Join horror host Malvolia the Queen of Screams as she celebrates this years Halloween Monster Marathon with 5 new tales of terror and the macabre. This Halloween horror anthology from indepe... Read allJoin horror host Malvolia the Queen of Screams as she celebrates this years Halloween Monster Marathon with 5 new tales of terror and the macabre. This Halloween horror anthology from independent horrors best and bloodiest directors is a grab bag of treats you are sure to enjoy.Join horror host Malvolia the Queen of Screams as she celebrates this years Halloween Monster Marathon with 5 new tales of terror and the macabre. This Halloween horror anthology from independent horrors best and bloodiest directors is a grab bag of treats you are sure to enjoy.
Featured reviews
The trailers were OK - nothing great and maybe one chuckle or two.
The first short is the highlight of the movie. "A Samhain Liturgy" is one of the better shorts I have seen in a long time. It's a horror/comedy mix as most of these are, but does it really well. It's a simple, familiar formula done well. What makes it work is the acting. It's well above average for the budget. 8/10
The second short, "Dead Lift," is well-paced and starts off creepy and fun. The climax was a bit corny, but then the ending redeemed it. Again, good acting, but needed some more polishing. 7/10
Unfortunately, the last two dropped off a bit. The third is a pure parody that's relatively funny, but nor particularly special or memorable. It's also the first glimpse into (purposeful) bad acting. The kid was annoying, but not in a good way. 5/10
The last segment, to me, was useless and contended to be serious, I think? It was displaced and pretty hard to watch. 2/10.
I was actually torn between a 6/10 and 7/10. I'm not sure I'll recommend it or watch it again, but it made for a pretty fun night overall and is good, indie horror done right. It's just a shame the last segment was a bit of a throwaway.
The first story, about Samhain, is spoiled by characters mispronouncing 'Samhain', some unconvincing effects (probably to avoid depiction of a child beating an adult to death), repetitive script, irregular continuity, and some bizarre colour balance. The opening drone shot would be excellent were it not for light saturation, then scenes inside the house are washed out in reds and browns. A violent scene offscreen is rendered amateurish by entrails apparently thrown into view before being snatched back. A character plays a tape at loud volume but sits down a metre away and the music is all but silenced.
An undead story doesn't really go anywhere but mixes speech with telepathy randomly. Once it is established that characters are reading each other's thoughts, slipping back to speaking seems pointless.
An 'Indian burial ground' story is a mess. Names are stressed as if important when they are not; reference to Indians as "feather, not red dot" feels borderline racist but disrespectful anyway. Events take place a year apart, but without any idea what a character might have been doing during that time. The story is not developed and is an opportunity wasted.
The serial killer story loses its way and tries to be too many things, none of them well, and the nun story just wants to be something else. Jump cuts, jumbled timeline, unexplained characters and questionable motivation make it feel more arthouse horror than snappy short.
A lengthy credits sequence includes cast and crew for five stories not in the version I saw. Research tells me these were trailers for other films but all content has been edited out other than the closing credits. With only five stories in the film itself, this sequence could have been half the length.
The first story could have been made into a 90-minute standalone feature but the rest do not sit well together and offer no progression. The bookending by 'Malvolia' is unnecessary, but a running theme or transition story might have helped. Major edits following trial screenings would have been advisable.
Well, the good news is that if you enjoy stereotypical horror anthologies, then you're in for a treat, should you opt to sit down and watch "10/31 Part 2". And with that being said, then it is no secret that I didn't find "10/31 Part 2" to be a particularly outstanding addition to the horror genre.
I only really enjoyed the first segment, and the rest were watchable, for sure, but nothing really noteworthy.
I wasn't familiar with any of the cast members in this anthology.
Visually then "10/31 Part 2" wasn't actually all that bad. It wasn't, however, a grand spectacle of special effects, but there were some fair enough effects in the movie and some fair enough make-up as well.
All in all, then "10/31 Part 2" is something that came and went without leaving a lasting impression on me. There are far better horror anthologies out there, and this is not something I will recommend horror fans to rush out to get to watch. Nor is it something that I will ever return to watch a second time.
My rating of "10/31 Part 2" lands on a four out of ten stars.
Did you know
- TriviaFilmed on location in Mankato, Minnesota.
- GoofsAt around 15 minutes, Holly stabbed Tommy with the kitchen knife in the ribs, but in the following scenes, he is not even bleeding.
- How long is 10/31 Part 2?Powered by Alexa
Details
Box office
- Budget
- $5,000 (estimated)
- Runtime1 hour 34 minutes
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 2.39:1