HORROR MOVIE REVIEW: THE WOMAN IN BLACK 2: ANGEL OF DEATH
31/2/5
A
young woman Eve Parkins has to leave London to look after the orphaned children
who are being evacuated away from the dangers of german bombings. Among the children is
a little boy Edward who had just recently lost his parents. Eve, who herself
harbours a trauma, befriends the little boy. Things turn even darker when it is clear
that the house in which the children are stationed is haunted by a terrible
vengeful spirit of a child killer. The Woman In Black wants Edward. But Eve is
not going to give him up without a fight.
THE
WOMAN IN BLACK: ANGEL OF DEATH is made in the vein of many other classic
HAMMER movies. It is atmospheric, spooky and well acted. A score from horror
regular Marco Beltrami will not disappoint. The film may be low on scares and
the level of tension cannot be compared with the original, but it is always
entertaining.
The story is a problem. While the idea of sending the bunch of
lovely kinds into the house of a child murdering ghost shall be spine tingling,
it does not contain any original twists. Phoebe Fox as Eve is a lovely heroine,
but she does not deliver a conflict and a very one-dimensional protagonist. Eve’s
romantic involvement with a young picture perfect ex-soldier lacks any chemistry and her final
confrontation with the killing spirit is not as satisfying as it could have been,
because nothing really made us believe that she is capable of this extreme
bravery.
WOMAN
IN BLACK ANGEL OF DEATH is not as dark and as gloomy as the original. It is
wonderfully designed and beautifully executed horror, but is too familiar to be
a standout and memorable film.
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