Happy Death Day 2U Review: 4 Ups & 6 Downs

4. There's No Suspense At All

Happy Death Day 2U Jessica Rothe
Universal

As mentioned, the horror elements of the first movie are massively scaled back for the sequel, to the extent that the baby-faced murderer ends up feeling like an afterthought for huge chunks of the film (especially later on).

But writer-director Christopher Landon still insists on having Tree and other characters repeatedly walk down dark hallways and peer around corners, even though the film's live-die-repeat premise completely undermines any sense of stakes or tension this might otherwise imply.

More to the point, these set-pieces just feel incredibly unimaginative and drawn from any number of also-ran horror films released over the last few decades.

Even though death has a scarce amount of import for most of the film, at least Landon could've turned the screws by forcing the characters into some more unique locales and changing-up the formula.

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Stay at home dad who spends as much time teaching his kids the merits of Martin Scorsese as possible (against the missus' wishes). General video game, TV and film nut. Occasional sports fan. Full time loon.