Tuesday, October 22, 2024

Smile 2 (2024) * *

 


Directed by:  Parker Finn

Starring:  Naomi Scott, Rosemarie DeWitt, Kyle Gallner, Lukas Gage, Drew Barrymore, Peter Jacobson, Raul Castillo, Dylan Gelula

Smile 2 is the follow-up to 2022's Smile, a horror tale of an invisible parasite which takes over your mind and drives you insane to the point that, when it's time to die, your mouth upturns into a malicious smile and you kill yourself.  If you happen to die in front of someone else, that person will now carry the parasite.  

I recall nothing about the original Smile.  I looked back and saw I applied a negative review, but I couldn't pass a quiz on it.  Smile 2, however, starts out with promise and Naomi Scott's performance is indeed terrific, but the horror aspects kick in and turns the movie into a mess.  Scott is Skye Riley, a pop superstar on the comeback trail one year after nearly dying in a car accident which killed her boyfriend.   Skye is recovering from substance dependency and is planning a nationwide tour kicked off on The Drew Barrymore Show.   However, the psychological and physical scars remain, and one night after a painful rehearsal, Skye visits her former drug dealer (Gage) in hopes of scoring painkillers. 

The dealer, though, acts erratically and is soon wearing the telltale smile before staring into Skye's eyes and smashing his own face with a barbell.  Skye leaves the scene and is haunted by troublesome visions which question her own reality.  Her mother (DeWitt) manages her career down to her sleep schedule, but soon is worried about Skye's erratic behavior which alienates her fans, her record label, and her best friend Gemma (Gelula), whom Skye hasn't spoken to in a long time.  Skye attempts to rekindle her friendship with Gemma, but soon we have to question what's even real. 

If Smile 2 were a drama about the life of a troubled pop star, it would've been compelling, but Smile 2 wasn't made to document Skye's life.  It was meant to be a horror film with gotcha moments and jump scares.  There are plenty of these to go around and would satisfy those who attended for scary moments, but soon Smile 2 flies off the rails to its inevitable ending, wiping out whatever goodwill the first half provided.  But, it's surely an improvement over the first film, for what that's worth. 

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