There’s a reason sequels are often called “cash grabs.” Sometimes, they’re surprise gems (Evil Dead II). Sometimes, they’re fun trash (Friday the 13th Part VI). And sometimes, they’re Boogeyman 2, a movie that feels like a 90-minute therapy session where the therapist gets up halfway through, sets the office on fire, and leaves you to pay the bill.
Directed by Jeff Betancourt (yes, the guy best known for editing movies, and boy, does it show), this is the sequel to the utterly forgettable 2005 Boogeyman. And while the first one was a bland CGI spookfest, Boogeyman 2 decided to “ground” the monster. Translation: it swapped bad effects for bad writing, and now the Boogeyman is basically a cosplayer with a knife. Progress, I guess.
The Plot: Fear Itself, But Make It Dumb
Laura Porter (Danielle Savre) saw her parents murdered as a child, and like every horror heroine, she’s got baggage big enough to crush an airport carousel. Her brother Henry (Matt Cohen) went to therapy and seemed fine, but Laura? She decides to check herself into a group therapy program filled with walking phobias. We’ve got:
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Mark, afraid of the dark.
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Paul, afraid of germs.
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Alison, who loves pain a little too much.
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Darren, commitment-phobic and agoraphobic—because one phobia isn’t enough.
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Nicky, bulimic and terrified of weight gain.
It’s like The Breakfast Club if John Hughes had a lobotomy and a gallon of fake blood.
Naturally, someone (or something) starts killing them one by one, using their fears as inspiration. It’s Final Destinationmeets a bad Lifetime movie, except without the charm of either. Darkness swallows Mark down an elevator shaft. Paul, the germaphobe, gets forced to drink cleaning solution, which is about as subtle as a sledgehammer lobotomy. Alison gets maggots on her arms—because why not—and stabs herself trying to cut them out. By this point, the audience is rooting for the Boogeyman just to make it stop.
The “Twist”
Now, horror sequels love twists. Some work (Saw II). Others flop (The Devil Inside, all of it). Boogeyman 2’s twist is like a drunk uncle trying to explain Inception: messy, incoherent, and deeply embarrassing.
Turns out the Boogeyman is… Laura’s brother Henry. But wait! No, it’s Dr. Ryan, her therapist. But wait again! Actually, it’s Henry pretending, or maybe being possessed, or maybe Dr. Ryan got framed? By the end, the cops show up, Laura is blamed for the murders, and Henry waltzes out free like he’s late for a Taco Bell run.
And in the post-credits? The Boogeyman looks at a photo and disappears. Congratulations, you’ve just wasted 90 minutes and still don’t know who the Boogeyman is.
The Characters: Who Needs Depth When You’ve Got Maggots?
Danielle Savre does her best as Laura, but her “best” is still about three subway stops short of compelling. Her performance mostly oscillates between “deer in headlights” and “I’ve seen the script and I regret my life choices.”
Matt Cohen as Henry is supposed to be menacing, but he comes off like a hot topic cashier with a superiority complex. Tobin Bell (yes, Jigsaw himself) pops in as Dr. Allen, and while his presence is supposed to lend gravitas, it mostly feels like he wandered in from the wrong Saw set and decided to cash the check anyway.
The rest of the cast are phobia piñatas waiting to get smashed open. They’re less characters and more Mad Libs: “The ____-phobic dies by ____.” You could literally generate this script with a phobia dictionary and a random kill generator.
The Deaths: Gore and Boredom
This is where the movie tries hardest, and it still faceplants. We get:
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Elevator shaft bisecting.
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Throat hole from drinking chemicals.
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Maggot-arm suicide.
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Exploding-from-bile bulimia kill.
It sounds extreme, but it plays out like a SyFy Channel audition tape. There’s blood, sure, but none of it lands with impact. It’s all mean-spirited without being scary, gory without being memorable. The kills are like bad stand-up jokes: they drag on too long, you see the punchline coming, and everyone’s uncomfortable.
Direction & Atmosphere: A Hospital of Clichés
The movie is set in an abandoned hospital—because of course it is. Hospitals are cheap sets and come with built-in creepy lighting, so why bother with creativity? Instead of building dread, we get endless corridors, flickering lights, and the occasional “was that a shadow?” moment.
Jeff Betancourt’s background as an editor shows painfully—scenes cut so abruptly you wonder if you’re missing footage. Suspense is strangled before it even has a chance to breathe. And instead of atmosphere, we get loud noises, quick cuts, and characters staring at things off-screen like they’re watching a better movie.
The “Realistic” Boogeyman: Discount Michael Myers
The first Boogeyman had a supernatural monster. It was bad, but at least it tried. The sequel says, “What if the Boogeyman was just a guy in a hoodie stabbing people?” Which is fine—if you do it with finesse. Halloween did it brilliantly. Boogeyman 2 does it like a mall cop with a butter knife.
By the end, the “Boogeyman” feels less like an urban legend and more like that weird neighbor your parents told you to avoid. Realistic? Maybe. Scary? Only if you’re terrified of mediocre screenwriting.
Dark Humor Highlights
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The phobia-kill structure makes the movie feel like Fear Factor: Homicide Edition.
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Tobin Bell looks like he’s counting the seconds until he can leave and get back to Saw IV.
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The maggot scene feels like it was written on a dare by a 12-year-old with a bucket of gummy worms.
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Laura is arrested at the end, proving the true villain is the justice system—or maybe just the screenwriters.
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The Boogeyman staring at a family photo in the post-credits scene is supposed to be ominous, but it plays like he’s nostalgic for when this franchise still had potential.
Final Verdict: Straight to DVD, Straight to Regret
Boogeyman 2 is an improvement over the first film the way food poisoning is an improvement over cholera. Technically true, but you’re still on the toilet screaming.
The kills are gory but uninspired, the characters are cardboard cutouts, and the twist is a narrative pretzel that collapses under its own stupidity. The “realistic” Boogeyman angle could’ve worked, but it’s smothered under clichés, bad dialogue, and direction that mistakes jump cuts for suspense.
In the end, this isn’t a slasher, a psychological thriller, or even a supernatural horror. It’s a straight-to-DVD fever dream, stitched together with leftover hospital props and phobia flashcards. And yet, somehow, it spawned a third movie. Evil never dies, and apparently, neither does Lionsgate’s willingness to fund trash.
Final Score: 1 out of 5 maggots burrowing into your arm. And that one point is for Tobin Bell, who at least brought his Jigsaw voice to the party, even if he looked like he wished he hadn’t.

