The Hills Run Red 2 (2024) resurrects the terror of the original cult horror hit with a vengeance thatโs bloodier, smarter, and more psychologically haunting than before. Directed by Dave Parker, who returns to helm this long-awaited sequel, the film picks up fifteen years after the events of the original massacre, delving deeper into the legend of Babyfaceโthe masked killer whose sadistic legacy refuses to die. Blending slasher brutality with chilling self-awareness, The Hills Run Red 2 becomes both a love letter to horror fans and a nightmarish exploration of obsession, guilt, and the price of uncovering truth.
The story follows Harper Collins (Sophia Lillis), the daughter of one of the survivors from the first film, who has spent her life trying to understand what really happened in those cursed woods. When a disturbing new snuff tape surfaces onlineโshowing fresh murders in the same locationโHarper sets out with a small film crew to document the area and uncover the truth behind the myth of Babyface. What begins as a reckless true-crime project quickly spirals into a descent into hell, as the group realizes that the legend never diedโit evolved. The deeper they go, the more the line between filmmaker and victim begins to blur, and Harperโs fascination with the killer starts to feel dangerously personal.

Unlike many modern slashers, The Hills Run Red 2 refuses to rely solely on gore for impact. Parker crafts a film thatโs both brutally physical and psychologically suffocating. The woods themselves feel alive with menace, filmed in cold blue tones and unnerving silence. Every branch snap, every flicker of light, builds unbearable tension until violence finally erupts in short, shocking bursts. Babyface, redesigned but still horrifyingly iconic, represents more than a killerโheโs the embodiment of generational trauma, obsession, and the twisted relationship between horror and voyeurism.
What truly elevates the sequel is its focus on legacy and media. The film questions why audiences are drawn to violence and whether filmmakers exploit pain for entertainment. Harperโs obsession mirrors that of her late father, creating a chilling cycle that traps her between fascination and fear. โYou donโt just watch horror,โ she says in one of the filmโs eeriest lines. โYou live it.โ This meta-commentary gives the movie surprising emotional depth amid the carnage, reminding viewers that monsters are often made, not born.

The performances add emotional weight to the chaos. Sophia Lillis is outstanding, capturing Harperโs evolution from curious investigator to traumatized survivor with raw vulnerability. Bill Moseley makes a sinister return in a cameo that ties the film to its roots, while newcomer Jacob Elordi brings unsettling charisma as a documentarian whose motives are far from pure. Their chemistry keeps the narrative grounded even as the violence grows increasingly surreal.
Cinematographer Don Dunn amplifies the horror with claustrophobic framing and washed-out lighting that evoke classic grindhouse aesthetics. The score, composed by Bear McCreary, pulses with dread, blending distorted lullabies with mechanical sounds that echo Babyfaceโs inhuman nature. Every technical choice serves the story, creating an atmosphere that feels both modern and timeless.
By its final act, The Hills Run Red 2 explodes into a blood-soaked crescendo thatโs as tragic as it is terrifying. The twist ending redefines what we thought we knew about the original, leaving audiences questioning who the real monster isโthe killer behind the mask, or those who keep watching. Brutal, intelligent, and unflinchingly dark, this sequel doesnโt just revive the legendโit carves its own place in horror history. The Hills Run Red 2 is a chilling reminder that some nightmares are too powerful to stay buried.





