
Pet Sematary II
The "sematary" is up to its old zombie-raising tricks again. This time, the protagonists are Jeff Matthews, whose mother died in a Hollywood stage accident, and Drew Gilbert, a boy coping with an abusive stepfather.
Director(s)
Christina Dennis
Mary Lambert
Jeffrey Wetzel
John Wildermuth
Nancy Blewer
Jesse Long
Where to watch

Amazon Video
Rent
Cast & crew

Clancy Brown
Sheriff Gus Gilbert

Sarah Trigger
Marjorie Hargrove

Anthony Edwards
Chase Matthews

Mary Lambert
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Jesse Long
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Joe Dorsey
Caretaker

Edward Furlong
Jeff Matthews

Jared Rushton
Clyde Parker

Darlanne Fluegel
Renee Hallow
Jason McGuire
Drew Gilbert

Lisa Waltz
Amanda Gilbert
Jim Peck
Quentin Yolander
Len Hunt
Director
Reid Binion
Brad
Dave Ratajczak
Stevie
Lucius Houghton
Puppeteer

Wilbur Fitzgerald
First assistant director
Elizabeth Ziegler
Steadicam Operator
Ken Fisher
Assistant Steadicam

Gil Roper
Electrician

Robert Easton
Priest
Judson Vaughn
Reporter

Bruce Evers
Mover
Janell McLeod
School Teacher
Christina Dennis
Susan

Rick Andosca
Pathologist
Donna Lowry
Newscaster
Emily Woodward
Twins mother
Amanda Mitchell
Screaming Twin
J.L. Parker
Potato Truck Driver

Bart Mixon
Bumbling Technician
Jeffrey Wetzel
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John Wildermuth
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Nancy Blewer
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Details
Reviews
CinemaSerf
So first question... Why? The easy-on-the-eye Edward Furlong ("Jeff") and hid dad "Chase" (Anthony Edwards) move to the Maine town of Ludlow after his mother dies in a freak electrical accident whilst filming a horror movie! Needless to say, the teenager is still a little bit traumatised when they arrive at his mother's old home and so is suitably susceptible when his pal "Drew" (Jason McGuire) tells him of the reputedly recuperative powers of the pet graveyard near their town. He is going to test the theory with his recently deceased mutt "Zowie" and this triggers a course of events that has poor old "Jeff" soon contemplating putting his mother in the same ground in the hope that she, too, might come back to life. This is actually quite comical to start with, but as it progresses it becomes little better than a cheap and cheerful zombie movie that is totally devoid of peril and suffers from a some very wooden acting and a very limited special effects budget. It lacks the subtly and cumulative power of the original Stephen King story - instead opting for shock tactics that really only raise a smile rather than the hairs on the back of your neck. A sequel nobody needed, sorry.


