|
"Don't let them eat,
Joshua. For the love of God don't let them eat."
Making a really bad horror movie and linking it to a respectable movie
for the hopes of financial returns and name recognition is not a new
thing. Video companies have been doing it for decades, it's a common
practice in the direct to DVD market. Not to mention the cult classic
"Zombie" alludes to being a sequel to "Dawn of the Dead," even though it
really isn't. But somewhere down the line to avoid being thrown in to
obscurity as it rightfully should have been, "Troll 2" is not a sequel
at all, it is instead a really god awful movie about Goblins and...
really bad acting. There isn't a single decent performance in the entire
film and it's all so laughably embarrassing that it's almost impossible
to deem this as so bad it's good. "Troll 2" is so ridiculously flawed
and shoddily put together it's easy to pick it apart. You can see
popcorn on the actors when they're turning in to vegetables, the goblins
are obviously just little people in masks and burlap sack costumes, and
its hero is most likely a paranoid schizophrenic with potential for mass
murder and torturing little animals. But at least he has his grandpa who
is prone to appearing to him everywhere like a more annoying obese
Obi-Wan Kenobi to warn him and tell him scary stories about goblins that
the dumb kid won't let him finish. Beyond that, the film is an
incoherent tedious mess with a story that makes absolutely no sense and
flaws aplenty that will have you in tears but also counting the clock
waiting for it to mercifully end.
|
There are just inherently
awkward moments like Joshua's dad's constant riffing on
Southern hospitality, the sexual tension between Holly's
boyfriend and his group of buddies, Joshua's solution to
keeping his family from eating food at the behest of his
undead grandfather, and instances like the one where Joshua
is thrown on to a bed by his dad who stands over him
unbuckling his pants as Joshua meekly asks "What are you
going to do to me daddy?" |
|
 |
It's moments like these that make
"Troll 2" such a hideous affair to sit through.
There are just so
many unanswered questions and holes that it's pretty much
incomplete. Why are people so focused on eating in every single
frame of the picture? Why is coffee the devil's drink, again? Why do
ghosts need to know the floor plan of a house? Why didn't the
Goblins ever go out in to the world before? Why are they so reliant
on this family trading places? Why does Joshua see his grandfather
in visions? And why does he appear in new clothing and hats every
time? Can he possess people? And if he can stop time with the snap
of a finger, why not help out more instead of making his grand son
look like a psychopath in front of his family? Why are Goblins
vegetarians? Why do they hate meat? Where do they get milk if there
are no cows? What the hell is Grandpa Seth, anyway? An angel, a
guardian? Where does he get these sweet weaponry from? Why does the
town of Nilbog only have cowboys who hang out in the darkness with
one another? And does kicking someone in the nuts really make them a
homosexual?
"Troll 2" is a lot like going in to a hot bath. You know it's going to
hurt but you want to dive in and see for yourself anyway. And it's just
as painful as the former. "Troll 2" is not an instant favorite from me
since it's really just a piss poor awful movie and nothing more, but if
you're up to some masochism, pick this up and give it a shot. Remember
kids: Double decker bologna sandwiches, always the prime weapon against
goblins!
|