Movies about ghosts really annoy me, and they can’t be made well. Now there is CGI, but Poltergeist II flipped and became tribal. The film wanted to bring up one hell of a spirit. It’s a warning to the family, but also to you. Or maybe it is a lesson not to mess with burial grounds, maybe a bit of both? Or even their physical being, where terrifying hallucinations that seem so real haunt you in a real way. The monsters that live in our heads are sometimes just trying to greet you. However, some of them have a sinister view.
Let’s get into the review.
Synopsis
The Freeling family have a new house, but their troubles with supernatural forces don’t seem to be over. They run into an old spirit that followed them home and made their way into their minds.

The Rundown
Poltergeist II touched on many stories from real people who were followed by a spirit. They are pretty rare, and I know someone is trying to rack up a few dollars for showing us a haunted cemetery. I know there are absolutely terrifying ghost stories. There are places I just refuse to go because of the Poltergeist series. Also, they knew the danger involved because I believed it was more about me, like a bunch of noises and shadows. Maybe someday someone will prove my opinion to be wrong, but ghosts are totally real. It made me think back on all the trauma from my past. That is what the film is supposed to be.
Horror isn’t made for a completely horrifying story; there is always a bit of humor involved, like your braces retaliating and taking over. I don’t know who agrees, but that was pretty damn funny instead of scary. What scared me and left me up at night was Reverend Kane, the Zelda of ghost stories. I wasn’t able to look at him without screaming like a little child. Poltergeist II brought two of my fears to life. I am deathly afraid of past religions, such as nuns or Reverend Kane, and Valek, or however it’s spelled. I refuse to watch any of The Conjuring films.

In The End
Poltergeist II was for the real horror hounds, mostly kids, and now here we are, still watching horror films. It is in our blood because of the fact that there were really disgusting living in a dude. It was like a mix between the children in Eraserhead and Clayface from the Batman universe. Horror fans have seen a lot of things, but that was always so disgusting to me. I even had dreams about that monster after seeing Poltergeist II with my grandma, who turned me into a horror hound. We hold films like this close to us, even if they made us the weird kids no one talked to. There was no need for them; I could go home and watch horror movies.
Poltergeist II is in my top 20 films of all time, and it was better than the first; it had more magic and passion.
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