Troll was a bit of a surprise hit in the past years on Netflix, the norwegian fantasy movie being great fun and a really good film.
And in december, the sequel hit, so me and Noshi sat down and gave it a look recently.
Unfortunatly, Isaksen provides a prophecy early in the movie, as he states "a sequel never lives up to the original". Granted, somethimes this isn't true (Empire Strikes Back, Aliens, etc...) but more often than not it is indeed so.
We come back to our heroine of the first movie, Nora, now living remotely in the wilds three years after her encounter with the Troll king. But she is recruited by her friend to come to a goverment facility for a new discovery: another troll is being held there! She accidentally awakens him, and where the first movie was about a troll just wanting to get home, this one wants to level Norway. Soon a second troll appears, as Nora had contact with the son of the Troll King and had hid him, and the army must try to stop the monster that seems impervious to all weapons and countermeasures.
Add in a crazy old coot... I mean archeologist, and a mystical water source of King Olaf, who was held responsible for removing the trolls in the middle ages from Norway. And then a document shows up, and it was all a misunderstanding in that the trolls didn't needed to be killed but given a home, but the chruch opposed this. Epic battle with huge trolls take 2, magical water and finally a sacrifice of one of the leads and the big one is brought down...
Yeah, that's a lot going on compared to the mysterious monster movie that was the original Troll. They had a big budget (so far the biggest ever in Norwegian cinema) and wanted to go big. Unfortunatly, it doesn't deliver, and feels more like a copy of King Kong vs Godzilla, but just, well, not that good.
A missed chance for sure, seeing how great the original was and what they served us in this second course...






Geen opmerkingen:
Een reactie posten