
40 years after Arthur Kipps' experience at Eel Marsh house, a group of children under the care of two women, escaping from war-torn London, arrive to the house and become the next target for The Woman in Black. With the help of a fellow soldier, the women and children must fend off the spirit, and end her presence once and for all.... (Full plot summary below)
FREE with your Prime (USA) subscription or when you start a 30-day free trial!
Links compiled using automated software. Availability of offers subject to change / might be region specific / out of date.
40 years after Arthur Kipps' experience at Eel Marsh house, a group of children under the care of two women, escaping from war-torn London, arrive to the house and become the next target for The Woman in Black. With the help of a fellow soldier, the women and children must fend off the spirit, and end her presence once and for all.
Leave your thoughts about The Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death.
| Entertainment WeeklyKyle AndersonAny tension created during its key moments completely evaporates once the lights come back on. The Woman may be back for another fright, but Angel of Death doesn't haunt like it should. |
| Mania.comRob VauxThis is a case of taking things too far without the proper structure in place, leaving it trapped like its hapless protagonists far from safety. |
| TheWrapAlonso DuraldeEvery good idea this sequel has to offer winds up taking a backseat to the most obvious cat-in-the-closet “BOO!” moments imaginable. |
| Sky CinemaTim EvansDirector Tom Harper reins back on the Gothic overkill of the original, keeping the jump shocks to a minumum so when they come - you feel them. |
| CraveOnlineWilliam BibbianiAre you scared yet? Check this box: Yes [ ] No [X]. |
| Boston HeraldStephen SchaeferFilmed in virtually non-stop darkness, this sequel lacks any tension-producing shivers or fright. |
| Contactmusic.comRich ClineIt may not be very clever, and the plot may be full of holes, but this sequel's clammy atmosphere is so unnerving that it manages to keep us squirming in our seats. |
| Independent (UK)Geoffrey MacnabDirector Tom Harper makes inventive use of the settings. |
| AV ClubJesse HassengerRedundancy is about all it offers, despite an entirely new set of characters and a story set 40 years after the early 20th-century original. |
| Observer (UK)Jonathan RomneyA respectably effective, decorously English addition to the current ghost story wave - Frightfully Insidious, as it were. |