The Hamilton Spectator

Happy Death Day 2U covers familiar ground over and over and...

- PAT PADUA

The 2017 thriller “Happy Death Day” took a “Groundhog Day”like concept — a young woman must relive the same day, over and over — and put it in service of a largely uninspired college-set horror movie. (Turns out the day in question is the day of the protagonis­t’s murder, which she must re-experience until she solves the crime.)

But unlike the 1993 Bill Murray comedy, some people never learn from their mistakes, no matter how often they repeat them. Case in point: the sequel “Happy Death Day 2U.” The new film may seem unnecessar­y — and it is — but it actually does a bit more than just regurgitat­e the premise of the first film.

The story begins at the fictional Bayfield University with Ryan (Phi Vu), a gifted science major, waking up in his car. After experienci­ng a sequence of minor incidents that you can bet will be repeated — a dog barks, a skateboard­er nearly hits him, etc. — Ryan joins a group of friends at the lab where they’re working on what amounts to a time machine: the kind of spark-throwing electromag­netic behemoth that drives countless sci-fi films, and that in this case creates not only an unintentio­nal time loop, but also alternate timelines in which the identity of a killer (yes, there’s another one) changes.

At first, Ryan seems to be the focus of this crisis in the spacetime continuum, but soon the young woman from the first film — Tree (Jessica Rothe), or as Ryan calls her, the “crazy white chick” — is once again the centre of the film’s, and the murderer’s, attention. Together, she and Ryan must solve a new problem, which entails identifyin­g one of several timelines as the “right” one. In these parallel universes, it isn’t just Tree who is threatened, but her friends.

In the first film, repetition worked against the kind of tension that builds suspense. But by taking over screenwrit­ing duty from Scott Lobdell, who wrote the original, returning director

Christophe­r Landon finds inventive and unexpected ways to tweak the formula. For example, he leans even harder into a tone of satire that was only hinted at in the first film: Bayfield’s sports mascot — the Bayfield Baby, an adult in a baby mask — infantiliz­es the students who adopt the costume, reducing them to caricature­s of infants, sucking at giant novelty baby bottles whenever the basketball team sinks one in the big game.

This time, “Death Day” has ambitions, posing questions that other slasher films wouldn’t touch. Is the self-absorbed Tree caught in a cycle of repetition so that she can become a better person? Or is she just collateral damage in some careless classmates’ ultimately meaningles­s science experiment?

The first time around, Tree’s character developmen­t seemed rushed. But aftertwo whole movies to learn about what matters in life, the opportunit­y seems to have only given her the chance to make new mistakes. It’s a “Fantasy Island”-esque dilemma: If we had the chance to pick and choose things to change in our lives, would that be a dream come true, or a nightmare? As one of her time-warping classmates says, “We’re messing with things we shouldn’t be touching.”

Ultimately, “Happy Death Day 2U” doesn’t live up to its aspiration­s. Landon’s script may be better than his direction, but he leaves a potentiall­y resonant subplot — one that involves existentia­l questions — flat and lifeless, as if our most important choices were of no more consequenc­e than a joystick manoeuvre.

 ?? MICHELE K. SHORT UNIVERSAL STUDIOS ?? Jessica Rothe with "Babyface" in the horror sequel "Happy Death Day 2U."
MICHELE K. SHORT UNIVERSAL STUDIOS Jessica Rothe with "Babyface" in the horror sequel "Happy Death Day 2U."

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