| The SF, Horror and Fantasy Film Review |
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| Science-Fiction |
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| Horror |
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| Fantasy |
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WISHMASTER 2: EVIL NEVER DIES
Rating: 
USA. 1999.
Director/Screenplay Jack Sholder, Producer Tony Amatullo, Photography Carlos Gonzalez, Music David Williams, Visual Effects Supervisor Marcus Keyes, Visual Effects Optical Illusions (Supervisor Jeff Matakovich), Makeup Effects Supervisor Anthony C. Ferrante, Makeup Effects SOTA F/X (Supervisors Roy Knyrim & Jerry Macaluso), Production Design Alfred Sole. Production Company Artisan Entertainment.
Cast:
Andrew Divoff (Djinn/Nathaniel Demerest), Holly Fields (Morgana), Paul Johansson (Father Gregory), Oleg Vidov (Osip Krezhkov), Tommy Tiny Lister Jr (Tillaver), Robert Lassardo (Gries), Levani Outchaneichvili (Pushkin), Carlos Leon (Webber), Bokeem Woodbine (Farralon), Ryan Rhino Michaels (Butz), Chris Weber (Eric)
Plot: Morgana and her boyfriend Greg are caught as they attempt to rob an art gallery robbery. Greg is shot and Morgana gets away, but inadvertently succeeds in freeing the djinn trapped in a statue. The djinn stays and claims responsibility for the theft and murders but this is merely a ruse for him to go to jail, a place that provides him with a ready bank of souls to grant his cursed wishes to so that he can gain the one thousand souls he needs to take over the world. Meanwhile Morgana struggles to understand what has happened and find a way of combating the djinn.
Wishmaster (1997) was an enjoyable formulaic attempt to create another Elm St-styled effects-driven, one-liner spouting super-villain horror franchise. Wishmaster 2 was the first sequel to emerge. It is invariably a lesser sequel although not entirely an uninteresting one. It is directed and written by Jack Sholder who notedly also directed the first sequel to A Nightmare on Elm Street (1984), A Nightmare on Elm Street Part II: Freddys Revenge (1985) and whose greatest (and only notable) moment as director has been The Hidden (1987).
The good news is that Wishmaster 2 is a better sequel than Freddys Revenge was. It explores themes from the original a little bit more than might be expected of just a formulaic run through at one point someone has the ingenious idea of stopping the djinn by attempting to shoot the heroine who revived him and who it needs to make a wish. The only person to return from the original film is Andrew Divoff in the title role, whose icy cold, gravel-voiced and darkly magnetic ruthlessness again adds much to the film. The films novel spin is in placing the character in jail where it is amusing to see him still smiling up against hardened killer-types. Perhaps the oddest thing about the film though is that Sholder has turned it into a parable of moral redemption. One has no idea of Sholders personal religious persuasions and the term Christianity is never mentioned once throughout, but the heroines basic plot arc becomes a parable about her earning atonement and finding forgiveness for the bad things that she has done. Theres a unique scene where in order to combat the djinn she makes an outward display of repentance by taking off her Goth clothing and punkette makeup and dressing as a wholesome girl-next-door type. The only downside is that Holly Fields gives a terribly wimpy non-performance in the part shes so insipid you cant even remotely take her seriously as a Goth girl.
The one other thing that the first film showcased was an extraordinary display of makeup effects. This only intermittently produces these a cool effect with the Wishmaster rebirthing by emerging out of a wall, a man being squeezed through the bars of a cell and none with the impact of the opening few minutes of Wishmaster. Worse Sholder adds silly sequences which take the film down to about the level of the average Leprechaun (1992) sequel. Theres a really silly sequence where a con wishes he could see his lawyer fuck himself whereupon we see the lawyers back bend over and .. The climax with the Wishmaster getting loose in a Las Vegas casino a riff taken directly from Leprechaun 3 (1995) with a woman excreting coins and people being sliced up with flying playing cards and a razor-tipped roulette wheel is immensely silly.
Cast:
Copyright Richard Scheib 2000
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