Poster
Watch

Hellbound: Hellraiser II

Hellbound: Hellraiser II

  • Status: Released
  • 23-12-1988
  • Runtime: 97 min
  • Score: 6.4
  • Vote count: 1153

Confined to a mental hospital, young Kirsty Cotton insists her supposedly dead father is stuck in hell, controlled by sadomasochistic demons after being betrayed by his evil, occult-obsessed wife, Julia. Few believe Kirsty, except the thrill-seeking Dr. Channard, who is intrigued by the young woman's lurid stories. So when Kirsty and fellow patient Tiffany head to hell for a rescue, Channard and Julia are close behind.

Ashley Laurence

Kirsty Cotton

Clare Higgins

Julia Cotton

Kenneth Cranham

Dr. Philip Channard / Channard Cenobite

Imogen Boorman

Tiffany

William Hope

Kyle MacRae

Sean Chapman

Frank Cotton

Doug Bradley

Pinhead

Barbie Wilde

Female Cenobite

Simon Bamford

‘Butterball’ Cenobite

Nicholas Vince

Chatterer Cenobite

Oliver Smith

Frank the Monster

Angus MacInnes

Detective Ronson

Ron Travis

Workman 1

Oliver Parker

Workman 2

Catherine Chevalier

Tiffany's Mother

Deborah Joel

Skinless Julia

James Tillitt

Officer Cortez

Bradley Lavelle

Officer Kucich

Edwin Craig

Wheelchair Patient

Andrew Robinson

Larry Cotton

Robert Hines

Steve

Michael Cassidy

3rd Victim

Anthony Allen

1st Victim

Grace Kirby

Female Cenobite

Kevin Cole

The Chatterer - Human Form

JPV852

Pretty out there (in a good way) sequel that doesn't make a whole lot of sense but still was an entertaining supernatural horror flick, the kind of horror I'm generally not a fan of. Kind of surprising Ashley Laurence didn't go on to bigger things (her last movie was 2008). **3.5/5**

kevin2019

"Hellbound: Hellraiser II" is watchable enough even though it very quickly slides down the steep slope into becoming a messy shambles. It is really nothing more than a tour through the diseased imagination of Clive Barker - it is hard to believe somebody out there actually thought this was a good basis for a film instead of seeking out some description of psychiatric treatment for the poor soul - and its major handicap is that the special effects just aren't up to the challenge of supporting his thoroughly twisted and uniquely original vision. There is also a desperately heavy reliance on copious amounts of blood and gore just for the hell of it and when you add in the fact that sadly a good portion of it is also totally forgettable what you're left with is nothing more than a modest gore fest of desperately limited impact.