke – that is until she realises she can’t pay the rent. At that point she becomes all-loving, for a cheque.

the hitcher near the theatre
Leesa has a flyer for a production called Songs of Despair. She goes to the theatre, that evening, and sneaks backstage. The rehearsals are on-going and the director (though this was confusing as Leesa meets another man who calls himself the founder and director of the show) is angry with rehearsals. He then spots Leesa, thinking she is press. She says she is an artiste and he gives her a shot – she performs part of Darkness to the cast's hysterical laughter – she runs out.

murder or just manslaughter?
The theatre's door seems to be locked and she meets Varsig (Didier Sauvegrain) – the founder/director I mentioned – he speaks to her about living the part, when the female lead Consuela (Joanna Pavlis) comes over and again disparages the girl. Leesa follows them to a club, collars Varsig and tries to wheedle her way into the company. She is critical of Consuela and flirtatious with Varsig – he offers her a scene audition. She goes to the toilet with the script and Consuela confronts her, there is a struggle and Consuela falls – smashing her head, apparently dead… Leesa scarpers.

fangs
In the morning Stephane phones her, she had not met with him as promised the night before. She tells him she has an important audition and puts the phone down on him. She goes to the stage and starts acting the part of “murder” but Consuela appears and laughs at her. Egged on and baited, Leesa stabs the other actress. She is shocked at her action and more shocked when Consuela gets up. However, she has passed the audition and Varsig shows his fangs as he goes to bite the company’s new actress…

And that’s all she wrote. If you know that they will be vampires, which I did and you do now, this is an average short that does little special. The character of Leesa is annoying, and is meant to be, but there is also little in the way of character building and therefore little in the way of audience buy in or character motivation. 4 out of 10.

The imdb page is here.

;)Q

Friday, January 28, 2011

Strigoi – review

Director: Faye Jackson

Release date: 2009

Contains spoilers

When I have written about the story Viy and, more so, the films thereof, I often mention the strigoï vii and strigoï mort. Though these two types of vampire are not mentioned in story and, indeed, hail from Romania rather than the Ukraine (the source of Viy), it was the easiest way to describe the vampiric principle.

The strigoï vii is a living vampire or vampiric witch, the strigoï mort is the undead (or, more properly, dead) variant. There are blessed few books and fewer films that actually feature traditional strigoï (and in those I’m classing the Viy variants). So this British funded, Romanian shot film with Romanian actors performing in English was already intriguing – it uses the strigoï mythology.

a kangaroo court
Its start is dark. The body of an old man, Florin, lies in a field. A couple – Constantin (Constantin Barbulescu) and Ileana (Roxana Guttmann) – are dragged from their beds and taken to a kangaroo court where the other villagers find them guilty of murdering Florin. They are taken out to the level crossing and forced to kneel. The mayor, Stefan (Zane Jarcu), and priest, Tudor (Dan Popa), are there supporting, encouraging even, the mob justice. A shotgun is raised and – fails to fire. The accused are brained with a shovel and, without ceremony, buried.

post execution party
Following this the locals ransack their mansion, stealing their items and doing a conga to Spirit in the Sky. Local woman Mara (Camelia Maxim) takes a blouse as well as lots of kitchen electrical goods. People dance, carpets are taken and drinks are consumed en masse. The mayor looks through papers. It is clear that Constantin was the rich man of the village; before he died he accused people of being willing to take his money (in bribes).

Rudi Rosenfeld as Nicolae
Vlad (Catalin Paraschiv) wakes and reaches for a cigarette – but the packet is empty. He stumbles into the living room and asks his grandfather, Nicolae (Rudi Rosenfeld), if he has any cigarettes. He has one, he says, but he is saving it. When Vlad looks in the tin jar it is empty. The gypsies stole it – his grandfather claims. He also claims that the communists stole his dog so that he it wouldn’t warn him when the gypsies came. Vlad goes outside, the dog has run away it seems, and sees Mara, who is his grandfather’s neighbour, laid upon her porch.

Catalin Paraschiv as Vlad
Concerned for her, he wakes her and her reaction shows us that he has just returned home. He was in Italy – where he ended up working in a chicken fast food outlet. As the film progresses we discover that his father, mother, brother and sister are all doctors. He graduated but is rather squeamish (we see why later, in flashbacks) and never interned or practised. Rather than see his immediate family he decided to stay with his grandfather.

the death-watch
He goes to the store but it is deserted. In the backroom he sees the men of the village sitting death-watch for Florin. They say he died in an accident but Vlad sees the bruising around his neck that indicates strangulation. Not able to get a straight answer from them he leaves and his friend Octav (Vlad Jipa), a policeman, shows up to ask some routine questions about Florin. Vlad discovers that his signature has been forged on the death certificate. He suggests to Octav that he speak to Constantin – not knowing that Constantin is dead. Meanwhile Mara’s food, prepared in the stolen electrical goods for the funeral, tastes off to her and her husband (Adrian Donea). She thinks it’s down to the stolen equipment and takes it all the stolen property back to the mansion (bar the blouse, which she can’t part with). She is leaving as Octav arrives and tells him she was returning borrowed things and no one is home.


Constantin Barbulescu as Constantin
 Vlad can’t sleep and wanders to the mansion. He knocks and Ileana, eating a chicken leg and looking rather worse for wear, opens the door. He speaks to an equally ill looking Constantin who tells him that he is hungry and sets him on a path to uncover some shady land registry “errors” committed by the village elders. Meanwhile Ileana goes to Mara’s home and starts eating all the food.

Ileana hungers for food
Later that evening the mayor tries to steal Constantin’s car and finds Octav, dead. They bury him. Octav then wakes Vlad, the policeman is back from the dead and, essentially, you have three strigoï mort wandering around. They all hunger for different things. Constantin wants the world to know of the village leaders’ corruption, Octav hungers for cigarettes (he had quit when alive) – which he steals from Vlad – and Ileana hungers for food. When the food runs out, so she cannot get any more, she attacks Mara for her blood but the woman is saved as the cock crows and Ileana leaves to go back to her grave.

strangling Constantin
We also have a strigoï vii (I won’t spoil who that is), who drinks blood when people are sleeping. Some of the lore is turned upside down. Ileana will eat food with garlic seasoning – something a strigoï should not be able to do. Constantin can enter the church (and is strangled by the priest but, of course, fails to die) and again strigoï should not be able to enter churches.

sat in his grave
Octav tells Vlad that strigoï can be identified as they sit in their graves, like Turks. In his case that is certainly true. There is also an indication that they are plague spreaders. Those in too much contact with the strigoï develop pustules or boils on their bodies. Vlad certainly does and does not seem to notice their presence, despite being covered eventually. Bite marks seem to change into boils also.

removing the heart
The way to destroy a strigoï is to cut out its heart and burn it. In a fantastic scene it becomes clear that removing a heart with a bread knife is not the easiest job in the world!

Octav and Vlad
I adored this film. It is a comedy, and the comedy is dark but at its heart it is driven by quirkiness and character. If I had to liken the tone of the comedy it would be to the film Local Hero (1983). The pace is uniquely quirky also, it has a rhythm that feels right, and feels rural. You become caught in some of the underlying stories and not everything is resolved, and yet an answer is, strangely, forthcoming in the last scene featuring the main villagers. Ultimately the film's ending offers a conclusion regarding Vlad and his underlying issues and not about the foibles (albeit criminal foibles) of village life.

The acting is superb throughout. Special mention to Catalin Paraschiv, Rudi Rosenfeld and Camelia Maxim – who all bring their characters to glorious, eccentric life. 8.5 out of 10.

At the time of review the film is only available on Swedish DVD but the imdb page is here.

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Web Serials



Lara De-Leuw as Victoria in Blood and Bone China
 My last three posts have looked at some of the current crop of web serials. There are a couple more en route worth mentioning due to their potential.

I have already mentioned Blood and Bone China but Chris Stone's Victorian, Stoke based serial is looking like it will be a class piece of work if the stills are anything to go by. The synopsis suggests "It is 1897 and a city is in turmoil. In the smoky, dirty depths of middle England, the people are terrified. The once bustling streets of Stoke are empty, the silence is only broken by the whispers of devils, demons and vampires. Poor souls are being taken, vanishing without a trace.


When the local doctor is snatched away, word travels to his brother, a young vet by the name of Newlyn Howell. Spurred on to discover the truth by the enigmatic Alexander Pyre, Newlyn's dark adventure into the depths of Victorian Stoke begins… and what he discovers is beyond belief."

I also want to mention End of the Line. Described as “Vampire girl with a young soul and a young man with a very old one try to solve the murder of his father.” This has been co-penned by personal friend and friend of the blog D. MacDowell Blue (AKA Zahir).

Knowing Zahir's taste in vampires this should be a gothically charged epic, despite the modern world setting, with a darkly romantic heart. Zahir has also been working on an annotated edition of Carmilla, more news on that at a later date.

Next, not all web serials are films. Caballo Blue is an online prose serial, “A Vampire’s curse… Endless night, a midnight sea… horses glide like Poseidon’s mount… through a world of darkness, of spirits… …of dreams.”

The verse is marvellously evocative but, I have to admit, that I have not yet read the prose. This came to my attention just recently and I am backlogged, so my apologies to Michael Smith.

The Captain
Finally I also want to mention something not vampire at all – an online graphic serial that was brought to my attention by Zombie Astronaut

Romantically Apocalyptic is the best graphic novel I have read for a long time, fantastic art, great off-the wall humour and absolute insanity… and it is free. I would gladly part money for trade paperbacks of this one. Not a vampire in sight but, hey, its nice to go off topic once in a while.

Wednesday, January 26, 2011

Honourable Mentions: Vampire Mob – Season 1

Another web serial, Vampire Mob is directed by Joe Wilson and the name of the series doesn’t do the show justice. The name was one of those names were you think to yourself, well this might be a bit rubbish and it doesn’t prepare you at all for what you get.

It starts with Don (John Colella), a hitman and a vampire, waking wife Annie (Reamy Hall) whilst holding a camera. She chastises him for waking her to make a sex tape. The tape cuts and Don is being filmed by the (never seen) Mike. He is making a film of his life and his trials and tribulations. The series is the resultant film.

sisters
Both Don and Annie are vampires. Don bit Annie because he was hungry, Annie has also turned her mom, Virginia (Marcia Wallace). This has not gone down well with sister Laura (Kirsten Vangsness) who doesn’t like the whole blood drinking and fang bit that has appeared in her family. Annie lets us know that Virginia doesn’t have fangs – she’d lost her teeth before being turned and never developed fangs.

Annie and Don
Virginia is moving in with Annie and Don – forcing Don to use the garage as his office and leaving him spending eternity with his mother-in-law. It also means that he has to collect blood for three, rather than two (he siphons from ‘business associates’, into bell jars, and sometimes buys in).

John Colella as Don
There isn’t too much else to say as this is character driven and very well done at that. The dialogue is spot on and Colella carries it with a natural flair that drives the episodes along. The rest of the cast are also all very good. We see plenty of character development, again spawned from the excellent dialogue. Thus, to do the show justice, you really need to give it a watch.

When it comes to lore, I mentioned the fangs. Daylight is an issue. They still say grace at dinner time but holy water is an issue. They have food at dinner to give themselves an illusion of eating, whilst drinking wine glasses of blood, but garlic is out and they can’t actually eat other food as it gives them the runs for a few days.

The show’s homepage is here. At the time of writing there is no iMDB page.

Tuesday, January 25, 2011

Honourable Mention: Vampire Zombie Werewolf

When I first heard the tile Vampire Zombie Werewolf, I pictured a kind of Being Human clone. I was wrong.

This is a web-series directed by Robb Padgett and at the time I write this there are 5 episodes online, and an educated guess suggests we are halfway through the season. However, it was just so much fun that I wanted to share straight away.

Robb Padgett is the producer
A producer of webcasts (Robb Padgett) drives across town to meet a potential backer. He arrives at a normal looking house (bar the clouds boiling overhead for a moment before they vanish and all becomes bright again). Inside he meets Tad (Steven Lekowicz) and his wife bunny (Tanya Ihnen).

Bunny and Tad
The producer is happy to take the cheque and run but Tad insists that he stays, and insists and insists until… they reveal that they are vampires… but not just vampires, they are vampire zombie werewolves. For the producer there is no escape – Tad wants him to meet the vampires at a party that evening – he and Bunny are to step into vampire society.

Jon Monastero as the Werewolf
Not a thing easily done when you are also a werewolf and a zombie and the joy of the series is that it knowingly sticks its decaying tongue into its furry cheek and gently pokes at both the monster movie genre and the web series phenomena. In a scene nearly akin to Amercian Werewolf in London we see flashback of Tad being bitten by a werewolf (Jon Monastero)… who looks just like a normal guy (because the moon isn’t full; genius).

Tad and the zombie
However he really was a werewolf. Tad, in his turn, heads out to the moors and bites his first victim… who turns out to be a zombie (Jeff Charlton) and, of course, they are contagious. As for the vampire aspect, he doesn’t tell that story until a later episode. Bunny converted for Tad. Tad fears the vampires will look down on his other monster aspects and hopes the producer will prove to be his ace in the hole.

The whole thing is played with a faux-fifties attitude in respect of Bunny and Tad and is great fun. Some really funny moments are provided as we look at other webcasts. Sand witches - the witch based baywatch clone - was great. Definitely worth a watch, the homepage is here. At the time of writing there is no imdb page.

Monday, January 24, 2011

Honourable Mentions: Transitions – Season 1

Transitions is a web serial that has run its first season and, being a free to watch series, it receives an honourable mention rather than a scored review. The series can be found here and was directed by Chad Ream.

Things start with a man sleeping in a cemetery and then we get brief close-ups of people, a swing, a baseball bat, a shopping trolley. It is actually a rather nice collage of images. After the opening credit runs we see a bum, Ed (William Ellwood), pushing his trolley. Three thugs approach him, one with a baseball bat. He tries to ignore them and, when it becomes clear that they aren’t going to leave him alone he runs.

under the moonlight
They catch him in an alley and one of the thugs starts to beat him with a baseball bat. This is watched from a rooftop by Zachariah (Chad Earnest) and here we see two of the less strong aspects of the web-show. The fight scene isn’t as convincing as it might be, punches are too obviously pulled, but also there is a dark sky and moon aside the vampire and yet down at ground level it is clearly daylight. Later a grey wash is used to offer a feeling of night but again we can tell it is daylight – or strong lighting has been used, I suspect the former. Not enough to kill the series off, I have witnessed much worse, but something to mention.

turning Ed
Anyway, Zachariah kills off the thugs and then he is by Ed’s side. Ed refuses going to a doctor – presumably because he has no insurance – and he has no home. Zachariah takes him to a building. He bites Ed and then feeds him from his wrist before leaving him. Later he returns as Ed comes round – he has transitioned.

Tudor Dixon as Claire
Zachariah takes Ed to a house where he lives with his clan. Joseph (Todd Sprad) accepts Ed but is angry as Zachariah did not ask permission to turn him. Later Ed’s development will be handed to Claire (Tudor Dixon) as Zachariah is put into solitary. This means he cannot feed and the punishment will debilitate him and may send him mad. Another vampire, Kevin (at first Matin Markaj and later Adam Slager), has a problem with Ed – because he is a bum – and dislikes Zachariah. Here we get one of the strengths of the series (and a potential weakness).

Angela Robitaille as Delvi
The depth the filmmakers have put into this is truly welcome. We have hints of in-clan politics as well as problems with another clan. We see the Vamp vampire Delvi (Angela Robitaille) in a couple of scenes and it is clear she is a villain. What is she up to? We don’t know yet. This is where it might become a weakness, as the production has opened several threads and I hope they manage to juggle them as the next season is recorded.

a victim
Lore wise we don’t know too much. The vampires can be starved, they can’t fly and don’t sparkle, sunlight will not burn them but they are naturally nocturnal. One nice bit surrounded daytenders, these are humans bitten (and presumably given blood) who have not turned. The vampires release an enzyme when they feed and in those turned it has bonded with their systems. Daytenders are people with whom the enzyme will not bond and their immune system breaks down. They become reliant on the enzyme but the only way to get it is to be bitten. The vampires treat them as not much better than serfs, or at least that is how Claire treats Amber (Liza Zaczek), the daytender we meet.

Occasionally the dialogue can feel a little clunky, or the delivery forced, but this is in no way worse (and indeed better, in some cases) than many independent films that have somehow gotten distribution. The varied locations in use are very much better than a lot of straight to DVD flicks. All in all, worth a watch. At the time of write up there is no imdb page.

Sunday, January 23, 2011

Kuntilanak 2 – review

Director: Rizal Mantovani

Release date: 2007

Contains spoilers

In many respects Kuntilanak 2 starts exactly where Kuntilanak leaves off… ish… sort of…

That is, it does after the credits. Before the credits we get a scene of three children breaking into the, now abandoned, Mangkujiwo Boarding House to play. There is a brother and sister and an older kid and the house has been invaded by vegetation making it an ideally eerie place to play in. The brother counts on the stairs as the sister hides on the ground floor and the older kid hides on the second floor (if you recall that’s the really bad one).

kids in the mansion
Well all the floors are bad, to be fair, and one by one the kids are scared by a variety of kuntilanak – I am convinced there is more than one there. The main one has a very broad mouth reminiscent of the creature from Death Note, but that’s beside the point. The brother and sister both confront kuntilanak and then go to the older kid – their eyes now weirdly staring and fixed rictus grins adorning their faces. They walk him to one of the broken mirrors and say that this is where they live now. Suddenly the mirror is fixed and they are inside it.

Julie Estelle as Sam
Sam (Julie Estelle) is in a taxi and the driver very casually suggests that he will rob her. He stops the car and she hands him her purse and gets out of the cab. He follows her as it isn’t enough, rape seems to be on the cards when she turns to him and sings the chant. He runs and gets in his car, his nose bleeding. The kuntilanak beheads him with the cab’s window.

The Kuntilanak
Meanwhile a business man has visited the Mangkujiwo, the satanic cult, and whatever he has asked them to do has failed. The head Mangkujiwo admits it is the case and the man demands his money back. For his trouble he is injured and taken out to a pit where he is brained and tossed in with other bodies. The Mangkujiwo discuss how their last Kuntilanak singer got herself killed by the new girl and that Yanti (Lita Soewardi), the boarding house manager, is missing. They determine to find the new girl.

Eva Sanders as Gung
Sam reaches her destination, a shop with a room to rent from the family who run it. The little girl, Yenny (Cindy Valerie) knows that there is something wrong, evil even, with Sam. Gung (Evan Sanders) is dreaming and, in his dream, he is back with the kuntilanak being tortured and fed upon. He awakens with a start and reaches for medication. I said in respect of the first film that Sanders’ acting was filled with histrionics. In this his character has suffered a break down and the acting style works really well. His friend Iwang (Ibnu Jamil) suggests that he must find Sam and return back to where the trauma began (the boarding house).


chanting down the phone
Sam meanwhile is having a crisis of personality. She knows that Iwang has suggested Gung find her and sings the chant down the phone to him (she also appears to have developed a psychic dialling system for the phone). She seems comfortable with the maggot puking that follows a chant. The chant causes Iwang to be killed in the manner of a kitchen accident. She then dreams of all her victims in hell begging her for forgiveness.

Sam faces herslef
Madame Mangkujiwo (Alice Iskak) appears before her as a ghost talking of regret and Sam looks at herself in the mirror (which is the Kuntilanak mirror that she has had delivered to her new lodgings) and her reflection moves differently. It becomes manifest in the room and she fights with herself. The good Sam wins against the evil Sam but she knows how good the evil feels and how at peace she would be if she let herself surrender to it. Yes we have a whole Jedi type dark and light battle going on and, actually, it is probably better handled than the (new) Star Wars films!

The Kuntilanak feeds
The film rumbles along at a fairly even pace and has a twist to get us to the finale that you can see a mile off. That said there is a twist cliff-hanger, at the very end, that is designed to go into part three of the series that worked better. Estelle is still rather pleasant to look at and she betrays more emotion in this part than the simple bewilderment she previously protrayed.

Sam chanting
The photography wasn’t as nice this time around and the kuntilanaks seemed falser, more like caricatures so the atmosphere wasn’t quite as good. There are some logic flaws, the main one being that because the mirrors were broken (by Sam in film 1) the kuntilanaks were free and looking for revenge on the chanter who controls them. Yet one of the mirrors was intact (and with Sam) and the kuntilanak still heeded her chants. That aside 5 out of 10.

The imdb page is here.