Following the underwhelming opening instalment of this new (and unnecessary) spinoff trilogy, Chapter 2 takes the Halloween II/Halloween Kills route for the first act, picking up from the end of the previous instalment and relocating surviving female character Maya (Madelaine Petsch) to the nearby hospital where the murderous trio soon appear - cue shadowy corridors that are slowly wandered down, beeping monitors and sinister cubicle curtains as no sub-genre cliché goes unmissed - for little more than a contained and unsurprising cat-and-mouse chase (although sedate plod is mostly more accurate), which is then repeated in other locations (including a farm, forest, car, scrapyard, a circular return to the previous film's cabin and a finale setting) as Maya barely escapes her pursuers every time. Indeed, Maya's injuries from the first film have inconsistent impact, as she administers self-stitching only to then fend off an improbable attacking CG boar, with the resulting leg trauma being dispensed with conveniently for the third act. It is all written with the subtlety of a sledgehammer and limited dialogue, and the limited number of local characters means the finale reveal is hardly surprising. This is a hollow and dreary film that offers a bland backstory told in perfunctory flashbacks and unexciting run-of-the-mill masked-killer set pieces, and it is hard to fathom why this very thin material has been stretched over three movies. There is mid-credits preview of the trilogy-capping Chapter 3.

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