Review: ABCs of Death 2
“A is for Amateur”:
An assassin has a bugger of a time completing his latest job. “B is for
Badger”: A pompous wildlife TV presenter is doing a story on badgers being
affected by a local power station when a mutant badger runs amok. “C is for
Capital Punishment”: Local townsfolk accuse a man of murder. “D is for
Deloused”: Animated weirdness about bugs…or something. “E is for
Equilibrium”: Two men on a desert island fight for the affections of a
newly arrived woman. ‘Coz they’re both dicks. Or something. “F is for
Falling”: About a female Israeli soldier stuck in a tree when a Palestinian
with a gun comes along. “G is for Grandad”: A snotty young man moves in
with his cranky old grandfather. “H is for Head Games”: Animated
nonsense involving two people who pretty much obliterate each other’s faces.
Yeah, OK then. “I is for Invincible”: A greedy family attempt to off
their mother to get her money. It doesn’t go well. At all. “J is for Jesus”:
Religious-y types try to exorcise the ‘gay’ out of a man. It doesn’t go well,
either. “K is for Knell”: A woman is disturbed by murderous visions in a
nearby apartment building seemingly caused by some mysterious force that
eventually heads straight for her. “L is for Legacy”: It’s about a
tribal sacrifice. “M is for Masticate”: A flesh-eating fat man goes on a
rampage eating anyone he comes across. “N is for Nexus”: A Halloween
tale set in New York from the POV of two people preparing for their date. “O
is for Ochlocracy (Mob Rule)”: A Miracle cure for a zombie plague results
in zombies now running the courts and prosecuting the living. Pretty sure this
will be “Judge Judy” in a few years. What? You think this is just a
straight-up synopsis? “P is for P-P-P-P Scary!”: Bumbling escaped
convicts freak out at things that go bump in the night. “Q is for
Questionnaire”: An intelligence test that has horrific consequences for anyone
who aces it. “R is for Roulette”: A B&W segment about tiddlywinks.
OK, so it’s about a game of Russian Roulette. “S is for Split”: A
husband away on a business trip calls his wife just as an intruder enters and
attacks her. “T is for Torture Porn”: The set of a porno gets seriously
messy in all the wrong ways. Think Hentai porn…but live-action! “U is for
Utopia”: An anti-septic futuristic tale about a chubster who doesn’t quite
fit the mould, to his peril. “V is for Vacation”: A man makes a video call
back home to his girlfriend, while on vacation. His dickhead best friend spoils
things by showing her what he’s really been up to. And it only gets worse from
there. “W is for Wish”: Two kids get transported into the world of their
favourite “He-Man”-esque toy. Things prove far more grim and serious
than they expected. “X is for Xylophone”: A babysitter gets the shits
with the child constantly banging away at the xylophone. “Y is for Youth”:
A young girl with revenge fantasies about her parents. “Z is for Zygote”:
A husband leaves his heavily pregnant wife alone in a remote cabin but tells
her to wait for him to return. Cut to thirteen years later and…
The
first anthology film was a complete waste of time, as even the best of the
segments were hampered by the time restraints of fitting in 26 short films into
one two hour anthology film. This 2014 follow-up is at least a much improved
version of the same damn thing (almost to the point of recommending it), but I
still think the central idea is an ill-conceived one. The first film was 26
flavours of suck, whilst this time out I seemed to have more fun and the
filmmakers seemed to better manage the time constraints than last time out. I
must say, though, that barely any of the segments seemed to belong to the
horror genre. As far as I was concerned, this one was a comedy, and sometimes
hilarious. So let’s go through the entries one by one:-
“A is for Amateur”
Directed by E.L. Katz: OK, so we get chicks going topless, dancing, and
occasionally making out. Unfortunately, it’s been so choppily edited that you
can’t enjoy any of it. I call it “A is for Prick-Tease and I don’t care if
it starts with an A or not!”. It’s got a dumb story, isn’t remotely
horror-related, and not funny in the slightest. Hardly a good start.
“B is for Badger”
Directed by Julian Barratt: 30 seconds of this one is funnier than the entirety
of the first “ABCs of Death”. Director Barratt is hilarious as the
wonderfully pompous Toland. It’s not horror, but quite funny schlock that
actually works within the time limit. Any longer and it’d be too dumb and run
out of steam. Probably the highlight of the whole film.
“C is for Capital Punishment”
Directed by Julian Gilbey: This one’s dopey and too short to be anything
special, but it does at least show how difficult it actually is to decapitate
someone. Not that I have experience in such matters, mind you. A disappointment
from the director of the very fine “A Lonely Place to Die”.
“D is for Deloused”
Directed by Robert Morgan: Interestingly ugly stop-motion animation, this is so
fucking weird you’d swear David Cronenberg was involved. I’m not sure I
understood any of it, but it sure is interestingly weird.
“E is for Equilibrium”
Directed by Alejandro Brugues: WHAT?
“F is for Falling”
Directed by Aharon Keshales and Navot Papushado: Was this meant to be profound?
‘Coz it was stupid and once again you’re reminded that this thing is marketed
as horror when it’s anything but horror. “No Man’s Land” did this basic
idea a lot better at feature length.
“G is for Grandad”
Directed by Jim Hosking: Nicholas Amer is terrific as the title character,
whilst Richard Hardisty makes Iggy Pop look portly. This one’s actually a
pretty amusing black comedy segment that works quite well at this length.
Well-done!
“H is for Head Games”
Directed by Bill Plympton: Scribbly hand-drawn animated segment, just plain
stupid. It’s one-note stuff with a joke title that, like “A” just isn’t
funny at all.
“I is for Invincible”
Directed by Erik Matti: This one is like turning on a really fun, gory Asian
horror film at the ¾ mark. I sorta found myself enjoying it, but only on a
surface level. I’d prefer to see a whole feature-length film version of it, but
at least this one was genuinely horror.
“J is for Jesus”
Directed by Dennison Ramalho: This one really, really walks a tightrope, and
even if it’s not ultimately homophobic (I kinda think it is, though when you
think about it) it’s still very silly. More fleshing out might’ve helped. It’s
possibly blasphemous too, actually.
“K is for Knell”
Directed by Kristina Buozyte & Bruno Samper: Simple, well-shot and
effective. One of the best segments. More like this, please!
“L is for Legacy”
Directed by Lancelot Imasuen: Why the subtitles for people speaking clear and
coherent English? This one’s interesting for Ethnic diversity, though it might
be a tad racist. Best of all, it’s gory, stupid monster movie fun. It plays
more like a movie trailer than an anthology segment, but hey, at least it sure
is different! One of my favourites for sure.
“M is for Masticate”
Directed by Robert Boocheck: Slow-mo zombie/cannibal nonsense until it reaches
a genuinely hilarious punchline that almost makes it worthwhile.
“N is for Nexus”
Directed by Larry Fessenden: Finally a filmmaker I recognise, but this is a
shithouse piece of garbage from someone who should’ve known better. This seemed
like a crap home movie with no context whatsoever.
“O is for Ochlocracy (Mob
Rule)” Directed by Hajime Ohata: Anything that contains
the hilarious term ‘Apparent Death Syndrome’ can’t be too bad. This is
typically crazy Asian nonsense that once again, would’ve been even more fun at
feature length.
“P is for P-P-P Scary!”
Directed by Todd Rohal: Pretty much everyone hates this segment and I’m no different.
This is like Abbott and Costello, except it’s three Costello’s, they all have
fake noses and stutter. Weird, but not in any entertaining way. Fucking cheat
of a title, too. One of the worst.
“Q is for Questionnaire”
Directed by Rodney Ascher: A cute idea is completely ruined by the dumb
decision to give us all the information at once instead of playing out in
linear fashion. Fail.
“R is for Roulette”
Directed by Marvin Kren: This one ends just as it was actually about to go
somewhere. WTF?
“S is for Split”
Directed by Juan Martinez Moreno: Pretty interesting idea for a home invasion
attack story and it works well within the time frame. Bloody harsh and has the
best acting in the entire film for sure. You will NOT see the ending coming at
all. It might be a tad on the nose, but boy was it a shocking twist. Bravo!
Second best behind “B is for Badger”.
“T is for Torture Porn” Directed
by Jen and Sylvia Soska: Full marks for…um…going somewhere I would never have
expected and the joke title is actually hilarious. Two women being at the helm
is no surprise, either. It’d be unbearable at feature length but here it
works…just.
“U is for Utopia”
Directed by Vincenzo Natali: The director of “Cube” and “Splice”
gives us a dopey segment that looks like a commercial…that makes no sense
whatsoever. The worst segment until…
“V is for Vacation”
Directed by Jerome Sable: The most notorious segment of the film, this one has
its fans. I think it’s sick, ugly, and pointless. Without question the worst
segment in the entire film. Just irredeemably ghastly.
“W is for Wish”
Directed by Steven Kostanski: A genuinely funny segment as two kids are
transported into the world of a toy commercial ala “H-Man and The Masters of
the Universe” as if it were a real place. And boy is it NOT kids’ stuff.
Best toy commercial ever! Fantasy Man is a hoot. Oh, if only this were a
full-length film. Picks up the Bronze medal here.
“X is for Xylophone”
Directed by Julian Maury and Alexandre Bustillo: A sick joke. A really, really,
really sick joke that is neither funny nor scary. It’s deeply troubling in ways
the directors probably didn’t intend. If it was intentional, I question their
morals. It’s not even clever.
“Y is for Youth”
Directed by Soichi Umezawa: More Asian strangeness, probably less compelling
than the others but still weird enough to work. There’s certainly some
memorable…imagery.
“Z is for Zygote”
Directed by Chris Nash: Yet another one-joke segment, but the joke is so out
there you surely have to commend them for going there. It’s so damn stupid and
I’m not sure why the ‘baby’ still has a kid’s voice 15 years later, but funny
is funny, and unlike “V is for Vacation” it’s too damn silly to be
offensive or off-putting.
Rating:
C+
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