Earl Bassett's celebrity after defeating the Graboid attack against the town of Perfection has proved short-lived, until he's recruited by a Mexican oil company whose workers have found more than they bargained for under the soil.
Fred Ward
Earl Bassett
Helen Shaver
Kate 'White' Reilly
Chris Gartin
Grady Hoover
Michael Gross
Burt Gummer
Marcelo Tubert
Senor Ortega
José Ramón Rosario
Pedro
Marco Hernández
Julio
Thomas Rosales Jr.
Oil Worker
S.S. Wilson
War Documentary Narrator (uncredited)
Director, Characters, Writer
S.S. Wilson
Characters
Ron Underwood
Characters, Writer
Brent Maddock
July 31, 2014
5
The Shriekers!
After the huge love and deserved critical praise for Ron Underwood’s 1990 film, Tremors, this in spite of poor box office and lead man Kevin Bacon disowning the film at the time, sequels were always likely. And so it proved.
Fred Ward and Michael Gross return from the first film and are joined by Christopher Gartin, Helen Shaver and Marcelo Tubert. Underwood hands over the directing reins to S.S. Wilson and co-produces instead, while music is by Jay Ferguson and cinematography by Virgil Harper.
In spite of adding some new beasties into the mix, it all feels very same old same old, only without the funny script and any sense of peril. What made Tremors so strong was that even as it had its tongue in its cheek, homaging 1950s creature features with a proud sense of being, it was still scary and suspenseful. The characters there gave a believable sense of danger and fright, here it’s just done for laughs, we never once think the principal players are remotely scared of the Graboids and their offspring.
Story has advanced for Earl (Ward) and Burt (Gross), where this time it’s Earl who is romancing (Shaver under used but lovely) and Burt is all on his lonesome as his Mrs (Heather played by Reba McEntire) has left him on account of his love of war and weapons, a joke which grows old very fast here. Still, when the action isn’t of the budget CGI kind, it’s well staged and good fun, though Wilson’s comic sequence shooting is flat, while Ward is a strong enough actor to carry the film to keep it above average.
Passably enjoyable for fans of creature feature movies without ever being an essential viewing choice. 5/10
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$4,000,000.00
Revenue:
$0.00