Add a Review

  • A hedonistic prom queen is accidentally killed on stage in 1957. When her spirit is inadvertently released thirty years later, she wreaks havoc on prom night seeking to be queen again, not to mention obtaining revenge. Michael Ironside plays the principal of the school, the man responsible for the girl's death decades earlier.

    Sometimes subtitled "Hello Mary Lou," "Prom Night II" (1987) is disconnected from the original 1980 film with Jamie Lee Curtis, although there are some trivial links. This one discards the disco dancing while upping the ante with the "Carrie" (1976) elements and mixing in components from the first two "A Nightmare on Elm Street" flicks (1984/1985), like the illusions and possession.

    The original was more of a coming-of-age drama/whodunit with a masked assailant appearing in the last act whereas this sequel is actually a little better in that it adds creative horror pizazz, which some might say makes it "cheesy." In any case, Wendy Lyon stands out as the winsome protagonist who's shown totally nude on a few occasions in the second half which ties-in with the possession angle.

    If you favor any of those other horror films noted above, "Prom Night II" is arguably on par, although I suppose "Carrie" is superior on a technical level.

    The movie runs 1 hour, 37 minutes and was shot in Edmonton, Alberta, with other stuff (post-production) done in Toronto.

    GRADE: B
  • This one is simply too much devilish fun! An unrelated, stand-alone sequel much more in the supernatural slasher vein of the at the time very popular "A Nightmare On Elm Street" movies. There's some black humor & genre references present (the film winks at "The Exorcist" and "Carrie"), but it does deliver in the creepy horror department also. Lisa Schrage is delicious as the evil Mary Lou Maloney and Michael Ironside is running around in it also as the principal of Hamilton High (always a nice bonus in any movie, this man). Wendy Lyon (as the possessed Vicky Carpenter) provides some very unexpected full frontal nudity, resulting in a scene featuring the best kill of the movie. This is a fine example of how much crazy fun an '80s slasher movie can get.
  • Wendy Lyon plays blonde-haired high-school goody-two-shoes Vicki Carpenter (just one of several characters in this film blessed with the surname of a horror director) who gradually becomes possessed by the vengeful spirit of promiscuous tart Mary Lou Maloney (Lisa Schrage), who was burnt to death during her high school prom in 1957 as a result of two men fighting for her affections.

    Before getting down to the messy business of exacting revenge on those responsible for her untimely demise, Mary Lou dispatches a couple of Vicki's closest friends (after all, practise make perfect), causing her next targets—local priest Father Cooper (Richard Monette) and high-school principal Bill Nordham (Michael Ironside)—to suspect that they might be next to die. At the high school prom, Nordham attempts to stop the now fully possessed Vicki from causing further mayhem, but only succeeds in making the spirit within even more angry, ensuring everyone present has a totally unforgettable night.

    A non-related sequel to Prom Night, the 1980 Jamie Lee Curtis slasher, Hello, Mary Lou is an entertaining tale of revenge from beyond the grave featuring a grab-bag of supernatural elements borrowed from genre classics such as The Exorcist, A Nightmare on Elm Street, and Carrie.

    The result is a derivative slice of 80s teen horror that is rather light on the gore (why, oh why, didn't they chop fashion disaster Jess's head off like they threatened to do?), but which is still lots of fun thanks to some great performances from a decent cast (including the always superb Michael Ironside) and a couple of surprisingly risqué scenes: Lyon strips off and gives us full-frontal as she hops in the shower with (big) bosom(ed) pal Monica (Beverly Hendry); nasty prom queen hopeful Kelly (Terri Hawkes) gives a blow-job to a lucky computer geek to convince him to rig the evening's voting; and the possessed Vicki not only comes on to her principal and a priest, but also her own father!!!

    Throw in some Elm Street-style nightmare scenes, the most memorable of which has a rocking horse come to life, and a daft 'shock' ending, and what you have is an eminently watchable time-waster.
  • Though this movie often gets skewered on the message boards it is a delight for those who appreciate the high school horror films of the 80's. The acting is stale, the story is one we've all heard before but this film had some memorable touches. The locker room scene is one of my all-time favorite death scenes and this film used the art class paper cutter as a weapon way before Josh Hartnett wielded one in "The Faculty". The "living rocking horse" is definitely something viewers wont easily forget and that scene reminds me of horrors historical roots in cinema: that scene screams German Expressionism as much as the title sequence in "Nightmare on Elm Street". If you don't like camp, this movie will be hard to swallow, but if you're a fan of the B movies you rented as a kid just because the cover art looked creepy: bon apetit.
  • In 1957 Hamilton High, Mary Lou Maloney is a sexually aggressive girl who dump her stiff boyfriend Billy Nordham at prom after making out with another guy. He's hurt and sets off a stink bomb as Mary Lou is crowned prom queen. Her dress is set on fire and she dies a horrible death. In the present, Vicki Carpenter (Wendy Lyon) is a sweet girl suffering under her strict religious mother. Her boyfriend Craig Nordham is the son of principal Billy Nordham (Michael Ironside). Vicky finds Mary Lou's cursed crown. Her friend Jess releases the spirit when she tries to take the crown apart. She is hung to death by the spirit and it is declared it a suicide.

    There is a bit of comedy both intentional and unintentional. The 80s style is insane and the movie has to also have 50s style. For lower level 80s horrors, this is one of my favorites. I love the locker room scene. It is shoot perfectly. Every cut has something terrific. Then it ends in such a memorable way. The movie is an amalgam of some great horrors like Carrie. Sometimes the horror B-movie seams are showing but I do love the locker room.
  • I could not consciously give this film anything more than a 7 rating despite the fact that I really like it because it and the subsequent sequels and the remake of "Prom Night" have absolutely NOTHING to do with the original! This would be a great film on it's own, I don't know why the producers saw it necessary to leach onto the "Prom Night" title when this is actually a totally different movie. It's not really all that scary but it is a campy little horror flick about a prom queen who dies in a fire on stage in front of the entire school just before she is about to receive her crown. She dies before our eyes but returns to haunt the high school 30 years later and posses the soul of one prom queen hopeful. Michael Ironside puts on a great performance in this as the man responsible for Mary Lou's fiery death who later becomes the high school principal and whose son is dating the girl who has been possessed by the spirit of the vengeful Mary Lou. There are a couple of attempts to blatantly rip off "The Excorcist" and some inconsistencies in the story line but all in all this is a fun little flick and you don't need to watch the original to appreciate it since it's a totally different movie.
  • Hello Mary Lou isn't the most entertaining horror I've seen but it's fairly decent and something always seems to be happening. There's no gore at all but there's plenty of silliness. There seems to be a weird religious edge to it as well, as the girl possessed by Mary Lou asks the priest: "Will you pray for me?...Will you f**k me?" There's a hilarious line from the priest during a funeral, when he comments that the death should remind everyone of violence seen every day in life, on TV, and in films. Other funny scenes include a girl being pulped in between two lockers, Mary Lou's corpse bursting out of Vicki's body, and an exploding grave. These are not as cool as they sound, but will still bring a smile to your face.

    I would give this a watch if you enjoy 80's horror films. It's not the best, but it's got enough wholesome cheesiness to pass the time.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    Poor tenderhearted innocent, Vicki Carpenter(Wendy Lyon), the lonely teenage daughter of a repressed religiously fanatical Catholic mother(obviously modeled after Piper Laurie in CARRIE) and pu ss y whipped father, is invaded by the vengeful spirit of Mary Lou Maloney(Lisa Schrage, a real sex kitten who isn't in this film nearly long enough), who seeks retribution for the one responsible for her tragic demise. The film opens with Mary Lou Maloney ditching prom date Billy for Cooper. Wishing to embarrass her, he drops a stink bomb which ignites her dress, burning Mary Lou alive. 30 years later, Cooper(Richard Monette) is now a guilt-stricken priest with uneasy feelings about her death, with Mary Lou's memory still lingering. Now a principal at Hamilton High, Bill(Michael Ironside)is a domineering father of a son, Craig(Justin Louis)who is dating Vicki. Bill has attempted, unsuccessfully, to mold and shape his son's future, but Craig is quite the free-spirited sort who wants to take a year to measure out his career plans & goals. What Craig doesn't know is that Mary Lou has her eyes set on revenge with him an easy target considering it was his father who murdered her. But, friends of Vicki will also find their lives in jeopardy because frankly Mary Lou just enjoys killing with the demonic abilities she has available to her. Bill, sensing through the strange behavior elicited from Vicki, whose demeanor, profane mouth, and clothing attire are eerily reminiscent to a certain someone he knew from his teenage past, will accept the unbelievable(especially after finding someone other than Mary Lou in her casket)and exact a plan to hopefully save his son.

    I feel many will approach this sequel-in-name-only as a slasher and find themselves wondering what they got themselves into. Clearly an 80's spoof of CARRIE among other films, HELLO MARY LOU, PROM NIGHT II is a black-hearted horror-comedy loaded with off-the-wall special effects, taking cheerful jabs at Catholicism, with a priest getting a certain symbol shoved down his throat when Mary Lou, working through Vicki as her host, complains about not even getting wings after her death. There's a hilarious scene where Vicki's mother is forbidding her "sinful" daughter to go to the prom, getting thrown right through the front door! Oh, and the way a confessional is used by Mary Lou, once as her self(..writing a number on the wall for anyone looking for a good time)and later inside Vicki's body, is yet another gag poking gleeful fun at Catholicism. Thanks to the whole demonic powers at Mary Lou's disposal, the filmmakers use her imposing supernatural abilities with creative murder sequences(..which aren't that gory, to tell the truth)such as what can happen if you attempt to hide in a locker, or if you try to illegally assist in a candidate's win of Prom Queen through the use of a computer. My two favorite sequences contain a "demonic rocking horse" and a classroom chalkboard with hands that pull Vicki into it.

    A completely gratuitous sequence should bring the house down as a completely nude Wendy Lyon(..as the virginal Vicki, now completely under Mary Lou's control)searches through a locker room for Vicki's best friend, Monica(Beverley Hendry)scared out of her wits after "Mary Lou" attempts a lesbian engagement in the showers. What makes the nude scene so hair-raising is that Lyon, as Vicki early on, shows no signs of having such an amazing body. And, Lyon doesn't hold back as she's actually more convincing as Mary Lou than the meek & nerdy Vicki at the beginning of the film. The way she parades around in that locker room, walking with an awareness of just what kind of sexual creature she really is, floored me. Certainly a highlight, capped by that death sequence using lockers to crush a victim. Lyon has another memorable scene where Mary Lou confronts Bill in his office, hopping up on the desk splitting her legs in his face(..not to mention, sitting on his lap). I think this will be good fun for those who watch 80's films for the atrocious hair styles and colorful clothing displaying the personalities of high school teens at the time. I particularly like the "culture clash" scene where Mary Lou has Vicki wearing 50's era attire, walking through the high school as others look on in bewilderment. There's even an eye-opening crazy climax as Mary Lou truly "emerges" from Vicki(..reminds me of the outstanding sequence in A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET II where Freddy exits Jesse's body) to open her true reign of terror on the kids trying to escape from the building.
  • OPMaster21 November 2003
    Your attitude going into Prom Night II will determine how much joy you take away from the film. If you're expecting a horror masterpiece, look elsewhere. If you like campy movies that are rather fun to watch unfold, you'll like this. Lisa Schrage has the time of her life playing an over the top Mary Lou and Wendy Loyd channels Schrage's rage perfectly during her time "possessed".

    Not classic cinema but a fun way to kill a couple of hours with a wicked ending.
  • Has nothing to do with the Jamie Lee Curtis 1980 original. Here in 1957 a cheating Mary Lou Maloney (Lisa Schrage) is named Prom Queen. She is burned to death after a prank goes horribly wrong coming from a jilted lover. Fast forward 30 years and her spirit is walking the hallways of Hamilton High. Or rather possessing Vicki Carpenter (Wendy Lyon) who is dating the son of Bill Nordham (Michael Ironside) who was hurt by Mary Lou 30 years prior on prom night. Does quite a good job on the possession angle and sort of feels almost like a Canadian-NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET. Just insert Mary Lou instead of Freddy. In fact at times plays out a little bit like, but works better than A NIGHTMARE ON ELM STREET 2: FREDDY'S REVENGE (which was made 2 years prior). Certainly worth a look.
  • cokane-130 April 2005
    and not in a fun-to-watch way. it's just bad. it's shocking that people have posted positive things about it here. the story sucks, the acting is bad, it's not scary, the special effects aren't special--oh no! the blackboard has hands coming out of it! oh gee--the mirror turned into water! the hair, clothes and makeup in the '50s scenes aren't accurate, and they got a middle-aged man with a receding hairline to play the high-school version of himself. this is like later-on nightmare on elm street stuff. i enjoy sitting down to watch a cheesy horror movie as much as anyone else, but there are better bad ones out there to choose from.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    What have The Fly, Invaders from Mars, The Thing from Another World, and The Blob all have in common? They are science fiction films from the 1950s that were remade in the 1980s. The 1980s saw a new enthusiasm for everything 1950s as America - for the first time in three decades - felt more like the society and world leader they imagined themselves to be in that earlier post-war decade. Helping this optimistic reinvigoration of nationalist sentiment along were such factors as Reagan's neo-conservative government, the growth of economic rationalism, Russia's withdrawal from Afghanistan, an end to the Iran Hostage Crisis, the meteoric rise of computer technology, and unprecedented increases in wealth accumulation and consumer fetishism. University survey's conducted in the 80s revealed that American values among young adults had returned to a conservative high not seen since the 1950s. With all of these cosmetic similarities between the two decades, its no wonder that fashion, music and movies returned to the halcyon days of McCarthyism, anti-communism, nuclear paranoia and conspicuous consumption. Indeed, in the New Hollywood of the 80s there was a general shift among audiences towards juvenile escapist fantasies rather than cynical social realist dramas of the 70s. So what does all this have to do with Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II (PN2)?

    The renaissance of everything 1950s in America is a key concern of PN2, and typical of horror films that, in general, capture the zeitgeist fairly accurately. PN2 provides a particularly impressive visual metaphor for the regeneration of the 1950s within a 1980s context when, at the prom, Mary Lou quite literally emerges from Vicki's body. Prior to this "rebirth," Vicky - possessed by the vengeful spirit of Mary Lou - dresses in 50s clothes, uses anachronistic phrases from the 50s ("See you later, alligator"), and listens to 50s music. The film is as much an intelligent and insightful observation of 80s neo-conservatism as it is a camp, clever and visually striking horror romp.

    Reviewers that have not enjoyed the film scathingly pointed out the extent to which PN2 borrows from Carrie and The Exorcist. Yet this is all part of the twisted pleasure of the film. Take it too seriously and the acerbically clever joke is on you. For through its derivative nod to Friedkin and De Palma's films, PN2 locates itself very clearly within firstly, a post-Exorcist era when every second horror film in the 70s borrowed something from The Exorcist (the most financially and critically successful horror film in history), and secondly, a post-De Palma era in which it pays homage to a director who pays homage to a director (Hitchcock), resulting in a playful mise-en-abyme.

    PN2 is also a really good looking film. It features some solid stylish special effects and well executed set pieces that predate those in the later campier instalments of the Nightmare on Elm Street franchise. As we know, Mary Lou makes several unsuccessful attempts to possess Vicki. She comes to Vicki when she's alone and vulnerable, invading her personal space. Some of these possession attempts involve some truly creative filmmaking involving good old fashioned in-camera special effects. This of course was an age when a major part of filmmaking was still problem solving - an age when audiences were still asking, "How did they do that?" An age before digital boredom. In one sequence from PN2, the rocking-horse in Vicki's room starts to move by itself and takes on a demonic visage, with its eyes rolling, its brows creasing and its tongue lolling about. In another sequence, Vicki is alone in a classroom when chalk writing mysteriously appears in reverse on the blackboard, seemingly written from inside the board (the words "HELP ME" appear, one of the many nods to The Exorcist). When Vicki approaches the board, it suddenly becomes a liquid state and black hands reach out and pull her into the inky blackness. After struggling to stay afloat as the board becomes a whirlpool, Vicki is eventually pulled under (or inside) as the dark waters swirl around her. After she disappears, the blackboard returns to its solid state and the letters that had been swirling around are now scattered randomly across the board.

    I could rabbit on endlessly about this film but i've already said too much. I hope after reading this review you might be inspired to check out this overlooked gem from the decade that produced so many overlooked gems, and with an open mind, hopefully you might see what a group of intelligent and creative young filmmakers with no cash, but solid ideas and loads of cunning are capable of producing.
  • simest31 March 2021
    If there was ever a vote for THE prototypical 80s horror film, I'd be hard pressed to vote for anything other than this. The look, style, pace and vibe of Bruce Pittman's delirious non-sequel to the routine slasher PROM NIGHT are the very epitome of the period. For this reason, those touched by nostalgia will find it hard not to like but HELLO MARY LOU: PROM NIGHT II has a little more in it's locker (literally as it happens!) to enjoy than just an appreciation of it's era.

    Right from the opening scene, there is a wonderfully odd vibe throughout that propels the movie along nicely and although it openly borrows from CARRIE, ELM STREET and THE EXORCIST, it makes no apologies for this and goes about the task with real zest and energy. Much credit belongs to veteran Canadian composer Paul Zaza, whose queasy score here adds immeasurably to the off kilter mood that works so much in this movie's favour.

    The cast have fun and are game for the ride with the ever-reliable Michael Ironside thrown into the mix. As for Lisa Schrage.........given her limited screen time (her character spends most of the movie in the guise of a possessed Wendy Lyon), I thought she was mesmerizing as Mary Lou, giving us a truly memorable and delightfully twisted character whose beauty can't be ignored and whose evil can't be escaped!

    Mary Lou is a vengeful 50s Prom Queen back from the grave with a score to settle. Most of all, she wants back the crown she was cruelly denied and will stop at nothing to get it.

    As the possessed Vicky, she kills and toys with victims - sometimes on a warped sexual level........at one point coming onto her Dad(!), her headmaster (in his office!) and even her best friend in a shower.........the latter in a sequence culminating in a protracted and utterly unexpected full-frontal nude scene, stalking her prey around the changing room with a payoff kill that's not easily forgotten.

    Well staged and imaginative dream sequences and hallucinations abound such as the liquid blackboard and a possessed rocking horse that comes off very creepy and not nearly as silly as it could have been. With little to boast of in budget, the SPFX here are all the more ballsy and impressive.

    Sharp, quirky and with a wicked sense of humour, there's not a dull moment here!
  • This movie is awful. Made off the success of Prom Night (Yes all you young people who think the first Prom Night sucked, it was a success!) which has no bearing off the first film. This movie is more of a ripoff of other movies because in 1987, slasher films were not making money anymore, and producers needed to find ways to make millions. So, why not steal the name off a movie that everyone recognizes and likes, rip off Nightmare on Elm Street, and Carrie and call it a movie! I thought it was a campy comedy of a film not even a serious horror film.

    My one question to all Original Prom Night Bashers: If the first prom night was so bad, why did they use the name for a sequel? :) My advice, if you are drunk and bored, watch this film!
  • The Prom Night series probably takes the cake as one of horror's more negligible series due to its lack of continuity, trite plots, and severe emphasis on Christianity. However, I think Mary Lou is probably the best installment in this series. Vicki Carpenter is the quintessential goody two shoes who's raised by strict and deeply religious parents who've done a fine job at making her feel guilty for having "sinful" thoughts about her boyfriend and using the Lord's name in vain. But with her interest in the prom queen who died thirty years earlier, it's obvious that she's torn between a her own world and one that can be considered more sinful. The spirit of Mary Lou does a helluva job at corrupting this little Miss Perfect by exposing her to violence, revenge, lust, and even homosexuality that she's pondered for years. While the film bears no major relevance to its predecessor much like the subsequent two films, it provides a reflection of what teenagers have been going through for years while they were trying break free from the parents who drove them crazy, discover more about themselves, or just try, by any means necessary, to be the most popular person in their school. After all, weren't those the elements that John Hughes filled his 80s teen movies with?
  • A prime example of 1980s b flick horror done right. You don't find movies like this anymore, at least not with the budget they have to work with here. While lower budget compared to Hollywood blockbusters it's far above the shot on digital video with shoddy computer effects we generally see today. Likable characters, well done make up effects, nudity, twists and effectively creepy moments. Michael Ironside delivers his usual strong performance and the main cast in general are stronger than what you may have come to expect from this type of flick. There are obvious "homages" to Carrie but not to the point of embarrassing ripoff levels. It's far more interesting and thrilling than the first film and it's easily the best of the franchise (including the remake of the first film). A must watch for fans of the low budget 80s horror genre.
  • The film centers around the ghost of one Mary Lou Maloney, a girl who was accidentally killed during her prom queen crowning in the 50s. Her spirit is accidentally released by a girl named Vicki when she finds her supposed prom queen regalia in the school's prop room. Mary Lou possesses her, and sets out to get revenge on those responsible for her death and become the prom queen once more.

    I usually prefer Hammer horror films or 80's horror with light gore and an emphasis on atmosphere and story and this 1987 sequel has plenty of atmosphere, moments that make you jump, builds progressively to the climax and the gore isn't too heavy - it's more special effect-laden like the Nightmare on Elm street series. Has some inventive effects and the characterisation is good, though it gets a little longwinded and tedious towards the end. The interesting aspect is that the would-be victim or the one vulnerable is the male - usually in horror film it's the female who is either the final girl or in the dangerous situation.
  • HELLO MARY LOU: PROM NIGHT II is such a cheesy film that if you watch it, your cholesterol level will rise exponentially. The acting is so bad, it's staggering. The actress who plays Mary Lou, Lisa Schrage, was 15 years too old and watching her play a teenager is bad enough but having her play a teenage girl possessed by the vengeful spirit of dead teen girl is too much. She's a car-wreck, train-wreck, shipwreck and all-around big wreck all rolled into one. Watching her vamping it and trying to have sex with anything with a heartbeat (including her dad) was the funniest and yet unfortunate thing I've ever seen.

    Nevermind that the story is dumber than a box of rocks, nevermind that the effects are horrendous (in the final "Carrie" scene, you can see makeup fx coming off actors' skin), nevermind that the cast is befuddled and embarrassed by it all (Michael Ironside is almost as bad as Schrage), nevermind the cinematography is just plain ugly, nevermind the fact that this awfully titled "sequel" has nothing to do with the first film, HELLO MARY LOU: PROM NIGHT II is pure, unadulterated cheese on the merit of Lisa Schrage's ne-plus-ultra performance. Her performance and this "movie" give new meaning to bad.
  • Well, if anything, "Hello Mary Lou" at least succeeded in getting Ricky Nelson's classic song stuck in my head since two days now! You can't help but think about the song when you notice the title, and it's also marvelously used in the film, when the normally shy & timid female lead just went through a diabolical metamorphosis and parades down the school's corridors whilst enjoying the lustful stares of all the boys. This certainly isn't a bad 80's popcorn-flick, especially because it doesn't take itself too seriously and features quite lot of comical situations & witty dialogs. There's absolutely no connection with the original "Prom Night" and, in fact, part two isn't even a genuine slasher picture! It's more like a demonic possession/haunted (school) house film that found its inspiration in classic titles like "The Exorcist", "Carrie" and even "Nightmare on Elm Street". The story opens with a scene set at the notorious Hamilton High prom night in 1957. The luscious and flamboyant beauty Mary Lou cheats on her boyfriend Billy whilst he's gone fetching drinks and he responds to this rejection by setting her on fire when she's crowned as prom queen. 30 years later, young Billy grew up to become Michael Ironside ("Scanners", "Visiting Hours") and he's now the principal of Hamilton High. I guess there never was a murder investigation, then. His son's sweet girlfriend Vicky accidentally frees Mary Lou's furious spirit and she reincarnates to take revenge. Mary Lou goes after the ones that killed her as well as the new teenagers that come too close to her. This film features all the known clichés (shower sequences, high school rivalry…) and stereotypes (uptight parents, the class comedian…), but it's campy good fun and the murder sequences are delightfully gruesome. One poor girl is crushed between two lockers and another poor bloke's face gets electrocuted by a computer! Lisa Schrage and Wendy Lyon are both wickedly sexy as the evil wench Mary Lou, but Michael Ironside is badly miscast in his role. He's a really talented actor and a super-cool guy but, actually, he's TOO cool to be a school principal and hence not very convincing. Some scenes are really bizarre, like possessed Vicky on her rocking horse or the blackboard that turns into a smutty pool, but whenever the script doesn't try to be overly ambitious, "Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II" is harmless 80'entertainment.
  • What is the point of creating sequels that have absolutely no relevance to the original film? No point. This is why the Prom Night sequels are so embarrassingly bad.

    The original film entailed a group of children hiding a dark secret that eventually get them all killed, bar one, in a brutal act of revenge. Can someone please explain to me what a dead prom queen-to-be rising from the grave to steel the crown has to do with the first movie then? Prom Night 2 had continuous plot holes that left the audience constantly wondering how did that happen and why should that happen? But in the end, i guess you could call it one of those movies that is so bad, you end up laughing yourself through it.
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This film has nothing to do with the original prom night, which was a pretty mediocre slasher flick. But I'm glad to say that there is nothing mediocre about Prom night 2 hello Mary Lou. The story starts in 1957 and the Mary Lou Maloney stops of to confession on her way to the High school prom. Needless to say that this scene establishes that Mary Louis a right evil hussy.

    Things go from bad to worse at the prom where she cheats on her rich boyfriend with the school rebel and pays the price when her boyfriend accidentally sets her ablaze as she is crowned prom queen . The story jumps forward 30 years where we meet The virginal Vicky Carpenter. Vicky's boyfriend just happens to be the principles son, and you guest it. The principal is Mary Lou's old rich boyfriend from 30 years ago.

    Some plot contrivances intervene and Mary Lou's Ghost returns to Possess Vicky, cause havoc and try's to become prom queen. Not even the local priest can stop her,and he just happens to be the school rebel from 30 years previous.

    As you can tell this all sounds like a bad horror movie?.....

    But it's not. The reason is that it steals from the best. Vicky's mum is a religious fanatic in the Carrie mode. Vicky has loads loads of strange nightmares that have been taken directly from the Wes Craven School of dream making and to this a healthy dollop of references to the Exorcist and you are on to something pretty unique. Plus it has pretty good acting headed up by the always reliable Michael Ironside as the principal and some imaginative special effects and you have the makings of a forgotten direct to video classic. But don't take my word for it, check it out for yourself. They made a proper sequel to this film but it was more comedy than horror and on the whole not as good.
  • psycho_15328 December 1999
    This is only related to the first movie by the name. The plot has nothing to do with the first and the whole movie stinks!!! I have no idea what they were thinking but this movie is so bad. Avoid this at all costs, the first movie in the series is acceptable as a slasher flick and so is the fourth but this one and the 3rd are rubbish!!
  • Warning: Spoilers
    This film is not a squeal or is in any way related to the Jamie Lee Curtis classic.

    The promiscuous Mary Lou Maloney (Lisa Schrage) upsets her date Bill (Steve Atkinson) at the prom as it seems she has had sex with everyone in school except him. Bill couldn't get to first base. A prank backfires and Mary Lou goes reverse Carrie on us as she catches fire and no one else does.

    Years later Vicky (Wendy Lyon) opens the trunk with the unburned tiara. She eventually becomes possessed by the spirit of Mary Lou without a Ouija Board. Bill (Michael Ironside) is now the principal. Supernatural elements enter the film as it becomes more similar to "Carrie" than "Prom Night."

    This is a classic 1980's horror. The confessional scenes are memorable plus the unabashed full frontal nudity of Wendy Lyon as she walks through the locker room.

    Guide: F-word, foreplay, nudity. This is part of many multi-packs
  • I had no idea Prom Night would have a sequel. Since it deals with a murderous prom queen would went in flames 30 years ago, it was a must see. Mary Lou Mahoney(Lisa Schrage) becomes Hamilton High prom queen. When her boyfriend Bill Nordham(Michael Ironside) sets off a smoke bomb for being jilted, the results weren't supposed to have her killed. He's now a principal at that high school. He keeps that painful secret from his son, which comes back to haunt him. Mary Lou is mad, really mad, and she kills without remorse or mercy. A beautiful killer, just what I need. When the killer decides to make up for his misdeeds, the murders would subside. A sign of redemption. What's worse, Mary Lou uses her victims like puppets, to me that's ultra scary. Usually, the parent would confess his past to make sure the son doesn't make the same mistake he did. Plenty of scare factor, lots of wonder, "Hello Mary Lou: Prom Night II" is one movie that makes the first one, nonexistent. A keeper! 2.5 out of 5 stars
  • In 1957, prom queen Mary Lou Maloney(the tasty Lisa Schrage) is burned alive before her crown is placed on her head. Her jealous date, who just wanted to embarrass her in front of the school, accidentally set her ablaze.

    30 years later, nosy goody-two-shoes Vicki Carpenter, opens a treasure chest that contains a few relics from Mary Lou's prom night of 1957. This unleashes Mary Lou's violent and sexually open spirit, which torments and later invades the body of Vicki. Mary Lou wants three things above all, revenge for her murder, numerous sexual encounters and to be crowned as this year's prom queen. Luckily enough, she possess the favorite for the crown.

    There are some genuine effects here and a decent script, all from a bunch of unknowns(albeit Michael Ironside). Wendy Lyon, as Vicki, is merely adequate, but her locker room nude strolling scene was quite a bit more revealing than Laura Harris' in The Faculty.

    A standard Blockbuster shelf horror.
An error has occured. Please try again.