I was really surprised by how much I liked The Black Phone so I was excited to be able to see the sequel, Black Phone 2, with my nephew last night. I think it takes a lot of the ideas explored in the first movie and expands upon them. Four years after Finney Blake (Mason Thames) killed the Grabber (Ethan Hawke), his sister Gwen (Madeleine McGraw) is having disturbing dreams about three dead boys at the Alpine Lake Camp, including one in which her late mother Hope (Anna Lore), who worked at the camp, calls her from a pay phone there. Finney is still traumatized by his experience with the Grabber but he reluctantly agrees to go with Gwen and her boyfriend Ernesto (Miguel Mora), the brother of one of the Grabber's victims, to investigate the camp. They arrive in the middle of a severe snowstorm and are stranded there with Armando (Demian Bichir), the owner of the camp, who remembers Hope and the three campers who were killed by a counselor and never found. When Gwen begins having disturbing interactions with the Grabber in her dreams, Finney receives a call on the pay phone from him vowing to kill Gwen as retribution for his death. They eventually realize that the Grabber was the one who killed the boys and that they must find their bodies in order end his power over Gwen. What I enjoyed most about this story is that it mirrors the one in the original. In the first movie, Gwen uses her supernatural ability to help Finney defeat a real monster and, in this one, Finney uses his real ability to help Gwen defeat a supernatural threat. I also liked the continued use of the phone as a link to those beyond the grave, especially the connection between Gwen and her mother which becomes more significant as the movie progresses. Gwen's dream sequences feature an aesthetic similar to Super 8 film and provide a lot of gore, particularly a decapitation using a windowpane, but my favorite scene is when Finney interacts with the three dead campers while in the phone booth because it is incredibly unnerving. Thames and McGraw give great performances but Birchir is used mostly for exposition and there are a few other characters who feel a bit extraneous. I think this is a good sequel but what keeps it from being a great one, in my opinion, is all of the cringe-worthy dialogue. I still really liked it and would definitely recommend it to fans of horror.
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