IMDb RATING
5.6/10
3.3K
YOUR RATING
The vampire Mamuwalde (a.k.a. Blacula) is resurrected by voodoo and forced to kill again.The vampire Mamuwalde (a.k.a. Blacula) is resurrected by voodoo and forced to kill again.The vampire Mamuwalde (a.k.a. Blacula) is resurrected by voodoo and forced to kill again.
- Awards
- 1 nomination
Lynne Moody
- Denny
- (as Lynn Moody)
Ernesto Macias
- Milt
- (as Eric Mason)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaBefore this film was released, the employees of American International Pictures were asked to submit titles for it as part of a contest.
- GoofsMamuwalde tells Willis after he becomes a vampire that his reflection cannot be seen; however, Mamuwalde's reflection is seen when he leaves Justin's party, first when he passes a glass display case and again when he is walking down the street by store windows.
- ConnectionsFeatured in Cinemacabre TV Trailers (1993)
Featured review
"Let the cartoooooooooooon begin!" Sorry, but for my generation William Marshall is best remembered as The King of Cartoons from Pee Wee's Playhouse, but little did I realize that he was originally the super cool vampire Prince Mamuwalde AKA Blacula! Marshall returns in this sequel that's surprisingly good. Having been vanquished at the end of the first film, Blacula is resurrected by a drug dealer who wants to use Blacula to exact his revenge. Blacula instead turns the dealer into part of a vampire army he commands for his own ends, part of which is securing Pam Grier, who hadn't broke out yet with "Coffy" which was released this same year. The vampires are creepy, the voodoo themed storyline is entertaining, and the film features a strong leads in Marshall and Grier. Overall, this is pretty silly blaxploitation film, but it's also quite entertaining in a camp sort of way. And look fast for Craig T. Nelson as a police sergeant.
Details
Box office
- Gross US & Canada
- $2,180,000
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