The Gate II: Trespassers

The Gate II: Trespassers
Directed by Tibor Takács
Produced by Andras Hamori
Written by Michael Nankin
Starring
Music by George Blondheim
Cinematography Bryan England
Edited by Ronald Sanders
Distributed by Vision p.d.g. (US)
Release date
  • 1990 (1990)
Running time
90 minutes
Country
Language English
Box office $2 million (US)[2]

The Gate II: Trespassers (also known as Gate II: Return to the Nightmare) is a 1990 horror film and a sequel to the 1987 film The Gate.[3] It was directed by Tibor Takács and was a co-production between the United States and Canada. Louis Tripp reprises his role as Terrence "Terry" Chandler, a teenager who opens a gate to Hell.

Plot

It has been five years since Terry (now known as Terrence) and his friend, Glen, accidentally opened up the Gate in Glen's back yard. Glen's family has moved away, and Terrence's broken family has grown worse. Still grieving over his mother's death, and with his dad wallowing in alcoholism, Terrence finds himself increasingly drawn to the evil portal and the power it possesses.

Terrence breaks into Glen's old house and begins the ritual to summon the demons and grant him the power to get his father's life back on track. He is interrupted by three other teens who also broke into the house. While John and Moe are content to ridicule Terrence, John's girlfriend, Liz is extremely interested in demonology and convinces her two friends to join Terrence in completing the ritual. Terrence brings a Minion (one of the small creatures that ran amok previously) through the Gate. In a panic, John pulls out his revolver and shoots it, then storms off with his friends in tow. Alone, Terrence finds the Minion's body and takes it home. It survives, so Terrance opts to keep it in a cage as a pet.

The next day, Terrence finds that his wish has seemingly come true. His father, once a proud airline pilot, has given up the bottle and netted a job flying for a major carrier. When Liz comes over later, they discover they can use the Minion to grant any wish they want, but with dire consequences.

Liz burns an effigy of her car pin to make a real one, and John and Moe create money and go pig out at a fancy restaurant after stealing the minion and trashing Terrence's house. The minion gets loose and attacks the boys, infecting them.

John and Moe are transformed into demons. They kidnap Liz to sacrifice her. Previously Liz and Terrence imbued an old jewelry box belonging to his mother as a vessel of light to destroy the darkness.

Terrence is brought to the dark world and greeted by the demonic John and Moe and given the task of killing Liz to complete darkness after being transformed into a demon as well. Terrence fights for himself and to save Liz and hurls the box into the gate. It explodes with light and they are transported back to Earth. Terrence dies.

After the funeral service for Terrence ends, he emerges from the coffin and Liz and Terrence kiss. After they leave, John and Moe also emerge from the coffin. Seeing Liz and Terry together, they state, "Who needs girls?, when you got demons!"

Cast

  • Louis Tripp as Terrence 'Terry' Chandler
  • Simon Reynolds as Moe
  • James Villemaire as John
  • Pamela Adlon as Liz (as Pamela Segall)
  • Neil Munro as Art
  • James Kidnie as Mr. Coleson
  • Gerry Mendicino as Maitre d'
  • Andrea Ladányi as Minon
  • Elva Mai Hoover as Doctor
  • Irene Pauzer as Teacher
  • Todd Waite as Wine Steward
  • Layne Coleman as Priest

Release

The Gate II opened in 350 theaters in the US on February 28, 1992, and grossed $2 million.[2]

The film was released on VHS in the US later in 1992 by Columbia Tristar Home Video. In October 2017, Scream Factory announced their intention to release The Gate II on Blu-ray on February 20, 2018.[4]

Reception

Kevin Thomas of the Los Angeles Times wrote that the film "doesn't generate as much fun and excitement as the original", but it is likely to enjoyed by fans of The Gate.[5] TV Guide rated it 2/4 stars and called it "an extended, updated riff" on traditional fairy tales about the dangers of wish fulfillment.[6]

References

  1. 1 2 "The Gate Ii: Trespassers (1991)". British Film Institute. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  2. 1 2 "Gate II". Box Office Mojo. Retrieved 2016-08-27.
  3. Freitag, Gina; Loiselle, André, eds. (2015). "Filmography". The Canadian Horror Film: Terror of the Soul. University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442624047.
  4. Squires, John (2017-10-30). "Scream Factory Unleashing 'Gate II'!". Bloody Disgusting. Retrieved 2017-10-30.
  5. Thomas, Kevin (1992-02-28). "Movie Reviews : More Teen Demonology In Sequel to 'The Gate'". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 2017-09-03.
  6. "Gate II". TV Guide. Retrieved 2017-09-03.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.