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Monsters 2 : The Dark Continent

Original title: Monsters: Dark Continent
  • 2014
  • R
  • 1h 59m
IMDb RATING
4.3/10
12K
YOUR RATING
Monsters 2 : The Dark Continent (2014)
Ten years on from the events of Monsters, the ‘Infected Zones’ have now spread worldwide. In the Middle East a new insurgency has begun.  At the same time there has also been a proliferation of Monsters in that region.  The Army decide to draft in more numbers to help deal with this insurgency...
Play trailer2:08
3 Videos
99+ Photos
DisasterActionDramaSci-FiThrillerWar

Monsters' reign continues to spread throughout the Earth.Monsters' reign continues to spread throughout the Earth.Monsters' reign continues to spread throughout the Earth.

  • Director
    • Tom Green
  • Writers
    • Jay Basu
    • Tom Green
    • Jesse Atlas
  • Stars
    • Johnny Harris
    • Sam Keeley
    • Joe Dempsie
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    4.3/10
    12K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Tom Green
    • Writers
      • Jay Basu
      • Tom Green
      • Jesse Atlas
    • Stars
      • Johnny Harris
      • Sam Keeley
      • Joe Dempsie
    • 191User reviews
    • 84Critic reviews
    • 42Metascore
  • See production info at IMDbPro
    • Awards
      • 2 nominations total

    Videos3

    Trailer #2
    Trailer 2:08
    Trailer #2
    International Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    International Trailer
    International Trailer
    Trailer 1:17
    International Trailer
    Monsters: Dark Continent
    Trailer 2:16
    Monsters: Dark Continent

    Photos138

    View Poster
    View Poster
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    + 134
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    Top cast30

    Edit
    Johnny Harris
    Johnny Harris
    • Noah Frater
    Sam Keeley
    Sam Keeley
    • Michael Parkes
    Joe Dempsie
    Joe Dempsie
    • Frankie Maguire
    Sofia Boutella
    Sofia Boutella
    • Ara
    Kyle Soller
    Kyle Soller
    • Karl Inkelaar
    Nicholas Pinnock
    Nicholas Pinnock
    • Sergeant Forrest
    Parker Sawyers
    Parker Sawyers
    • Shaun Williams
    Philip Arditti
    Philip Arditti
    • Khalil
    Michaela Coel
    Michaela Coel
    • Kelly
    Hassan Sha'er
    • Civilian Man
    Uriel Emil
    Uriel Emil
    • Militant Leader
    • (as Uriel Emill Pollack)
    Jesse Nagy
    • Ryan Conway
    Wael Baghdadi
    • Militant 1
    Jacqueline Hicks
    • Stripper 1
    Amanda Kaspar
    • Stripper 2
    Donna-Marie Foster
    • Midwife
    Orlando Ebanks
    • Newborn Baby
    Tonya Moss-Roberts
    • Bar Worker 1
    • Director
      • Tom Green
    • Writers
      • Jay Basu
      • Tom Green
      • Jesse Atlas
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews191

    4.311.5K
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    Featured reviews

    3ArchonCinemaReviews

    No beauty or profound statement like the original, just a cheap uninspired knock off

    The beauty of the original 2010 Monsters was its profound statement, Dark Continent satisfies the original naysayer's with action, and not much else.

    The initial 2010 film Monsters was a profound parable about humanity and its interactions with one another that used an 'alien invasion' as a mirror for this introspection. It is an independent film I adore and can not recommend enough. Four years later, with seemingly no connection to the original's genius creator Gareth Edwards, Monsters: Dark Continent is released, with absolutely no relation to the 2010 film in both scope or talent.

    Though the term 'derivative' does not imply subservience in its definition, quite often it is used as a descriptor for inferiority, and Monsters: Dark Continent warrants the adjective. When I first learned of a sequel to Monsters, I was aghast, for the narrative had been told in its entirety. When I saw the trailer, I was mortified of the bastardization of the beautiful film into Hollywood action drivel.

    With the scope of potential from its predecessor being a peak of perfection to the lows of my expectations of pure garbage, Monsters: Dark Continent falls somewhere in the middle but certainly closer to trash. In truth, Dark Continent tries to be like its original in using the alien invasion to be an allegory for the war efforts in the middle east. Unfortunately it feels terribly superficial and contrived.

    There is no beauty in the story telling of Dark Continent. The dialogue is poor and voice overs are used constantly to convey the narrative rather than creative artistry. Monsters: Dark Continent is neither philosophical nor intelligent in the manner of its originator. Writer and director Tom Green tries to speak of the war but it is in a very ignorant and uninformed perspective that is neither deep or even unique.

    Please check out our website for full reviews of all the recent releases.
    4chrismackey1972

    Boring, Boring, and More Boring

    OMG! I just saw this and...don't! It was soooo boring. It was NOTHING like the first movie. I know the director said it wasn't a sequel, but still, it was not good. A big problem was the title. It's called Monster: The Dark Continent. The dark continent is what Africa's known as. However, this movie seemed more like a film about the Iraq war with the monsters as a very distant backdrop. Granted, they didn't say they were in Iraq. I don't actually recall them saying where the film took place.

    Some said the acting was bad. I didn't have a problem with the acting. The cinematography was good. I just expected something VERY different.

    Some of the monsters were like galloping antelope. Others were like birds. Some seemed like walking trees. The point is, they didn't come across as any sort of a threat. As I said, boring.

    I gave this a 4-star rating. I do not recommend. Watch the first one, and look at that as a one-story movie. This one didn't do anything but bore me to tears. Now I'm really tired. When I feel like going to sleep after watching a movie -- in the early evening -- that's how I can tell a movie sucked.
    5cosmo_tiger

    Another US vs Taliban movie, with an occasional monster thrown in. A lot like Battle LA, if there were no aliens

    "This was our home. It was our last day, so for those last few hours we needed to forget about what was coming." Ten years after the monsters landed on Earth things have gotten worse. They have begun to fully take over the entire planet and now with the US military using all of its resources to fight them off they now have to contend with a new type of insurgency. I will start by saying that I remember seeing the first one, thinking it was a little slow, but it's been so long all I remember about it is the cheesy ending. I had the same expectations for this one. I was wrong. While I though this one was a little better it was still pretty slow moving and was really missing something the first one had...monsters. In terms of war movies this one is pretty decent, the problem with it is that every so often a monster would pop up out of nowhere, presumably to remind you the movie is called monsters. Some movies are deceiving because of the trailers released, they seem funny and are really dramas, etc...this is the first movie I have seen where the title is misleading. This is really just another US vs Taliban movie, with an occasional (out of place) monster thrown in. Overall, a movie much like Battle LA, if there were no aliens in that movie. I give this a C.
    4CleveMan66

    "Monsters: Dark Continent" isn't what is claims to be, but what's there is pretty good.

    In 2010, a British visual effects designer named Gareth Edwards released the feature film "Monsters", which he wrote, directed and edited. The movie that he (personally) shot in five countries over a three week period with a cast, crew and equipment that fit in one van, a film which he put together for under $500,000 made over $4 million worldwide. Edwards was rewarded with the opportunity to direct 2014's "Godzilla" reboot. Critics and audiences, who gave "Monsters" generally positive reviews, were rewarded with a sequel, "Monsters: Dark Continent" (R, 1:59). But before we talk about whether the sequel really qualifies as a reward, let's set the stage for the second film by taking a quick look back at the first.

    The story of the original "Monsters" has NASA bringing samples of possible living organisms back from one of Jupiter's moons, only to inadvertently introduce Earth to a new species that is larger and deadlier than anything currently on the planet. The Monsters end up spreading throughout northern Mexico and a quarantine of that half of the country is planned. The focus of the film is the efforts of a photojournalist to get his employer's daughter safely out of Mexico and back to the U.S. without getting killed by the monsters or trapped in the quarantine zone. The sequel picks up about ten years after the first film ends and has all new characters in a completely different setting and with a very different plot.

    The production schedule for "Godzilla" prevented Edwards from directing "Monsters: Dark Continent" (although he did serve as Executive Producer) and the sequel's writers, Jay Basu and Tom Green (the latter making his directorial debut with this film), made the sequel about the soldiers who are fighting the monsters. These creatures are about 300 feet tall and look like a spider, an octopus and a cockroach somehow all made a baby together and it was shot up with more steroids than every professional baseball and football player on the planet could use in a lifetime. No longer confined to Mexico, these creatures have become a world-wide problem. The U.S. military is trying to bomb the monsters into oblivion, but, at least in the Middle East, the collateral damage from those bombing campaigns has created a dangerous new insurgency that troops on the ground are needed to quell. As in the original film, the follow-up is mostly a story of human survival, with the monsters practically fading into the background (a point that some praise, but many criticize). The main focus is on a squad of Soldiers from Detroit who end up fighting the local insurgency under the battle-hardened Staff Sergeant Noah Frater (Johnny Harris). The member of the squad with which Frater ends up spending the most time is Private Michael Parkes (Sam Keely). Parkes is as scared as Frater is determined. Although we see the squad on patrol, and even killing one of the monsters with the small arms that they carry, most of the action takes place on a mission to rescue four fellow soldiers who are believed to be trapped by the insurgents. As is always the case in combat, these young soldiers have to depend on each other and on the wisdom of their leaders if they are to survive. And, as is often the case in war movies, inexperience clashes with experience, idealism clashes with reality and each soldier has to defeat his fear before he can ever hope to defeat the enemy. This film is a combination of "The Hurt Locker", "Saving Private Ryan", "Platoon" and "Starship Troopers", but with much more intensity.

    "Monsters: Dark Continent" delivers in terms of the emotions experienced by soldiers in high-stress situations, but that's all it does. For one thing, everything about the marketing of the film – the title, the movie poster, the trailers – is misleading. Based on the title, I expected combat in the deepest, darkest jungles of Africa (maybe like a modern version of "Predator"), not a story set in the villages of the part of northern Africa that is better described as part of the Middle East. Based on what I saw and heard before seeing this movie, I also expected lots of battles against, you know – monsters. The monsters really are gigantic, frightening, bad-tempered destruction machines, but they are mainly relegated to the role of background scenery. We see the insurgents take more lives than the creatures of the film's title. In the few scenes where we observe the monsters up close, we mainly just see them destroying a few buildings, when we can tell that they're capable of so much more. (Oh, the tragedy of wasted monster potential.) Even though I don't feel like I got what I paid for, I was impressed with the performances of the actors playing soldiers, but that wasn't enough for me… or maybe it was too much. The action showing each man beneath the warrior was so incredibly intense that I'm hard-pressed to call this movie "entertaining" and the over-grown creepy-crawlies which could have added a lot to the story were largely MIA. "C+"
    3SnoopyStyle

    disappointing

    It's 10 years after Monsters. In the Middle East, the US military struggles to fight both the monsters and insurgents. Staff Sgt Frater has served 17 years. In Detroit, best friends Michael Parkes, Frankie Maguire, Karl Inkelaar, and new father Sean Williams head off as green soldiers.

    I don't know how much Gareth Edwards has to do with this production. I don't know if he could help as the director. It's not strictly the director's fault. It's more about the writing. It's a bunch of characters that I don't know and don't care about. The monsters are back but this is lifeless. One would think that the US military would draw back out of the Middle East to consolidate the homeland defense. After Monsters, a sequel should be about stemming the tide on American soil. The original was a happy surprise. This one is a disappointment but not necessarily a surprising one.

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    Storyline

    Edit

    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Gareth Edwards wasn't happy with the direction this movie took. The aliens in the original became one with nature where in this they are a more trying to take over the world which is the total opposite
    • Goofs
      Near the end of the film, when Frater shoots the man in the head, the blood spatter on the wall is blue instead of red.
    • Quotes

      [last lines]

      Noah Frater: Why am i here? What am i doing here?

    • Alternate versions
      The first print submitted to the BBFC in the UK was granted a '15' certificate on 14 August 2014 uncut with a theatrical running time of 122 minutes and 55 seconds but later cited with remarks stating "Following a request from the distributor, this determination is currently under reconsideration." On 22 January 2015 the film was again granted a '15' certificate from the same distributor, Hammingden Pictures Ltd, with a reduced theatrical running time of 118 minutes and 47 seconds. This work is stated as 'uncut' however, some 4 minutes have been removed from the original print submitted which is also verified by the reduced film length. All details are on the UK BBFC website.
    • Connections
      Follows Monsters (2010)

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • May 1, 2015 (United Kingdom)
    • Countries of origin
      • United Kingdom
      • Jordan
    • Official site
      • Official site (Japan)
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Monsters : Dark Continent
    • Filming locations
      • Jordan
    • Production companies
      • Vertigo Films
      • Between The Eyes
      • 42
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Gross worldwide
      • $306,004
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

    Edit
    • Runtime
      1 hour 59 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Sound mix
      • Dolby Atmos
    • Aspect ratio
      • 2.35 : 1

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