You've ignored this film. It will no longer appear as a recommendation. View ignored films.
You've decided to remember Quarantine 2: Terminal for later. You can see all your remembered films here.
Summary: A follow up to 2008's Quarantine, this entry was directed by John Pogue and "picks up later that night at LAX, as passengers board a flight to Nashville. When a passenger becomes violently ill with a mysterious rabies-like virus, the plane makes an emergency landing at a large metropolitan airport. Jenny (Mercedes Masohn), a heroic yet inexperienced flight attendant, takes charge of the safety of her passengers. (imdb)
This basically follows the exact same plot as the first movie but with a different setting and without the found footage style of shooting. I'd like to be able to support my hatred of found footage by saying this has vastly improved everything but instaid it all feels cheep, the lack of acting talent is obvious and the plot feels even stupider than before. Found footage definatly has its place in low budget movies hiding away these cracks and this should of stuck to the orignals style.
Good on John Pogue for not going for another shot-by-shot remake, and this even started out quite nicely. The sequence aboard the plane then malfunctions by introducing a bunch of unlikely coincidences, and then it literally and figuratively lands for a completely standard 2nd and 3rd acts with a corny eco-terrorism premise.
Despite being a complete departure from what made Quarantine an enjoyable film, Quarantine 2: The Terminal is definitely worth your time, especially if you can get into the story. It's a well-made horror film about a killer virus with none of the shaky-cam that can instantly turn off some audience members. For something made on the quick and cheap, this is a surprisingly enjoyable film with memorable characters and enough scares to keep you thrilled.
Meh....there's really only one good kill, and that comes near the end. Let's just say it involves a huge wrench. As for the rest of the film, I give it some credit for trying to tie it into the original, but it was just too different. They could have called it "Zombie Plane Film" and no one would be the wiser.
Not REC2! Not even using the "personal footage" concept. It's a very straight-to-dvd kind of movie, in both look and feel. Let's pretend that it cannot be be connected to the REC franchise in any way.
i'm not sure if there's an ounce of originality left in the whole sub genre, while that may be the case this sub genre is still not a tired one and they can still pump out more of the same while retaining viewers, myself included. that basically sums up this movie, not original, not bad.
I had my doubts being a direct-to-DVD sequel to one of my all-time favourite Horror films (Quarantine) but I'm happy to say I was more than pleasantly surprised. It was a very impressive sequel that follows a similar format to the first which works well, and the plane & airport setting worked perfectly also. Good group of characters that might be played by a group of unknowns but it didn't matter at all. Not as scary as the first but still had it's jumps here and there. Overall a great film!
As you can guess from the name, it's not a remake of [rec]2. It's an interesting concept, and I liked the idea of a plane zombie movie. Too bad the claustrophobic atmosphere pretty much ends with the landing of the airplane. After that, well, it remains a pretty standard zombie flick, no innovations if you don't count that the night vision in this one is black and white instead of green. Oh and I always like super fat zombies, those are seriously nasty!