Buried - Alive Ii
In a stroke of dark luck, a machine malfunction at the morgue prevents Laura from being embalmed. She is buried while in a deep, toxin-induced coma, only to wake up in the dark, wooden confines of her coffin.
Her husband, Randy, isn't interested in her dreams of starting a family; he wants a yacht and a new life with his lover. Using the same toxin that "killed" Clint in the first film, Randy poisons Laura. Because of her family's history of heart failure, no one suspects foul play. The Escape and the Reckoning
While the sequel follows a similar narrative beat to the original, it's the intervention of a ghostly, weathered Clint Goodman—now living under an alias—that changes the game. His eventual sacrifice allows Laura to claw her way back to the surface for a final, poetic confrontation. Why It Still Holds Up Buried Alive II
If you grew up during the golden era of USA Network "Satur-de-Movie" marathons, you likely remember the skin-crawling dread of Frank Darabont’s 1990 thriller, Buried Alive . But for many horror fans, the real surprise was the 1997 follow-up, , which took the original’s claustrophobic premise and gave it a gender-flipped, vengeful twist. The Plot: Lightning Strikes Twice
: Critics at Letterboxd often note how the film excels at making the antagonists "the most scumbag people of all time," making their eventual downfall incredibly satisfying. In a stroke of dark luck, a machine
Ten years after Clint Goodman (Tim Matheson) escaped his own grave, the small-town nightmare returns. This time, the victim is Laura Riskin (Ally Sheedy), a woman who inherits a $250,000 fortune—a windfall that quickly becomes a death warrant.
Buried Alive II might not have the "EC Comics" feel of Darabont's original, but it remains a solid piece of 90s horror nostalgia . It’s a reminders that some secrets—and some people—refuse to stay buried. Using the same toxin that "killed" Clint in
: Tim Matheson didn’t just return to play Clint; he also stepped into the director’s chair, ensuring the sequel maintained the "gonzo" TV-movie energy of the original. Final Verdict









