It's probably best for you to know exactly what to expect before seeing Adam Green's Hatchet II. If you enjoyed the first film, then you're good to go as the sequel continues from the exact scene where it left off. For newcomers, Hatchet II is done in the classic American horror that many of us remember from the 80's and early 90's. That means there's plenty of over the top blood and gore and some humor strewed about. If you're looking for scary, you're looking in the wrong place.
NFamousGamers writes:
Slasher films have been a staple of the horror genre since the early 1970s (1960s if you count Psycho). But the big boom was in the 70s. Gory, blood-infested films with lots of pretty girls with nice racks getting hacked to pieces by a demented mad man were the rage. This tradition got stale in late 1980s and the early 1990s, but was brought back by Wes Craven in 1996 with the hit movie Scream. The genre was revived again with a fresh take on it in the form of Adam Green's Hatchet in 2007 (it was actually released in film festivals in 2006 but didn’t receive wide release until 2007).
I have enjoyed both of these so far. They were nice old-school b-style slasher movies I thought.
David Weaver from Home And Theater writes: I had heard through the "web"-vine that this was supposed to be one of the goriest and purposely cheeseball horror/slasher films in recent memory. I had never seen the original one (nor did I ever have the intention to) but this sequel kind of intrigued me a bit. So I plopped down my $2.50 at the local video store and said what the hell. I can honestly say now that it lives up to the hype of the gory death scenes it has been beating its chest over but does that mean it was an honest to goodness good slasher film...?
CNN Entertainment: "Just a couple of days after the release of Hatchet II, the AMC theater chain has pulled the unrated slasher sequel from all of the cinemas that were showing the movie.
"We woke up this morning and the movie was gone," says director Adam Green. "I'm bewildered and confused."
Is it just me, or does this director always seem to come off as an arrogant whiner? He talks like he's the biggest thing since Orson Welles. That and I totally disagree with his arguments against the MPAA. It's not an 'evil' organization, but I feel a necessary one. Even the biggest Hollywood movies all listen to the organization, so what makes him think he's better than it?
Oh well, I can't say as to why AMC would have pulled it, but my guess is after watching it a few times, and maybe getting some complaints, they decided featuring an unrated movie wasn't in the best interest of their business.
I think Hatchet had a bit more humor-than-horror even for the 80's comparison. The tagline for the original was genius, "It's not a remake, it's not a sequel, and it's not based on a Japanese movie."
But the movie failed.
I personally stay miles away from this type of movies, I really want a good Horror movie, a which that doesn't require Female exploitation in order to sell.
Last Good Horror/Thriller movies i saw were, The Crazies, The Orphan & Paranormal Activity.