The former Black Flag frontman plays a disgraced military man trying to revive his career as a TV host. But unlike the screaming teenagers of the first film, Dale is a force of nature. When the mutants attack, he doesn't hide. He grabs an M4 carbine, straps on a vest, and literally declares war on the hillbillies.
Rollins delivers lines like, "I'm gonna gut you like a pig," with the manic intensity of a man who has been waiting for the apocalypse his entire life. He is the proto-John Wick of low-budget horror. Watching him clear a mutant camp is worth the price of admission alone. You might think a movie about inbred cannibals isn't deep. And you’d be mostly right. But Wrong Turn 2 has a cynical, angry heart beneath the gore. wrong turn2
The twist? Three Finger, One Eye, and the newly introduced "Poker Face" (a terrifyingly strong mutant with a metal plate in his head) don’t like the cameras. They don’t like the noise. And they really don’t like the contestants. The former Black Flag frontman plays a disgraced
The film takes vicious aim at the voyeurism of reality TV. The showrunner (played brilliantly by The X-Files ’ Mitch Pileggi) refuses to stop filming even as his crew is slaughtered. He yells things like, "This is the highest rated season yet!" as a producer gets her face eaten. It’s a critique of how far producers will go for "authentic" content—turning tragedy into entertainment. He grabs an M4 carbine, straps on a
Lynch treats the film less like a sequel to the 2003 Eliza Dushku movie and more like a modern love letter to Cannibal Holocaust (the reality TV critique) and Evil Dead II (the slapstick energy). The pacing is relentless. There is no 45-minute buildup of characters walking through the woods. The first kill happens before the opening credits finish. From there, it’s a rollercoaster that only stops to reload the shotgun.