Faces of Death II
- 1981
- 1h 25m
IMDb RATING
3.9/10
2.2K
YOUR RATING
This film continues along the same lines as F.O.D. 1 with short scenes of material related to death. Mortuaries, accidents, police work are filmed by television equipment and domestic video ... Read allThis film continues along the same lines as F.O.D. 1 with short scenes of material related to death. Mortuaries, accidents, police work are filmed by television equipment and domestic video cameras.This film continues along the same lines as F.O.D. 1 with short scenes of material related to death. Mortuaries, accidents, police work are filmed by television equipment and domestic video cameras.
James Brady
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Mickey Crowe
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Thomas K. Delahanty
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
John Hinckley Jr.
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Timothy J. McCarthy
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Johnny Owen
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Bobby Pesco
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Lupe Pintor
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Kenny Powers
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Ronald Reagan
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
Chuck Strange
- Self
- (archive footage)
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
"Faces of Death 2" is more serious than its predecessor.It has only one fake scene,the rest of the footage is real.The extensive padding includes a nearly ten-minute segment on the death(in the ring)of boxer Johnny Owens,a horrifying Japanese mass dolphin slaughter,a monkey on drugs etc.Some of the worst scenes in this film are actually real footage of corpses in varying degrees of decomposition.I can't recommend this title to anyone but exploitation cinema buffs.Check this stuff out,if you can stomach it.
Okay...this sequel does have more of the same graphic violence and gore as the first one...and all but 1 scene is real, not faked, but still as a connoisseur of this type of thing, I didn't "enjoy" this one as much, and I use the term enjoy loosely. These things are not enjoyable viewing, but more of curiosity pieces, and as that I found the first one to be a lot better, even if several of the scenes in it were faked. Still, there is animal slaughter, a shootout, an execution by firing squad, some stunts gone awry, and a boxing match that ends in tradgedy, and alas, the filmmakers cashed in even more, as this is not the last entry in the "popular" series. "Fans" of gore and violence will still have plenty to look at in this one and marvel in the brutality.
I was relatively kind in my review of the first "Faces of Death" movie. Sure, it was utter trash, but I could see at least a reason for its exsistence: to scare the hell out of people. The sequel's only goal is to make more money off the original's infamous reputation. What kind of inspiration is that? The idea of a film comprised of footage of real people and animals getting killed in front of the camera is sick and disturbing. The first time around, there was merit, the idea of making more, just for the sake of making more is totally wrong. (F) Not Rated, but equivalent to an NC-17 for continual graphic carnage and gore from man and beast.
Best (HAH!) of the series.
Most of this was real footage.
Accident scenes from the autobahn.
Avalanche deaths.
Johnny Owens' last fight.
Only the cop shootout at the drugstore seemed fake. Too many camera angles and too much OTT acting to pass off as real.
Digging the bodies out of the avalanche was tough to see because most of the faces of the dead were easy to see.
The fire at the German nursing home will NOT be easy to stomach.
And the autobahn's traffic deaths were also a little heart rending.
My one question; Did 'Francis B. Gross' really make that much money off the first film that he could afford expensive boots, a new motorcycle, and to drink tequila in Mexico?
Most of this was real footage.
Accident scenes from the autobahn.
Avalanche deaths.
Johnny Owens' last fight.
Only the cop shootout at the drugstore seemed fake. Too many camera angles and too much OTT acting to pass off as real.
Digging the bodies out of the avalanche was tough to see because most of the faces of the dead were easy to see.
The fire at the German nursing home will NOT be easy to stomach.
And the autobahn's traffic deaths were also a little heart rending.
My one question; Did 'Francis B. Gross' really make that much money off the first film that he could afford expensive boots, a new motorcycle, and to drink tequila in Mexico?
Since death is something that we all have to face at some point, it's no surprise a lot of people have a morbid fascination with the subject, or that 'documentaries' such as this exist (or, indeed, websites that trade in grisly real-life imagery). For many it's about confronting reality, others will be testing the limits of what they can handle, and there'll no doubt be those that find the whole thing funny, and something to boast about having seen to friends. Whatever your reason for watching, there's no denying that Faces of Death II contains some very disturbing scenes, and that the film should be approached with caution.
The first FOD film was a mix of fake footage and real-life horrors, but part II is almost all genuine, with only a drugstore robbery gone wrong being apparently staged (the hysterical female witness isn't very convincing): the film features Hindu cremations, an avalanche disaster, a fatal boxing match, unsuccessful daredevil stunts, and airplane crashes, the camera lingering on the victims. These are either accidents or acts of nature, and are comparatively innocuous. Scenes of war atrocities are harder to take, although these days such harrowing footage is often broadcast on TV in news reports and in documentaries, and unfortunately no longer has the impact it once had. For me, the real 'punch to the gut' is the animal cruelty, specifically the brutal slaughter of dolphins, made all the more difficult to stomach after the narrator, Dr. Francis B. Gröss (Michael Carr), talks at length about the intelligence of the species. Sometimes, the human race really sucks (I guess that's the main message to be gleaned from this film).
Other abhorrent content presented for your entertainment includes a tribe of cannibals with leprosy, and a mass execution by firing squad. Don't say you haven't been warned.
4/10: it's worth seeing if only for the jet-propelled car stunt: did they really think that was going to work?
The first FOD film was a mix of fake footage and real-life horrors, but part II is almost all genuine, with only a drugstore robbery gone wrong being apparently staged (the hysterical female witness isn't very convincing): the film features Hindu cremations, an avalanche disaster, a fatal boxing match, unsuccessful daredevil stunts, and airplane crashes, the camera lingering on the victims. These are either accidents or acts of nature, and are comparatively innocuous. Scenes of war atrocities are harder to take, although these days such harrowing footage is often broadcast on TV in news reports and in documentaries, and unfortunately no longer has the impact it once had. For me, the real 'punch to the gut' is the animal cruelty, specifically the brutal slaughter of dolphins, made all the more difficult to stomach after the narrator, Dr. Francis B. Gröss (Michael Carr), talks at length about the intelligence of the species. Sometimes, the human race really sucks (I guess that's the main message to be gleaned from this film).
Other abhorrent content presented for your entertainment includes a tribe of cannibals with leprosy, and a mass execution by firing squad. Don't say you haven't been warned.
4/10: it's worth seeing if only for the jet-propelled car stunt: did they really think that was going to work?
Did you know
- TriviaMuch like the PSA Aircraft crash during the production of the first film, the assassination attempt on President Ronald Reagan occurred recently before the film's completion, and was included as well.
- Quotes
Dr. Francis B. Gröss: This white blanket of death is called an avalanche.
- Alternate versionsGerman VHS and DVD releases include scenes missing from both the U.S VHS and DVD Prints. One such scene included that is missing from the U.S DVD releases is the attempted assassination of Ronald Regan. The German release is titled as Gesichter Des Todes II (1981).
- ConnectionsEdited into The Worst of Faces of Death (1987)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Faces of Death Part II
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 25m(85 min)
- Color
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