When The Strangers learn that one of their victims, Maya, is still alive, they return to finish what they’ve started.

PROMOTED CONTENT
Tagline Survival was just the beginning.
Release Date: Sep 25, 2025
Genres: ,
Production Company: Lionsgate, Fifth Element Productions, Sherbone Media, Lipsync Productions, Stream Media
Production Countries: United Kingdom, United States of America
Casts: Madelaine Petsch, Froy Gutierrez, Gabriel Basso, Ema Horvath, Brooke Lena Johnson, Richard Brake, Pedro Leandro, Rachel Shenton, Florian Clare, Janis Ahern, Pablo Sandstrom
Status: Released
Budget: $8500000
Revenue: 11577352
The Strangers: Chapter 2
KODE IKLAN BANNER ATAU IKLAN HORIZONTAL DISINI

I should probably have watched the first one of these from last year to remind me because a bit like when “Maya” (Madeleine Petsch) wakes up in hospital, I couldn’t remember what she’d survived either. We are quickly reminded that her and her perfectly manscaped boyfriend “Jeff” (who must have read the script so stayed home and trimmed his beard this time) had been gruesomely assaulted by three local spooks bedecked in rudimentary face masks. He’s since gone the way of the dodo, but she managed to make it to the hospital where the cops were aghast at her story. Thing is, though, once her murderous antagonists discover that not only did she she survive, but that she’s in the local hospital, then the scene is set for a chapter two. Preposterousness now ensues in an almost risible fashion, as she is pursued through this almost empty hospital and then out into the woods towards the very cabin in which their misery began. Of course, after last time, she has mastered some rustic ninja skills but unsure who she can trust from this tightly-knit community, what are her chances of survival against the trio of tormentors who want to slice and dice her - just because she is there? The dialogue is barely worth mentioning, the acting plaudits are easily stolen by the masks - at least they a supposed to be plastic, and the frying pan to fire scenarios that unfold make the decision to board the Titanic in 1912 seem entirely risk-free by comparison. The only thing that is truly scary is that this tees up for a sequel, otherwise it’s a shocker in all the wrong ways.