V/H/S/2 synopsis: Inside a darkened house looms a column of TVs littered with VHS tapes, a pagan shrine to forgotten analog gods. The screens crackle and pop endlessly with monochrome vistas of static-white noise permeating the brain and fogging concentration. But you must fight the urge to relax: this is no mere movie night. Those obsolete spools contain more than just magnetic tape. They are imprinted with the very soul of evil. (c) Magnet R. If You Like this movie you can streaming V/H/S/2 Best movie without downloading HERE
Movie Title : V/H/S/2
Release Date : Jul 12, 2013 Limited
Genre Movie :Mystery & Suspense,Horror
Mpaa Rating : R
Actors :L.C. Holt,Adam Wingard,Lawrence Michael Levine,Kelsy Abbott,Hannah Hughes,Hannah Al Rashid,Devon Brookshire,Samantha Gracie,Jay Saunders,Epy Kusnandar
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Visitor Ranting and Critics For V/H/S/2
User Ranting V/H/S/2 :User Percentage For V/H/S/2 : %
User Count Like for V/H/S/2 : 3,739
All Critics Ranting For V/H/S/2 : 6.9
All Critics Count For V/H/S/2 : 24
All Critics Percentage For V/H/S/2 : 88 %
If You Like this movie you can streaming V/H/S/2 Best movie without downloading HERE
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Review For V/H/S/2
Just imagine the kind of anthology that might yet be born should all involved be held to the evident highlights of these films so far.William Goss-MSN Movies
what S-VHS lacks in true pyloric valve-loosening fear, it makes up for with some other three letter combos: WTF and LOL.
Jordan Hoffman-Film.com
Less turns out to be much more for S-VHS, a sequel to last year's uneven indie horror omnibus V/H/S; this one is shorter and has fewer segments, but also earns a much higher batting average.
Dennis Harvey-Variety
Hardcore horror junkies will get their fix; non-addicts will enjoy a hit or two but lament not getting a sustained high.
Steve Biodrowski-Cinefantastique
Its work to course-correct the franchise rewards with a tighter, more adventuresome sequel, smartly using hindsight to build a consistent odyssey of voyeuristic brutality.
Brian Orndorf-Blu-ray.com
Its seven directors surpass the imagination and intensity of those in the original V/H/S, reiterating the format's importance as both a showcase for interstitial creativity between feature-length projects and a testing ground for future ones.
Todd Gilchrist-ToddGilchrist.com
Consistently surprising with stylistic ingenuity and storytelling elegance. Never afraid to journey into the blackest of hearts, the filmmakers involved in "V/H/S/2" have given the project their best shot, and it shows.
Dustin Putman-DustinPutman.com
If three of the stories had been decent, I probably could have let it slide, and indeed about halfway through the film, I was surprised to find myself enjoying it. Then the second half hits and the film slides into mediocrity.
Jeff Beck-Examiner.com
It's a 50/50 split as two of the shorts are great and two... well, not so much.
Ethan Alter-Television Without Pity
A fantastic sequel that will satisfy the appetites of horror fans who enjoyed the first outing.
Felix Vasquez Jr.-Cinema Crazed
Last year's anthology horror production "V/H/S" was a revelation mainly because it took the overly familiar found-footage genre and exploited it to the fullest extent. The sequel, "V/H/S 2," achieves a similar goal with more frightening extremes
Eric Kohn-indieWIRE
A couple of these shorts are good enough to become features.
Roger Moore-Movie Nation
V/H/S/2 is a consistently terrific genre omnibus, and an excellent example of a goofy gimmick seemingly past its cinematic sell date.
Bill Gibron-PopMatters
A derivative horror film with dizzying camerawork and virtually no plot or character development.
Harvey S. Karten-Compuserve
V/H/S/2 is V/H/S on mega-steroids, but Gareth Evans and Timo Tjahjanto easily steal the show with their segment "Safe Haven" - which will undoubtedly be one of the strongest horror entries in 2013.
Matt Donato-We Got This Covered
The wraparound hour may not be very good, but those middle 40 minutes are a lot of fun.
Erik Childress-eFilmCritic.com
A welcome contrast to the first film's snuff-y atmosphere and general mean-spiritedness, featuring more humor, fewer hateful characters, and occasional twinges of relatable human emotion.
Abhimanyu Das-Slant Magazine
If it's not great V/H/S/2 is still a vast improvement over the first; brutal and efficient and immensely entertaining.
Joshua Starnes-ComingSoon.net
Sequel or not, this is a fantastic foursome of horror shorts -- and yes, the wrap-around stuff is better this time.
Scott Weinberg-FEARnet
A fine string of scary installments that makes the original V/H/S, even its better entries, pale in comparison.
William Bibbiani-CraveOnline
Bloodier, more intense, and on the whole more effective than its predecessor.
Tim Grierson-Screen International
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