Horror Bingo continues, but first! An important change to our Very Serious Ice Cream Rating System:
The Old System: I review three films and award them Chocolate (first place), Vanilla (second place), and Strawberry (third place), regardless of how silly it is to compare wildly different movies like this. Every Triple Scoop Review has one of each flavor.
The New System: I review three films and grade them individually with this totally objective and highly scientific ice cream rating system:
God-Tier – Chocolate Salted Caramel
Really Enjoyed This – Chocolate
Enjoyed This Okay – Vanilla
Technically Proficient, But Not My Thing – Strawberry
Well, I Liked SOME of It – Rocky Road
I Actively Disliked This Movie – Pistachio
I Could Not Finish This Movie – Mint Chocolate Chip
Each Triple Scoop Review will be any combo of these flavors. Chocolate Salted Caramel probably won’t get used very often (I suspect it will primarily be awarded to old sentimental favorites), and I honestly kinda doubt I’ll use Mint Chocolate Chip at all because I can’t even remember the last time I started a movie and didn’t finish it. Feel free to argue about how I’ve unfairly maligned mint chocolate chip (or any of the other ice cream flavors) in the comments below, of course, but just know that your opinions are wrong and wrong forever.
With that, let’s get back to our movies!
A Quiet Place Part II
Year: 2020
Director: John Krasinski
First Watch or Rewatch: First Watch
Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, or Other: Other – Paramount Plus
Spoilers: Yes, in paragraphs 3 and 4
Grade: Chocolate
A Quiet Place Part II is a very competently made sequel, and for the most part, I had a pretty great time watching it. It’s been a while since I’ve seen the first one, but I have the general sense that AQPP II got the Aliens treatment, you know, a little louder than its predecessor, more action all around, a bit less claustrophobic in terms of both setting and scope. But like Aliens, that totally works here, and most of what I really enjoyed about the first film (an active Deaf protagonist, creepy Demogorgon monsters, the close focus on the Abbott family) is still present in the sequel.
Many of the scenes in AQP II have serious video game energy: the opener (which would also make for one hell of a Disneyland ride), the destroyed train scene, any of the moments when someone has to stay perfectly silent and still. (It’d be like in Until Dawn, where periodically you can’t shake the controller or INSTANT DEATH FOR YOU.) It’s all very fun, tense and entertaining. I also enjoyed Cillian Murphy in this, less because Emmett is a particularly groundbreaking character and more because Murphy is just a fantastic actor who elevates the material. All the acting is really solid, actually, and I hope to see Millicent Simmonds in more stuff because once again she’s excellent.
My primary quibbles are these: A) JFC, stop casting Djimon Hounsou just to waste him like this, and B) the feral people don’t totally work for me, mostly cause they seem, like, weird fucked up instead of normal “we kill people for food and joy” fucked up? Like, their eyes are all weird and shit, I don’t know. Maybe they’re sick with some kind of radiation? Vague Zombie Disease? It’s not that I particularly wanted a detailed backstory for these ten-minute antagonists, but they also feel slightly out of place to me like this: a bit forced and unnecessarily distracting
That being said, I did enjoy how “dive” came back around. I also like that the island community isn’t some devious trap and how nobody in the family dies; even Cillian Murphy doesn’t get the obvious redemption death I’d initially predicted. Sometimes, going optimistic works in your favor because, in horror, optimism is often the more surprising and exciting choice. (Which is another reason Djimon Hounsou’s death here annoys me so much; it’s such a predictable, throwaway moment. If his character has to die, fine, but why like this?) I like the triumph in this ending, too, as the kids each literally step up to kill the monster and protect their respective adults. It feels a touch abrupt, since we don’t actually see our heroes meet up again, but I also kinda enjoy it.
The People Under the Stairs
Year: 1991
Director: Wes Craven
First Watch or Rewatch: First Watch
Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, or Other: Other – Peacock
Spoilers: Surprisingly, no, not really
Grade: Chocolate
You know, I really enjoyed this movie. I’d never gotten around to seeing it before and the very little I knew–basically, there are weird people, and they live under the stairs–had me expecting something a bit more Texas Chainsaw Massacre or The Hills Have Eyes. I wasn’t at all prepared for a satirical gothic horror criticizing conservatives, landlords, and gentrification, certainly not one with dark fairy tale sensibilities, deliciously over-the-top villains, cannibalism, bondage suits, and jokes, just like, all the jokes. This movie is a weird mishmash of a story that’s rocking at least four different tones, and I don’t exactly know why it works so well for me, but it really does.
I enjoy all of the acting, especially Wendy Robie as Mommy (or the Woman, as she’s credited). Her performance is so energetic and creepy and hilarious, and she makes for a delightful villain. This Lack of Impressed face right here, as she looks at Daddy?
Oh, man. I felt that in my bones.
But the whole cast is pretty great. Fool is a funny, resourceful MC, and I think Brandon Quintin Adams does a great job with him, especially considering he’s all of, what? 10 or 11 here? I enjoyed A.J. Longer as Alice, too. Ving Rhames and Bill Cobbs were both a delightful surprise, and of course, this Twin Peaks fan was deeply amused to see Everett McGill here alongside Wendy Robie. I also really liked Sean Whalen, who I will always remember from Michael Bay’s “Got Milk” commercial. (Heh. I love that isn’t a joke.)
This is a story about a Black child living in a Black neighborhood trying to save his family from eviction, but it’s written and directed by a white man; as such, there are probably improvements that could be made here. If TPUtS ever does get a remake (and I know there’s been some talk), I’d really hope to see it in the hands of a Black filmmaker. But I don’t have a lot else that I wanna criticize. I thought the pacing was a bit off, maybe? But I also watched it with a couple of commercials (sacrilege, I know) and I had to take a couple additional pause breaks for my cat, so that easily could’ve been the problem. And yeah, there were a couple gags that were bit corny for my personal preference; mostly, though, I just laughed a lot. I adore pretty much the whole aesthetic: the costumes (particularly Mommy’s and Alice’s) and also the design of the house, with its multiple hidden passages and secret doors. I quite like the ending, too.
I kinda wish I’d seen this as a kid. I didn’t really get into horror until I was in junior high, but I wonder if this might’ve been the rare exception because in some ways, it kind of plays like a children’s movie–albeit a very, very dark, very, very weird children’s movie. I could absolutely marathon this with Return to Oz and The Witches.
Escape Room: Tournament of Champions
Year: 2021
Director: Adam Robitel
First Watch or Rewatch: First Watch
Amazon, Netflix, Hulu, or Other: Amazon
Spoilers: Only in the 4th paragraph (but spoilers throughout for the first film)
Grade: Vanilla
We watched the theatrical cut of this movie, and that’s important because the theatrical cut and the extended cut are apparently wildly different films, with completely different beginnings and endings and even different people pulling the Escape Room strings. That’s . . . weird, right? I feel like that’s weird.
Tournament of Champions is a decent sequel, though I did enjoy its predecessor more. (To be fair, my expectations for the first film were . . . not high.) I did have a good time watching this: I like death games and ridiculous horror, and obviously, yours truly was happy to see Holland Roden as one of the new players. Indya Moore was also a fun addition to the cast. I wish I found Zoey a more compelling protagonist, but I still don’t buy many of Taylor Russell’s line deliveries. I do enjoy Zoey and Ben together, though. Logan Miller is fun, and there’s something potentially interesting about a team who survived the first game entering a whole new one with a bunch of soul survivors.
The rooms and death traps are silly and enjoyable, but I couldn’t quite shake the feeling that Tournament of Champions was trying a little too hard to top the previous film. I did have fun (I definitely laughed when one one of the characters clowned on a dude for trying to be the Chosen One), but the sequel has basically the exact same formula as the first movie, only slightly more . . . rushed? Ludicrous? I just feel like something’s missing, and I’m not quite sure what. Maybe I just wish the puzzles themselves had been more interesting. There aren’t many surprising or exciting plot developments here except for a twist that’s telegraphed a bit too hard.
Regarding that twist, well. In the first movie, Amanda (Deborah Ann Woll), who was kinda awesome, fell to her death, only it turns out that she survived, and was forced to design this Escape Room, otherwise Evil Minos would kill her daughter. I was bummed when Amanda died, so I kinda like this, except . . . IDK, it almost feels weirdly more depressing, like Amanda was pretty badass in the first film, but now she’s just broken, and never really gets an arc or a standout moment or even much screen time; in fact, she’s basically dropped once they all “escape.” Mostly, it feels like she’s around to show that unlike Amanda, Zoey would never break. Which, meh. Frankly, I’d probably have traded Rachel and Brianna for Zoey in a heartbeat. Partially because I just like them more, but also because their deaths specifically feel predetermined by the game, like they never really had a shot at winning, and that’s kind of a bummer, too.
This is mint chocolate chip slander, and I will not stand for it!
Mint Chocolate Chip is the WOOOOOORST.
I’d argue that mint chocolate chip is overrated and praline pecan is the WOOOORST, but arbitrary scales are arbitrary. 🙂
I’ve never had praline pecan, but I don’t like pecans (or nuts in general), so I suspect this would also be very low on the rating system.
I’m not mad, I’m just disappointed.
*insert get used to disappointment Princess Bride GIF here*
I support you in this war of the ice cream flavours. Mint anything is an instant no.
Mint is a nightmare. Mint is the flavor of all food in Hell.
I skipped the whole review of AQP II but noted its chocolate ranking. Where does AQP I fall on your scale? Tastier chocolate? Salty Caramel? (Yum). Moose Tracks? Americone Dream?
Slightly tastier chocolate, maybe? I enjoyed the first movie, but it’s been a while since I’ve seen it, so I’m not sure how thoroughly I can compare and contrast.
I should rewatch The People Under The Stairs; I saw it as a teenager and it was pretty awesome. Side note, at one point it was announced that Jordan Peele was attached to this potential remake – IDK if that’s still the case – and I saw a whole bunch of neckbeards who’d clearly never seen the original whinging about how Peele was going to ruin this classic movie by making it into some sort of social commentary on race relations.
I haven’t seen the Escape Room sequel, but I read a synopsis when it came out and was kind of baffled by the way in which Amanda returned. I’d imagine escape rooms, but probably especially murderous escape rooms, would take some skill to create – so would the villains be going to such lengths to force her specifically to do so? Danny the escape room nerd I’d get, but Amanda had no prior experience with or any particular interest in puzzles in general (she mentioned that she only came because she needed the money) and there was no indication that she had other skills or experience that would be especially relevant to creating them. As much as I’d liked Amanda and wanted her to live, it makes no sense for the Escape Room Overlords to keep her alive to do a job that’d be better filled by hire/kidnapping a non-lethal escape room designer, or an architect or something.
It did make a lot of sense when I found out the extended edition had an entirely different puzzle designer.
I saw that Jordan Peele was attached, which is cool! I’m also not sure if that’s still the case, but I’d be interested. Also, ugh, people are the absolute worst. How are their viewing comprehension skills this BAD?
Yeah, I really like Amanda, but wow, the more I think about it, the more she just doesn’t make sense. I ended up watching the alternate scenes, and they definitely work better. (Except how they just completely drop the plane thing, which is at the end the 1st movie.)
I figured that it wasn’t that the people making this complaint had particularly bad viewing comprehension, but that their dislike of both “politically correct,” remakes and Peele specifically led them to preemptively jump to defend the honour of The People Under The Stairs without watching it or knowing anything about it.
This is very likely the case, but also, I just can’t trust people anymore, since there are apparently people who came away from Squid Game thinking it’s a critique against communism. SMH.
I do find it very funny that they’ve gone to enormous lengths to make sure they got to use the plane room on Zoe. (Especially because the entire game was apparently rigged for her specifically to beat.) I can just imagine some Minos executive throwing a tantrum over how this was meant to be their magnum opus, how far over budget they’d gone, how they’d used it in marketing on the dark web, and it was all being undone because some college kid has a thing about flying.
And then their assistant suggests just using it on some other people who are willing to fly, and the Minos executive is like “But it was designed specially for her! And she really deserves something special, after escaping the first time.”
“We could always just kidnap her and put her on a plane with our other designated contestants, sir.”
“What, shove a bag over her head and pluck her off the street? No, we’re not philistines. We convince our contestants to walk willingly into our death traps.”
“Okay, so if she won’t get onto a plane…”
“We’ll just have to get her over her phobia! Find me an evil therapist!”
**Months later**
“Sir, the therapist is trying her best, but the girl said she’d have to destroy Minos before she’d feel safe enough to fly.”
“But that’s not even fair! We had nothing to do with her first plane crash; why’s she associating us with her stupid aeroplane trauma?”
“I know, sir. You did your best, sir.”
“Oh no, we’re not done. If that smug little shit wants to destroy Minos, we’ll just have to let her think she’s beaten us and destroyed Minos. Get me Amanda Harper, a train escape room, some fake cops, fake news reports about us being caught, and some previous contestants. We’re faking a tournament of champions!”
Oh my God, I have never wanted deleted scenes so badly IN MY LIFE. This needs to be canon immediately.