Eight years later, Kia-Rauch returned to the source material, past the necromancers, and made a sequel to Wormwood. It picks up right where the first part left off, with the same zombies and the same scary scientists. Only the hero has changed. Thrash and bloody mayhem still favors the applicants for new fuel, but now a new antibiotic zombie is in vogue. He's the reason for all the fuss in this part, as the main character makes a living delivering fresh human meat to the lab grounds.
Take Two didn't really work for me initially. The zombie action was replaced by a chase through the Australian woods, and the characters from the first film were relegated to the background. Plus, there is less grotesque, and some of the actors try to play on the serious side. At the same time they were in a trash movie. The contrast turned out so itself. However, the humor, good zombies, blood and gore didn't go anywhere. On these components Kii-Roach's sequel continues the cause of the first part with dignity. In addition, the heroine of the original Wormwood promptly reappears, thus leveling the viewer's sympathy position, me at least, and the plot becomes interesting to follow. Although it, the plot, is very clear and simple, once again the conflict of the survivors with the greedy world of military psychopaths and mad scientists. And this is in the foreground, the zombies themselves have become a familiar backdrop, the apocalypse. So, I can assume that Mr. Kieh Roach can safely save money for the third film, for: it's his theme, to shoot cheaply from sticks and trash, Roach gets an A-plus, and the story itself within the trilogy will look decent. So, we wait for the epic conclusion.