Slasher / horror films throughout the 1980s were a big thing
in its time. Many popular icons arose from that decade of which many still
resonate with fans today. Several moviegoers remember the mainstream villains
but there are also groups of people that remember the lesser known ones too. Of
those, William Lustig's Maniac Cop (1988) was one of them. Although the concept
itself borrowed ideas from past films like Halloween (1978), the idea of having
a killer cop on the streets causing hysteria among the citizens of the local
police force was rather inventive. The premise of corrupt cops has long been
used before in movies, but an undead cop was another story. The other component
that made it captivating to watch was that it played out like a mystery
thriller. The maniac cop wasn't actually figured out until much later in the
movie, which helped build tension to the reveal. And like any other successful
movie opening, a franchise was created. Let's see how it holds up.
Laurene Landon & Robert Davi |
Larry Cohen (the writer from the original) pens the
continuation of the story. William Lustig also returns in the director's chair,
yet there are noticeable problems, this time a little more than the first. As
it was revealed at the ending of the first movie, Matt Cordell, the maniac cop
(Robert Z'Dar) is alive and returns to exact his mission. The only people who
still believe he's around are the cop from past events Jack Forrest (Bruce
Campbell) and Teresa Mallory (Laurene Landon). Unconvinced of what they say,
their captain, Edward Doyle (Michael Lerner) sends them to cop psychiatrist
Susan Riley (Claudia Christian). Instead, Forrest and Mallory work to persuade
Riley that Cordell exists. The only other person to think their actually
telling the truth once he starts to see the puzzle pieces align is Detective
Sean McKinney (Robert Davi). This is fine for a premise, but as soon as this is
set up Lustig and Cohen add extra unnecessary elements.
Cohen and Lustig's biggest mistake was mixing in an
assistant to the maniac cop. Leo Rossi plays a serial killer named Turkell and
he ends up teaming up with Cordell; to a point where he can communicate with
him (via one-sided conversation). This would have been much more entertaining
if Rossi wasn't so over the top in his performance. There's actually more focus
put on Turkell than Cordell at certain points. This movie is called Maniac Cop
2 (1990) right? Also at one point, Turkell asks Cordell about his past and
viewers are given the exact same flashback from the original Maniac Cop (1988)
film. Even another jail mate named Blum (Clarence Williams III) joins Turkell
and Cordell, but has very little significance. This is all just padding, it's
not story telling. Lastly, there's a rushed subplot about some inside
conspiracy dealing with Cordell and his death. The problem is that it comes
from nowhere so abruptly; it's confusing as to why Cohen didn't mention it in
the original movie script.
Among these problems, everything else is commendable. The
cast can all act well together. Bruce Campbell and Laurene Landon are still
believable in their roles, Robert Davi and Claudia Christian make nice
additions and there are a number of other actors that have small roles. Charles
Napier, Danny Trejo, Marco Rodriguez and even Sam Raimi make quick appearances
and it's enjoyable to see that. Robert Z'Dar as the title character continues
to intimidate with his stature and presence. It's still confusing as to why
nobody ever thinks of shooting Cordell in the face though. Everyone aims for
the abdomen; not the face, why? For violence, nothing is seriously gore heavy
but there are still some good kills. There's even a scene with a chain saw that
may catch people off guard due to what's expected. One thing's for sure, the
maniac cop loves snapping necks. Cordell's face is much more hideous this time
too. There was only one scene though where it looked like a cheap mask.
"No hard feelings, but I'm taking over..." |
For cinematography, James Lemmo handled the camerawork.
Lemmo was also the cinematographer to director Abel Ferrara's Ms. 45 (1981),
Fear City (1984) and also to the original Maniac Cop (1988). Like the first
movie however, there are very few (if any) daylight scenes. It's fine to show
night time, but it gets a bit difficult to see things when everything is
shrouded in the dark city. Nonetheless the camera is always steady and gets
what it needs to show. Jay Chattaway returns as well to compose the film score.
Much like his previous effort in the franchise, Chattaway thankfully maintains
the main theme of the series with synth keyboard and drawn out ominous horns.
There are added themes though, which may not have been crucial to include. This
involves a church-like choir in the background for some tracks. Yeah, there's
always that idea that putting in holy or childlike songs in a minor key sounds
creepy but it makes the film feel like it was supposed to have a religious
tone. Not sure.
Casting, music and violence all make this sequel watchable.
It is disappointing however when majority of the original crew members return
and shift the focus from the title character to some other forgettable over the
top one. There's also a rushed subplot about Cordell's case and it gets wedged
in way too quickly. Still decent though.
Points Earned --> 6:10
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