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Horror Movie Talk

Brahms: The Boy II Review

Horror Movie Talk

Horror Movie Talk: Horror Movie Review

Tv & Film, After Shows, Film Reviews

4.4640 Ratings

🗓️ 26 February 2020

⏱️ 66 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

We saw Brahms: The Boy II in theaters and it was so bland and unfulfilling that I questioned whether or not I want to spend my free time reviewing movies of this caliber. As soon as I asked that question of myself, I realized that the answer is obviously -  yes. I need to watch these boring hunks of junk to make sure you don’t have to. @dgoebel00 on instagram provided this amazing artwork. Follow him and check out his website. https://youtu.be/ytxEldPKnyA Synopsis The Boy II is a stand-alone sequel to the somewhat more interesting movie, The Boyfrom 2016, which you can currently watch on Amazon for $3.99. It was directed by William Brent Bell, who has been directing horror movies like The Devil Inside, and the original The Boyfrom 2016. This is the story of a family of three, Liza (Katie Holmes), Sean (Owain Yeoman), and their son Jude (Christopher Convery) that escape to the countryside to heal after a burglary gone wrong at their house in London. Watch Brahms: The Boy IIPre-order on AmazonClick here to Watch Jude, the young son stops talking following the attack, and when the family shows up at the guest house on the Heelshire estate (where the original The Boy took place) he finds a doll buried in the woods.  The doll and Jude share a lot in common: not talking, staring blankly at whoever addresses them, generally being boring, and desiring to kill whole families. Through a notepad that Jude uses to communicate, we learn that the doll is named Brahms, and he has a bunch of rules for the family to follow.  You would be surprised how stringent these rules are, so they are broken often and the family is thrown into an uproar each time. Eventually, we find out that Brahms is more doll than this family bargained for. Review Brahms: The Boy II is a sincerely boring movie that does everything technically correct on paper. Casting, acting, pacing, direction - it’s all passable. The end result is boring as sin, though. At least movies like Fantasy Island are so zany that they are fun in an ironic way. Brahms: The Boy II bored me to tears and I don’t believe that you should ever watch it.  Score 3/10 Spoilers Click to Expand for Brahms: The Boy II Spoilers As I write this I am bored to tears at the prospect of having to relive the minutiae of The Boy II, but here it goes. Jude is Mute The burglary/attack on Liza and Jude really did a number on them, and Jude ends up going mute. Great, now we have to hear two nagging parents dote on their child throughout this already tedious script. Jude going mute is supposed to add to the spook factor of the whole thing by making us relate to the parent's further challenge of reaching their troubled child. Instead, Jude having to write out his every response adds padding to an already slim movie. Jude not talking also helps to draw a closer parallel with him and Brahms, the doll. By the end of the movie, Jude is dressing, doing his hair, and wearing a mask that makes him look just like the doll Look exciting? Right, it's not. The Brahms Doll MORE: Click Here for our blog about some of the most deadly horror movie dolls Brahms is truly one of the most uninspired and generic horror movie dolls that I’ve ever seen. He has no hook, nothing that makes him interesting at all. What are Brahms origins? There was once a boy on the Heelshire Estate that killed his family. His soul got into his doll. That’s it. The End Brahms: The Boy II ends in the least satisfying way it possibly could have – a history lesson. The groundskeeper tells the family about the backstory of the doll and gives us a bit of a montage of the destruction the boy doll caused. The dad smacks the doll’s head and a weird creepy face is revealed beneath his smooth veneer. Then the cliffhanger at the very end, once the danger is gone, is that Jude still enjoys wearing doll-like masks and might still kill his family...

Transcript

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0:00.0

Wake up! The Jones is a redo in their garden!

0:02.6

Love that porcelain paven and all that fencing.

0:05.3

I knew it. They'd been with their landscaper to Jusen.

0:07.8

A mini-digger! No wonder she was so smug at Zumba!

0:11.3

Right, I want a sunken seating area. She won't have that?

0:14.2

For materials, tool higher, timber and paving. Don't waste time.

0:17.7

Deucon's got the lot. Like Terales, porcelain, paving from only 22 pounds per square meter.

0:22.3

Love it.

0:23.1

All trade prices exclude VAT at 20%.

0:25.9

So now you can keep up with the Joneses.

0:28.0

And the Evanses.

0:29.2

And the Patel's.

0:30.3

Donald's Deadly Doll Emporium is proud to bring you this week's episode of horror movie talk.

0:34.9

Looking for that perfect gift for an at-risk youth?

0:39.3

Why not a doll? Donald's deadly doll Emporium has every doll you can possibly imagine. We have doll types ranging from malevolent but harmless looking to so obviously dangerous that no one would ever keep this in their house.

0:50.3

Best of all, these dolls are guaranteed to help your child work through any

0:54.2

attachment issues or insecurities that they may have from trauma or terror. They're absolutely

0:59.1

the most wonderful thing you could do for your kid. Because death is the ultimate cure to everything

1:04.5

that ails you. Oops, I said the loud part quiet and the quiet part loud. Donald's deadly doll Emporium.

1:12.1

Don't let the name fool you.

1:13.4

Most of these dolls are only PG-13.

1:18.7

Hello and welcome to horror movie talk,

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