(2016) ***1/2
In the 1960s, a widowed mom and her two daughters live
meekly as they all help mom’s medium for hire business, by assisting in the
theatrics such as blowing out candles and shaking the table when mom summons
spirits to “give us a sign”.
To heighten the theatricality, mom buys a ouija board,
paints the bottom of the planchette with a metallic paint, and practices
manipulating it back and forth with her knees underneath the table. But then, the younger daughter seems to
actually be communicating with the spirit of her late father, and thigns get progressively stranger.
The original movie, Ouija, was the epitome of scary movie clichés. Ouija 2 (sorry, but "origins of evil" is a dumb title), also suffers from many of these clichés. The microbudget horror movie is becoming
surprisingly common: Lights Out, The
Insidious series, The Conjurings, Annabelle, etc. Some of these films work and some don’t. Ouija 2 works. There’s nothing new or original here, but
what is presented, is executed very well.
The small budget gives us a small cast and less CGI so that we have more time exploring our characters. None seem expendable, and the sense of dread is ratcheted up a bit. The pacing and tension is done well too - an exponential curve where scares go from slow
burn, to gradual, to persistent.
Oddly enough, for anybody who actually remembered the first
Ouija movie, there’s even some fan service thrown in. Ouija 2 works both as a standalone, and a
clarifying prequel to explain the history behind Ouija (impressive since that
movie wasn’t begging for a backstory). Infinitely more enjoyable than its predecessor, Ouija 2 is
familiar and fun.
3 comments:
Abduscias & I went to see this too. Our review will be up soon.
I have heard some positive buzz about this film and your review cinches it for me!
It isn't too often that a "2" beats the first one. Nice to know this one delivers the goods!
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