Genre: Thriller/Horror
Director: Jeff Betancourt
Cast: Danielle Savre, Matthew Cohen, David
Gallagher, Tobin Bell
RunTime: 1 hr 33 mins
Released By: GV
Rating: M18
Opening Day: 3 January 2008
Synopsis:
A
young woman attempts to face her fears…with chilling
results. Laura Porter checks herself into a mental health
facility still haunted by a paralyzing fear of the boogeyman
after witnessing her parents’ murder as a child. Upon
her arrival at the clinic, other patients begin dying in horrifying
ways that manifest their worst fears and phobias leading Laura
to believe that the Boogeyman has finally returned.
Movie Review:
The Boogeyman is probably one of the most generic of the ghouls
and goblins out there, and different cultures have their own
interpretation of what is a manifestation of a basic fear
of the unknown, represented by a stranger in a hooded cloak
going around and inflicting the unpleasurable on its victims,
whatever that may be, dependant on the power of the imagination.
Usually it's that of children's when parents want to frighten
them into submission that the Boogeyman will get them when
they're naughty.
There
are countless of Boogeyman related movies out there, and while
this is a "part 2", there's nothing that suggests
it's a specific continuation of any earlier movie, so it's
quite curious why the need for the number, instead of a reboot
of a "monster" movie, so to speak. The end credits
had a mention that it's based on characters created by Eric
Kripke who wrote the 2005 movie Boogeyman, but there's no
recurring characters here. The story begins with Laura and
her brother Henry witnessing the senseless murder of their
parents, whom both acknowledge to be the Boogeyman. For all
we know, it could have been some random deranged killer who
didn't get caught, but for all intents and purposes, this
killer is given the Boogeyman status for being in that hood,
and coming out of the dark.
Fast
forward 10 years, and Henry (Matt Cohen) has been cured of
his fear of the dark and the Boogeyman. Sister Laura (Danielle
Savre) enrols reluctantly in the same psychiatric programme
in order to give it a go at a cure, but finds that movie formula
dictates she doesn't get the same bargain. The stage is set
with the usual inevitable cliches that plague any typical
Hollywood horror movie - a madhouse, wonky characters with
their own emotional (here psychological) baggage and whom
we don't care about, gruesome killings that has to be as explicit
as possible, plenty of furniture that require big time oiling
and electrical wiring that need major reworking.
What
probably could be a draw here is the casting of Tobin Bell.
I would put my neck out and say that Saw had probably spawned
an evolution of the torture porn sub-genre in horror films,
and the filmmakers here would have counted it as a coup to
have Bell star in their movie. However, one cannot deny that
Bell turned out to be an albatross for Boogeyman 2 despite
his very limited appearance, which worked out to be more of
a purposeful move to keep audience guessing. And in a cheap
tongue-in-cheek and highly unnecessary move, one scene featured
a cassette tape recording in the vein of how Jigsaw would
leave messages for his would-be victims.
And
that's probably the weakness of this Boogeyman - he took ideas
for dispatching his victims from recent torture porn flicks.
As the story goes along, the death traps become more elaborate,
some even being quite unbelievable given the time taken, or
coincidence required to set them up. I guess the good old
knife is unfashionable, and the sicker the Death design, the
better it is for a contemporary crowd, as it degenerates into
yet another slasher movie despite suggestions of it trying
to be a little more psychological. You know something's really
wrong when it has to mesh a sex scene with gratuitous nudity
with a gruesome murder together.
Leaving
the door wide open for a sequel as per the norm for such movies,
I seriously doubt we'll see any potential follow ups having
quality Boogeyman stories to tell, or delivering quality scares
to an audience out looking for some thrills. While Boogeyman
is generic in nature, this one had gone a step further into
diluting its worth.
Movie Rating:
(Boogeyman turned out to be Bogus-man in disguise)
Review by Stefan Shih
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