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Ghoulies II (1988)

Those hostile little beasts are at it again in this adequately entertaining sequel. It takes quite a while for it to really get started, but the final half hour is worth waiting for. It’s actually played fairly straight for a while, with comedy elements getting introduced more and more as the movie goes on. The Ghoulies themselves are definitely cute in an ugly sort of way, and are a genuinely amusing bunch. Fortunately, some of the human characters manage to be almost as interesting.

After an attempt to kill the Ghoulies fails, they hitch a ride with a truck carrying the contents of “Satans’ Den”, a house of horrors for a travelling carnival. They hide out inside Satans’ Den for a while, intermittently killing people, until the big finale when they finally break out. The place has been hurting financially, but when patrons get a look at the Ghoulies and assume them to be part of the act, business starts booming.

I have to be partial to any movie featuring the following elements: an appearance by old Hollywood pro Royal Dano, who’s in fine form as drunken old Uncle Ned, a song by the metal band W.A.S.P. (“Scream Until You Like It”), old school effects (puppeteering, stop motion animation, etc.), a role for Italian exploitation veteran Romano Puppo (“2019: After the Fall of New York”), and a carnival atmosphere (even if done on a budget). Production design, by Giovanni Natalucci, and cinematography, by Sergio Salvati, are both well done.

The enjoyable cast features familiar faces from other horror films: Kerry Remsen (“Pumpkinhead”), Sasha Jenson (“Halloween 4”), Starr Andreeff (“Dance of the Damned”), William Butler (“Leatherface: Texas Chainsaw Massacre III”), and Donnie Jeffcoat (“Night of the Demons” ’88). Damon Martin (“Pee-wee’s Big Adventure”) is our likable young lead, Phil Fondacaro (who played the title role in “Troll”) the engaging Sir Nigel Penneyweight, and J. Downing the appropriately odious money man Mr. Hardin.

Overall, agreeable entertainment for genre fans; produced and directed by Albert Band, veteran director and father of Charles Band of Empire Pictures and Full Moon fame.

Six out of 10.