
Critters 2
It's Everyone's Turn For Seconds
Three bounty hunters from space fly back to the town of Grovers Bend, hoping to save local residents from a new batch of Critter eggs.
- 6.2
- 1988
- Released
- 1h 26m

Scott Grimes
Brad
Liane Curtis
Megan
Don Keith Opper
Charlie
Barry Corbin
Harv
Tom Hodges
Wesley
Sam Anderson
Mr. Morgan
Lindsay Parker
Cindy
Herta Ware
Nana
Lin Shaye
Sal
Terrence Mann
Ug
Cynthia Garris
Zanti
Al Stevenson
Bus Driver
Douglas Rowe
Quigley
Eddie Deezen
Hungry Heifer Manager
David Ursin
Sheriff Corwin
Roxanne Kernohan
Lee
Randy Spears
Lee / Ug "Nothing-Face"
Patrick Campbell
Farmer
Montrose Hagins
Farm Woman
Gary Cashdollar
Scared Man
Candace Laughlin
Woman
J. Christopher Sullivan
Townie

Released
en
$4,500,000.00
$3,813,293.00
- #spacecraft
- #small town
- #bounty hunter
- #hamburger
- #kansas, usa
- #alien
- #easter
- #easter bunny
- #reporter
- #creature
- #explosion
- #alien invasion
- #dog
- #shape shifter
- #pitchfork
- #newspaper reporter
- #easter egg hunt
Reviews

<em>'Critters 2: The Main Course'</em> is more of the same, which is good for a sequel of this type. I wasn't anticipating much but it's solid enough, if you like the first flick then I'd be surprised if this disappointed you. I did rate the original, so go figure. Scott Grimes is the standout, in my opinion, from the first release, here he takes a bit more of a back seat (if still the lead) as

**_Effectively continues the story, but it’s not as good as the first movie_** It is reported that Crites are still present on Earth, so Ug (Terrence Mann) and two other galactic bounty hunters return to wipe them out, including earthling misfit Charlie (Don Keith Opper). Brad (Scott Grimes) just so happens to be in town when they visit the planet. Along with his new girlfriend (Liane Curtis),

The first "Critters" movie was a low-budget little monsters sci-fi/horror film that, despite its limitations in money and tech, still managed to strike the right chord in balancing the sci-fi, horror, suspense, and comedy elements, even with a PG-13 rating (despite its theme, only two people actually die in the first movie). Unfortunately, despite the fact that you can see them trying really hard

Critters 2 leans a bit more into the silliness of the series. Not to say that the original was a bleak take on gritty realism, but it did seem to take the danger a fraction more serious. It's not something that works particularly for or against the sequel, it's just a slight change, one that makes sense even. Establishes a real inter-connectivity in the franchise (that Critters would basically hol











