Mutant Reviewers from Hell do
    Waxwork II: Lost in Time

    "Sarah and you have actually stumbled into God's Nintendo game."

        Summary Capsule
        Teens battle bad horror movies through a time portal






        Justin's Rating: God Mode on N64
        Justin's Review: Let's get this out of the way first off: Waxwork II is not a great movie. It's not a bad movie, unless you hate bad movies, which this spoofs, in which case you might think this is a bad movie. It's kinda cool in parts, ridiculous in others, and the acting has to be smelled to be believed. But all in all, W2: Lost in Time is enough of a smorgesboard of quirky ideas that it's fairly easy to be entertained by the effort.

        While W2 is technically a sequel to Waxwork, that's like saying Scotch tape is a sequel to duct tape just because both are sticky. Or something like that. Mark (Zach Galligan from Gremlins) and Sarah (Monika Schnarre) have somehow survived the burning inferno of the waxwork, but are followed by an amputated hand (Mr. Hand). After the hand kills Sarah's evil stepfather, Sarah is blamed in court, and only a magical amulet that lets the teens cross time can prove her innocence.

        This is, without a doubt, the weakest reason to plunge characters into time travel. Well, it's not too bad if they could control where they're sent. But they can't, and instead of returning to the crime and taking a photo or two, they somehow get caught up in horror movie parodies (so it's not actually traveling across time, per se, but celluloid instead). At least they're just so genuinely goofy about the plot that it makes the sort of sense that's easy to swallow with milk. What I love is that instead of letting the tenuous plot drop, they (as in the first film) spend a TON of screen time trying to explain it away through exposition. In Waxwork 2's case, they use a talking raven that used to be Mark's uncle to explain that all history is a massive Nintendo game between God and the devil. There's also some sort of tie-in to Alice in Wonderland that is dropped mid-way through. HUH?!? You can't make up this stuff, at least not without licking intoxicated toads.

        Mark and Sarah are incredibly dimwitted, and it's only through the use of some clever parodies does this film obtain ha-ha quality. There's an inspired Alien ripoff, a cool bit with Frankenstein getting really gory, and a trip back through memory lane with a remake of the mall/zombie scene from Dawn of the Dead. While some of these parodies drag on, there's a lot of fun bits that more than make up for it. W2 owes a huge debt to Evil Dead 2, using a rogue hand (down to the hand throwing all sorts of junk at the good guy), a flying eyeball (or brain this time), a gyser of blood, and even a cameo of that ultra-manly star, Bruce Campbell. Bruce returns as John Loftmore, a professor in a Poltergeist/Legend of Hell House clip. Nothing huge, but he does get a few good scenes and laughs, and it just made my day to see him here. Two years later, Campbell would return in the third Evil Dead movie.

        It's a lot of fake gore, and a lot of real camp. There are parts that drag and drag, but you must endure to get to the final "movie jumping" scene that's plain awesome (New! Plain Awesome! Now in six varieties!). Waxwork II doesn't break any new ground, but it manages to retread old paths with tongue in cheek and Frankenstein's hand through gut.

        Sean's Rating: 4 out of 5 decapitated (yet still fully functional) hands
        Sean's Review: Okay, the movie is so silly it's awesome. And yes, Justin, I too got a kick out of the line, "Sarah and you have stumbled onto God's Nintendo game." This movie has everything a satirist of horror movies could want, making fun of the Aliens movies, Frankenstein, and more. My favorite scene is the sword fight from movie to movie. (I couldn't help but laugh as Edward Hyde looked at his bottle to wonder if it had brought the swordfighters into his laboratory, or when Zach Galligan's mouth didn't match his words in the Godzilla sequence.) Overall, this is a silly movie, and the rap video at the end is equally campy.

        The Scoop


        1992
        Rated R
        Horror/Time Travel/Parody

        Director
        Anthony Hickox

        Starring
        Zach Galligan
        Monika Schnarre
        Bruce Campbell
        Martin Kemp

        Didja Notice?
        Product placement wasn't available, so the modern characters drink cans labeled "BEER" (like Repo Man)
        Once again, a two-pound hand proves more than a match for two grown adults.
        "It's only a flesh wound" - reference to the classic line in Monty Python and the Holy Grail
        200 people were reported to be killed at the Waxwork (from the first movie)
        Mark and his dead uncle talk to each other over the film reel
        Drew Barrymore has a cameo as a vampire victim
        Some of the artifacts in Nigel's closet include: Jason's bloody hockey mask, an "ex-living dead", silver bullets, Van Helsing's stake, the Ark of the Covenant box from Raiders of the Lost Ark, and the time door opener
        What's-her-name, Counselor Troi from Star Trek, has a cameo in the haunted house scene
        The blood river coming out from the door is a direct reference to The Shining
        In the courtroom, Sarah sketches a hanging girl; later this vision comes directly to life
        Bruce gets a bag of salt thrown on his gaping chest wound, followed with a flask of vinegar
        No matter what costume he's in, Mark is always wearing the same T-shirt (with the letters OTE showing)
        The dumb guards are another homage to Holy Grail
        The "oldest delivery service" that gives Sarah a package is a blatant reference to the same plot device at the beginning of Back to the Future part III
        At the end of the credits, it says "Filmed entirely in the 4th Dimension"

        The Movie Store!
        Waxwork II: Lost in Time: Movie [VHS]

        Intermission!
        This movie spoofs: The Haunting, The Legend of Hell House, The Shining, Alien, The Masque of the Red Death, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Jack the Ripper, Nosferatu, eine Symphonie des Grauens, Dawn of the Dead, Gojira, Invasion of the Body Snatchers, Saturday Night Fever, Monty Python and the Holy Grail, and Frankenstein.

        Sean: Here's a scary thought, folks. Reprising his role as Sir Wilfred from Waxwork I is Patrick MacNee, who is most known for playing John Steed in the BBC cult series, "The Avengers." Now he plays a talking raven who says, "Sarah and you have stumbled into God's Nintendo game." Not to mention the fact that Keith Carradine (Caine from "Kung Fu") has another bit role as a beggar who gives our hero a sword. *sigh* Sad, isn't it?

        Official and Not-So-Official Websites
        Bruce Campbell - Official site

        Groovy Quotes

        John: Read directly to the bones... page 210, chapter 13, verse 7.
        Mark: Ecapsmi evig nig inglock...
        John: Douglas, the book is upside down.

        Mark: I have to go.
        John: Where to?
        Mark: You wouldn't understand. You be alright?
        [John is hanging on a cross with his chest torn open]
        John: Oh. Sure. It's only a flesh wound.

        Stepfather: Precious friggin daughter! It's three o-friggin-clock in the morning!

        Mark: [yelling in a courtroom] Sarah didn't kill anyone, you IDIOT!

        Uncle Nigel: [speaking from a recorded film reel] More importantly, Mark, I've left this all to you.
        Mark: You did?
        Uncle Nigel: Yes!

        Crew member: [sees alien] Eat lead, tribble!

        Mark: [chained in prison, with a metal mask on his head] One billion bottles of beer on the wall, one billion bottles of beer...

        Raven: Sarah and you have actually stumbled into God's Nintendo game.

        Raven: Remember, it is one of the greatest privileges ever to be chosen as a Time Warrior!
        Mark: You mean he, I mean God, wants me to be a Time Warrior?

        SWAT soldier #1: Who are they?
        SWAT soldier #2: Whoever they are, they're bad.
        SWAT soldier #3: Word.

        Mark: [subtitled in the Nosferatu scene] Bloody hell!

        If you liked this movie, try these:
        Waxwork
        Evil Dead 2: Dead by Dawn
        Dawn of the Dead

        Soundtrack Review: There is a long rap music video that plays over the end credits... worth watching, just 'cause it's cheesy and shows clips from the movie. The rest of the score is remarkably inappropriate to the scene in which it is playing, so there's some humor in that.