USA 2013
Starts October 17, 2013
Directed by: James Wan
Writing credits: Leigh Whannell, James Wan
Cast: Patrick Wilson, Rose Byrne, Barbara Hershey, Lin Shaye, Garrett Ryan, Jocelin Donahue, Lindsay Seim, Ty Simpkins, Leigh Whannell, Angus Sampson, Steve Coulter
Length: 106 minutes
Flashback: 1986 and young Elise (Seim)—hypnotist and supernatural expert—arrives late at night at Loraine (Donahue) Lambert’s home to help her boy. Recognizing the presence of a “malignant parasite”, Elise makes him forget. Fast forwarding, Chapter 2 picks-up the morning following where Insidious left off. Josh (Wilson) was able to pull young Dalton (Simpkins) back from The Further, but a tragic consequence results in the police questioning wife Renai (Byrne). Now a schoolteacher and family man, Josh’s son has inherited his ability to travel outside his physical body. Seeking a safe haven, Josh and family move in with grandmother Lorraine (Hershey)—three generations under one roof. Lorraine proactively calls in Specs (Whannell/writer) and Tucker (Sampson), the ghost-hunting duo. Stymied, they eventually turn to Elise’s (Shaye) friend and former colleague Carl (Coulter), a gifted albeit reluctant physic. With the pieces in place, the action escalates with horrifying dizziness as we shift from past to present and between worlds—the one we know and The Further, where the dead live on to torment the living.
Since college in Melbourne, Australia, collaborators Wan and Whannell swapped ghost stories. “We took all the scares, all the great ghost stories we’d heard, and put them in the film (Insidious)”. This sequel, shot in twenty-six days in or around Los Angeles, California with the original cast, has a handful of new characters. The strong storyline, combining time travel (25 years into the past) with astral projection, is visually believable through cinematographer John R. Leonetti’s framing, salient color palette, and unnerving contrasts. Which Kirk M. Morri cuts on, and Joseph Bishara’s music’s originality complements. Budgetary restrictions forced creativity: at Production designer Jennifer Spence’s film locations; in Prop master Thom Spence’s applications—the tin-can telephone portal is especially disarming; via Kristin M. Burke’s details in dressing the living, and dead, 19th and 20th century characters. As a sequel, Insidious: Chapter 2—even without seeing the original—is a terrifying psychological horror thriller. Wan and Whannell’s filmmaking partnership is just getting started, and worth following. ( )
American Women's Club of Hamburg e.V.
Postfach 13 04 05
20104 Hamburg
Contact: info@awchamburg.org