
Seventeen year-old Nell Margaret Sweetzer is found completely insane when trying to explain her possession by the demon called Abalam. After medical and psychological treatment, she is sent to the Deveraux transition house in New Orleans managed by Frank Merle, who helps her to start a new life. She finds a job as a hotel housekeeper, befriends her new roommates, and develops a crush on her coworker, Chris. Soon, Nell comes to realize that she is haunted by people from her cu... (Full plot summary below)
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Seventeen year-old Nell Margaret Sweetzer is found completely insane when trying to explain her possession by the demon called Abalam. After medical and psychological treatment, she is sent to the Deveraux transition house in New Orleans managed by Frank Merle, who helps her to start a new life. She finds a job as a hotel housekeeper, befriends her new roommates, and develops a crush on her coworker, Chris. Soon, Nell comes to realize that she is haunted by people from her cult... and by the same evil force that once possessed her. When Nell meets Miss Cecile, she tells Nell that she has been following her since the hospital. Further, she discloses that she belongs to the sect Order of The Right Hand, and that they can protect her from the evil in an attempt to divert the prophecy of an apocalypse. Will Nell accept help, and be protected from the extremely powerful, evil force Abalam -- Or will she come to accept... herself?
Leave your thoughts about The Last Exorcism Part II.
| Blu-ray.comBrian OrndorfThe director wisely steps back and permits the agitation to sink in slowly -- it's a fright film that's uncharacteristically patient and superbly crafted. |
| Movie MezzanineChristopher RunyonNot a single aspect of this film suggests that anyone involved in the production cared. |
| Jam! MoviesBruce KirklandThey promised us it was The Last Exorcism. They lied. |
| VarietyDennis HarveyNever mind the inherent titular redundancy: The Last Exorcism Part II is a generally effective sequel to the 2010 sleeper that injected at least a little new life into the heavily taxed found-footage-horror subgenre. |
| Total FilmKen McIntyreAshley Bell’s nuanced performance and a surprisingly pyrotechnic finale liven up a gloomy sequel. Title’s still nonsense, mind. |
| Contactmusic.comRich ClineWhen you qualify your movie as the "last" anything, a sequel seems a bit out of the question, but these new filmmakers have essentially relegated the 2010 original to a mere backstory. |
| Los Angeles TimesMark OlsenThe Last Exorcism Part II is an effectively unnerving, slow-burn supernatural horror tale. The film is smartly different enough from the original to survive on its own, though it lacks some of the first film's sense of surprise. |
| Entertainment WeeklyClark CollisUnfortunately, no one involved seems to have bent over backwards to make the movie either original or even all that scary. |
| The New York TimesAndy WebsterAt least this movie, like its predecessor, has Ashley Bell as Nell. An actress who suggests religious piety, carnal fire and satanic aggression with equal dexterity, Ms. Bell provides a pulse an audience can connect with amid the standard-issue atmospheric accouterments. |
| Little White LiesMartyn ConterioAn inventive Satanic shocker, which is much more than we expected. |