The Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death (Blu-ray) PG-13
She Never Left
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Blu-ray Details
- Rated: PG-13
- Run Time: 1 hours, 38 minutes
- Video: Color
- Encoding: Region 1 (USA & Canada)
- Released: April 14, 2015
- Originally Released: 2015
- Label: 20Th Century Studios
Performers, Cast and Crew:
Starring | Phoebe Fox, Jeremy Irvine, Helen McCrory & Adrian Rawlins | |
Performer: | Ned Dennehy & Oaklee Pendergast | |
Directed by | Tom Harper | |
Director of Photography: | George Steel |
Entertainment Reviews:
Rating: 2/5 --
The lazy, ineptness of the screenplay doesn't help matters, and writer Jon Croker seems keener on ticking every box in a notional 'How To Make A Horror Film' manual than creating enduring characters or a truly riveting storyline.
Full Review
CineVue
Rating: 2.5/5 --
Still retains the original's reliance on jump scares but is a much more involving story that at least manages to keep you activated throughout its run time.
Full Review
Bloody Disgusting
Rating: 1/5 --
You might be startled once or twice while watching Angel of Death, but the thrills are cheap tricks.
Full Review
IONCINEMA.com
Rating: 2/5 --
The sequel is about as far from the original source as you can get while still using the title, The Woman in Black. It is just as far away from being interesting.
Full Review
Toronto Sun
Rating: 8/10 --
The Woman In Black 2: Angel Of Death is a profoundly frightening, relentlessly spooky film that wears how old-fashioned and traditional it is as a badge of honour.
Full Review
Wicked Horror
Director Tom Harper conveys this theme through dark, moldy-looking mise-en-scene and the uniformly sullen performances he elicits from the cast; you're more likely to find this depressing than scary.
Full Review
Chicago Reader
Clearly no expense has been spared -- the house and misty marshes remain eerily beautiful...
Total Film
Product Description:
Hammer Films goes in for a second round of fright with this follow-up to THE WOMAN IN BLACK from a story idea by original author Susan Hill. Tom Harper directs. This entry opens in 1941 London, where the citizens live in fear of aerial bombings by the Germans. Schoolteacher Eve Parkins (Phoebe Fox) and headmistress Jean Hogg (Helen McCrory) are tasked with evacuating a small group of children to the countryside where they'll be safe, although probably not since their destination is the haunted mansion from the original (was there really nowhere else in Britain that could have housed two adult women and a half-dozen small kids'). Things start out gloomy and just proceed to spiral downwards, from disturbing dreams to waking hallucinations to actual death.