
In Los Angeles, the police put a residential building in quarantine. Meanwhile, the flight attendants of Trans Sky Air, Jenny and Paula, are welcoming the passengers of flight TS Air 318 from Los Angeles to Kansas City with Captain Forrest and Co-Pilot Wilsy. Teacher Henry brings a cage of hamsters to the cabin, but Jenny tells him that it should be transported in the cargo hold. However, one hamster bites the fingertip of the fat passenger Ralph. Soon, Ralph vomits and becom... (Full plot summary below)
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In Los Angeles, the police put a residential building in quarantine. Meanwhile, the flight attendants of Trans Sky Air, Jenny and Paula, are welcoming the passengers of flight TS Air 318 from Los Angeles to Kansas City with Captain Forrest and Co-Pilot Wilsy. Teacher Henry brings a cage of hamsters to the cabin, but Jenny tells him that it should be transported in the cargo hold. However, one hamster bites the fingertip of the fat passenger Ralph. Soon, Ralph vomits and becomes aggressive, attacking Paula. The male passengers help Jenny and lock Ralph in the bathroom while Captain Forrest requests an emergency landing. When they land in the airport, they find all the gates closed and the Captain heads the plane to an abandoned terminal. Employee Ed helps the crew and passengers to reach the exit, but they find that they are closed. Soon they discover that the place is in quarantine and there is no way out.
Leave your thoughts about Quarantine 2: Terminal.
| BrianOrndorf.comBrian OrndorfLacking a budget and stars, the filmmaker reworks the viral viciousness into a modest but highly entertaining follow-up, dropping tedious found footage elements to refresh the concept. |
| IGN DVDR.L. ShafferIt's not original in the slightest, it doesn't really connect well with the first film, and it's seasoned with the thinnest characters imaginable. But the film is scary in the right places, delivering pulse-pounding jolts and a freaky narrative. If you like the first two [REC] films or this picture's big brother, check this one out. |
| IGN DVDR. L. ShafferThe film is pretty thin, but the scares are effective and creepy. |
| MovieMartyr.comJeremy HeilmanJudged on its own terms, the movie is a better than average, if somewhat routine, horror effort. |
| Film.comWilliam GossThe best possible retread of a remake it could have been. |
| The Blogging BansheeMolly HeneryThis movie had a couple scary moments, but it is nothing compared to the first film or it's Spanish predecessors. |
| PopMattersBill Gibron...a blatant cash grab that has nothing to do with the source's sense of dread. |
| User ReviewThuy Khanh NStop comparing it with Rec. A film should stand on its own, and this movie did that quite well. It may be a bit generic in terms of plot lines, but it is in no way a bad plot or a bad film. I really enjoyed this more than any of the haunting, ghost, exorcism, or zombie movies that came out in recent years. |
| User ReviewDaniel DThe story was drawn from the same well as the first one, only this time it adds a twist that makes it pale in comparison to the original. I wish I'd liked it more. Too bad. |
| User ReviewGary FAs direct to dvd movies go, this gets a solid A. The acting is superior and the characterizations are vivid and believable. The plot has sufficient twists to keep you guessing and it is never entirely clear how it would end. I particularly like the growing sense of chaos and the subtle transition from the routine to madness and the characters inability to make sense of it. I thought this sequel was far better than the first which was wholly predictable. I give this a solid 5, not because it's a cinematic masterpiece, but because it excels at being exactly what it is. |