IMDb-BEWERTUNG
5,2/10
2884
IHRE BEWERTUNG
Eine Epidemie von Monsterbabys breitet sich in Amerika aus.Eine Epidemie von Monsterbabys breitet sich in Amerika aus.Eine Epidemie von Monsterbabys breitet sich in Amerika aus.
- Auszeichnungen
- 1 Nominierung insgesamt
Jill Gatsby
- Cindy
- (as Victoria Jill)
Alex Baker
- Reservoir Guard
- (Nicht genannt)
Greg Cannom
- Baby Monster
- (Nicht genannt)
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After the first film It's Alive about a mutant baby that's a real killer fresh from the womb, it was decided a sequel was in order. The first must have made a few dollars, that is how these things are decided.
Returning from the first film is John P. Ryan the father who killed his own mutant and now has a mission in life, maybe to save others who are now showing up in the population. Which is why he visits Frederic Forrest and Kathleen Lloyd another expectant set of parents.
After that things get real silly as the all seeing government in the person of John Marley gets into the act. There's also an institute that wants to house and study the mutants that's headed by Andrew Duggan. All these plot elements combine for one bloody ending.
Not that the first film was a world beater, but it's Citizen Kane next to this.
Returning from the first film is John P. Ryan the father who killed his own mutant and now has a mission in life, maybe to save others who are now showing up in the population. Which is why he visits Frederic Forrest and Kathleen Lloyd another expectant set of parents.
After that things get real silly as the all seeing government in the person of John Marley gets into the act. There's also an institute that wants to house and study the mutants that's headed by Andrew Duggan. All these plot elements combine for one bloody ending.
Not that the first film was a world beater, but it's Citizen Kane next to this.
It's cute! It's cuddly! It'll rip your head off! Writer / Director Larry Cohen's saga of babies gone bad continues with IT LIVES AGAIN.
In this dose of pernicious pablum, Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) crashes a baby shower in order to deliver the news that expectant parents, Jody and Eugene Scott (Kathleen Lloyd and Frederic Forrest) are about to hear the pitter-patter of tiny mutant feet!
If that's not enough, the government, led by Mr. Mallory (John Marley) is involved, ready to swoop in and make matters even worse! They're bent on mutant infanticide! Once the "baby" is born, the chase is on, winding up in a secret facility until the inevitable bloodbath.
Not a bad follow-up to the original...
In this dose of pernicious pablum, Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) crashes a baby shower in order to deliver the news that expectant parents, Jody and Eugene Scott (Kathleen Lloyd and Frederic Forrest) are about to hear the pitter-patter of tiny mutant feet!
If that's not enough, the government, led by Mr. Mallory (John Marley) is involved, ready to swoop in and make matters even worse! They're bent on mutant infanticide! Once the "baby" is born, the chase is on, winding up in a secret facility until the inevitable bloodbath.
Not a bad follow-up to the original...
Weak follow-up to the original cult classic It's Alive is virtually a remake of the first film, but with three babies this time around instead of one. Dull, boring, talky horror flick with a disappointing score and just about all the action and scares confined to the end, but by then it is too late. Rick Baker actually did the poor effects for this inept sequel.
Rated R; Violence & Profanity.
Rated R; Violence & Profanity.
Frank Davis (John P. Ryan) is still struggling with his child's death in the first movie. He tries to warn Jody (Kathleen Lloyd) and Eugene Scott (Frederic Forrest) against Mallory (John Marley). She's pregnant with another mutant baby.
This is the sequel to It's Alive (1974). This franchise is stuck between serious horror and campy B-movie. It's both. For the serious horror, this movie needs a better-looking baby. The special effects are not good enough. It's pretty bad. The franchise remains stuck in campy B-movie territory. I can imagine it going better, but this poor sequel is not unexpected.
This is the sequel to It's Alive (1974). This franchise is stuck between serious horror and campy B-movie. It's both. For the serious horror, this movie needs a better-looking baby. The special effects are not good enough. It's pretty bad. The franchise remains stuck in campy B-movie territory. I can imagine it going better, but this poor sequel is not unexpected.
After the Davis baby is destroyed, others begin to appear around the country. The second film follows a renegade group of people (including Frank Davis from the first film) who are trying to prevent the government from killing the mutant babies. But at what price? Along with Frank, we now have the Scott family: Eugene Scott (played by Frederic Forrest, best known to me as the Nazi Surplus Store Owner from "Falling Down") and Jody Scott (played by the lovely and undercast Kathleen Lloyd). And the Scott family doesn't like it when you try to kill their baby! Oh, and the makeup effects of Oscar-winning Rick Baker again.
This film picks up pretty much where the other left off, give or take a few months. Where the first one pushed the message of chemicals affecting unborn babies, this is more of a family message: parents should love their children regardless of who or what they are. If your child is a criminal or autistic, they're still your child and you should defend and love them, not let the government exterminate them.
There's also a really subtle subplot about child molestation. Although never explicitly shown, there is good reason to believe molestation is occurring between an adult and a child family member. (I won't say who, but you should notice it as hints are dropped multiple times.)
This film is paced better than the first one, and the attacks are a bit more often and slightly more gruesome (though by no means graphic). Going from a PG rating to an R was a good move, though they didn't push the rating as much as I probably would have liked. And a really strange thing happens: Frank Davis becomes known as "Frank Davis". Not "Frank", not "Mr. Davis"... but "Frank Davis" every time he is mentioned. It seems unnatural, as if somehow he is a celebrity that needs to be highlighted, like TV's Patrick Duffy or something.
Although I liked this movie better than the first one, it relies heavily on the first one to understand it, so you're really stuck having to watch both if you want to "get it". The recurring characters and source of the mutants won't make sense unless you see the original. But by all means if you liked the first one, watch the second... and if you liked this one, watch the third.
This film picks up pretty much where the other left off, give or take a few months. Where the first one pushed the message of chemicals affecting unborn babies, this is more of a family message: parents should love their children regardless of who or what they are. If your child is a criminal or autistic, they're still your child and you should defend and love them, not let the government exterminate them.
There's also a really subtle subplot about child molestation. Although never explicitly shown, there is good reason to believe molestation is occurring between an adult and a child family member. (I won't say who, but you should notice it as hints are dropped multiple times.)
This film is paced better than the first one, and the attacks are a bit more often and slightly more gruesome (though by no means graphic). Going from a PG rating to an R was a good move, though they didn't push the rating as much as I probably would have liked. And a really strange thing happens: Frank Davis becomes known as "Frank Davis". Not "Frank", not "Mr. Davis"... but "Frank Davis" every time he is mentioned. It seems unnatural, as if somehow he is a celebrity that needs to be highlighted, like TV's Patrick Duffy or something.
Although I liked this movie better than the first one, it relies heavily on the first one to understand it, so you're really stuck having to watch both if you want to "get it". The recurring characters and source of the mutants won't make sense unless you see the original. But by all means if you liked the first one, watch the second... and if you liked this one, watch the third.
Wusstest du schon
- WissenswertesThe opening credits for the film were done using director Larry Cohen's own swimming pool.
- PatzerThe man who gives Jody Scott the instructions for the pick-up tells her to go to a theater and then go out 15 minutes after the beginning of a film. When she goes out, it can be seen that the film (Der Mann mit der Todeskralle (1973)) is running almost at its final sequence.
- Zitate
Frank Davis: Why are you trying so hard to do your job?
Mr. Mallory: I have a high regard for the human race. I want to see that it sticks around a little while longer.
- VerbindungenEdited from Die Wiege des Bösen (1974)
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By what name was Die Wiege des Satans (1978) officially released in India in English?
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