Rent Legend of the Mummy 2 (1999)

1.4 of 5 from 49 ratings
1h 25min
Rent Legend of the Mummy 2 Online DVD & Blu-ray Rental
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Synopsis:
Six archaeology students are spending the summer at an isolated compound with their college professor. Together they are working on an exciting discovery: an ancient mummy that has been discovered in the ruins of a temple. Little do they realise that the mummy was the evil servant of an ancient rain god and that one of their group has the ability to bring it back to life to wreak it's master's deadly revenge. After the silent curse of centuries, the creature plans to unleash it's evil power.
Actors:
, Trent Latta, , , , Brenda Blondell, , , Anton Falk
Directors:
Producers:
David DeCoteau, Sam Irvin, David Silberg
Writers:
Matthew Jason Walsh
Studio:
Prism Leisure
Genres:
Horror, Sci-Fi & Fantasy
BBFC:
Release Date:
01/09/2001
Run Time:
85 minutes
Languages:
English Dolby Digital 2.0
Subtitles:
None
DVD Regions:
Region 2
Formats:
Pal
Aspect Ratio:
Full Screen 1.33:1 / 4:3
Colour:
Colour
Bonus:
  • Trailer

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Reviews (1) of Legend of the Mummy 2

Spoilers follow ... - Legend of the Mummy 2 review by NP

Spoiler Alert
08/06/2017

In the midst of the inexplicable success of 1999’s CGI-fest ‘The Mummy’, this sequel to the previous year’s ‘Bram Stoker’s Legend of the Mummy’ slithered out onto the straight-to-video market. Like that first entry, this is cheap, hackneyed, badly acted and clichéd. However, whereas the first film barely featured a Mummy at all, this time we see more of the creature – much more. Christopher Bergschneider, billed as Anton Falk, plays a shorter, more overweight Mummy than I have ever seen, and is impossible to take seriously. By its very nature, such a creature should be skeletal, cadaverous, and that is not the case here. So it must be tongue-in-cheek. You would think. But no – it is played straight, or as straight as can be by this group of second graders. Strangely (or not), hunky braggart Morris (Michael Lutz) is the most convincingly played – you fully believe he is a lazy, arrogant, ignorant braggart. Also, he clearly fills the tight boxer-shorts he parades round in well enough for the casting director.

So then, an ancient Mummy has been found and placed in an insecure country compound and is placed on a slab, entirely open to the peccadillos of the young students staying there. Cretin Morris takes away an amulet so to impress chipper, chirpy Janine (Michelle Erickson), whilst Norman (Trent Latta), the butt of everyone’s jokes – who initially appears to be autistic – is actually an Aztec priest. Luckily for Morris, Janine is instantly in love with him when he gives her the amulet, so that’s nice. The big fat Mummy, buried with a circular blade (which makes you wonder why he didn’t use it to slice his bonds and escape his incarceration all those thousands of years ago) stalks the compound during an endless storm after the picturesque young people. For a compound, the location seems more like an average sized house, which is adequate, as only about 7 people are staying there.

Actually, I quite enjoyed this. It’s not quite so bad it’s good, but it is along those lines. The dialogue is ham-fisted and clichéd, but it’s eventful, well-paced and as cheesy as a cheese-burger in a stilton sandwich. It is an old style chiller – although not really very chilling – with a small budget and an undistinguished cast. It just isn’t particularly good on several levels, but perfectly enjoyable on another.

“Your time on this planet is over, Don!” I’m pretty sure that dialogue has as much to do with Bram Stoker as everything else on display here. And yet I still enjoyed this more than the Brendan Fraser efforts.

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