Five college women buy the old Hokstedter place for their new sorority house. They got it cheap because of the bloody incidents from five years before. They decide to stay in it for the night so they can meet the movers in the morning, but begin to get the creeps when the weird neighbor Orville Ketchum starts poking around. Shortly after the women take showers and consult a Ouija board they begin experiencing an attrition problem.
Gail Harris
Linda
Melissa Moore
Jessica
Peter Spellos
Orville Ketchum
Stacia Zhivago
Kimberly
Barbii
Suzanne
Dana Bentley
Janey
Jürgen Baum
Lt. Mike Block
Toni Naples
Sgt. Phyllis Shawlee
Bridget Carney
Candy
Bob Sheridan
Moving man
Gunnar Johnson
Cop in rain
Eric Hoffman
Bartender
Carlo Jonzi
Abdul
Hassan Feffer
Schmabdul
Emil Rochelle
Godfather
Savannah
Satana
Alex Tabrizi
Bouncer
Kevin Tent
Newscaster
Don Keehed
House Cop #1
J.B. Rogers
House Cop #2
Mike Elliott
Eddie
Director
Jim Wynorski
Writer
J.B. Rogers
Writer
Mark Thomas McGee
Writer
Bob Sheridan
August 12, 2022
6
**_Entertaining one-dimensional slasher with dubious acting and a wink of camp_**
Five college gals apprehend a sorority house in Los Angeles at low-price due to its infamous past and immediately go about fixing it up. The first night they foolishly play with a Ouija board and members start dying. Who’s doing the killing since the mass murderer died in the first film?
"Sorority House Massacre II" (1990) is less amateurish compared to the first film and adds camp & sexploitation, but only in the sense of female attractiveness and tame nudity, not sex. Speaking of which, this flick is a celebration of the beauty of women masquerading as a slasher.
Some might argue that it degrades women, and I can understand this perspective since some of the protagonists die in the typical slasher manner, but the movie is stressing that they have to rise to the challenge in a life-or-death situation if they want to survive, which smacks of the proverbial girl power.
While the story is overly one-note to be very compelling everything builds to an effective last act. It’s an entertaining spooky ‘B’ flick for Halloween that walks the balance beam between too serious and too goofy.
The director is the prolific Jim Wynorski, a student of Roger Corman known for myriad ‘B’ flicks of varied genres, some surprisingly good (“Gargoyle” from 2004), some bad (“Camel Spiders”) and some amusing schlock (“The Hills Have Thighs”).
The effective no-name female cast features: Gail Harris (Linda), Stacia Zhivago (Kimberly), Barbii (Suzanne), Bridget Carney (Candy), Savannah aka Shannon Wilsey (Satana), Dana Bentley (Janey), Melissa Moore (Jessica) and Toni Naples aka Karen Chorak (Sgt. Shawlee). Needless to say, if softcore female nudity offends you, I suggest skipping this.
The film runs 1 hour, 17 minutes, and was shot in Venice, Los Angeles (interiors of house) and 2200 S Harvard Blvd, Los Angeles (exteriors).
GRADE: B-/C+
Status:
Released
Original Language:
English
Budget:
$0.00
Revenue:
$0.00