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The Hills Have Eyes 2
When a team of National guard decide to take supplies into the desert for a group of soldiers and scientist, they are shocked to find the placed deserted but soon after they get a distress call up in the mountain which they decide to go investigate only to find a tribe of cannibalistic creatures upon arrival.
23 October 1986, Anderson, South Carolina, USA
29 April 1972, Bakersfield, California, USA
10 March 1980, Mancus, Colorado, USA
22 June 1981, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia
18 December 1953, Billings, Montana, USA
15 April 1970, New York City, New York, USA
August 15, 2007
It sucks balls.
March 31, 2007
The mutants may or may not live to kill again, but at this point, these fussed-over grotesques are better suited to wax museums than movie theaters.
August 22, 2007
In case you miss what's happening, one soldier wails, 'Oh, man, we're gettin' picked off one by one, here.'
July 07, 2010
The only thing the lowly Hills 2 has going for it is the grossness, ferocity, and superhuman strength of the rampaging mutants. I mean, these guys put the ugh in ugly; they make the original's Michael Berryman look like a hunk.
April 02, 2007
One man-versus-mutant dust-up ends with a sledgehammer to the groin. Enough said.
August 02, 2009
...could have been more than a pale shadow of the original if the filmmakers had taken their time...
March 31, 2007
A secret comedy lurks within this decidedly shoddy piece of corporate horror.
July 23, 2008
The Hills Have Eyes 2 offers another round of dull, gory fright scenes that neither push the horror envelope nor exhibit any noticeable ingenuity.
March 31, 2007
It's no better or worse than most films of its genre.
September 27, 2007
There is not any plot worth discussing: people go into a desert, some die. The end.
August 28, 2015
As far as stuff like mood, atmosphere, tone, and intensity is concerned, this sequel is a completely empty vessel.
April 12, 2007
Written, disappointingly, by Wes Craven and his son Jonathan, this limp sequel to last year's remake of Wes' 1977 original feels like the work of a guy who's spent a few too many days lost in the desert.

