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{{short description|2008 film directed by Louis Morneau}}
{{Infobox film
{{Infobox film
| name = Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead
| name = Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead
| image = Joyride2.jpg
| image = Joyride2.jpg
| caption = Promotional poster
| caption = Official DVD cover
| director = Louis Morneau
| director = Louis Morneau
| producer = Connie Dolphin
| producer = Connie Dolphin
| writer = {{Plainlist|
| writer = {{Plainlist|
* James Robert Johnston
* James Robert Johnston
* Bennett Yellin
* Bennett Yellin
}}
}}
| based on = {{based on|Characters|[[J. J. Abrams]]<br>[[Clay Tarver]]}}
| based_on = {{based on|Characters|[[J. J. Abrams]]<br>[[Clay Tarver]]}}
| starring = {{Plainlist|
| starring = {{Plainlist|
* [[Nicki Aycox]]
* [[Nicki Aycox]]
* [[Nick Zano]]
* [[Nick Zano]]
Line 17: Line 18:
* [[Mark Gibbon]]
* [[Mark Gibbon]]
}}
}}
| music = [[Joe Kraemer (composer)|Joe Kraemer]]
| music = [[Joe Kraemer (composer)|Joe Kraemer]]
| cinematography = {{Plainlist|
| cinematography = {{Plainlist|
* Robert C. New
* Robert C. New
* Scott Williams
* Scott Williams
}}
}}
| editing = Mike Jackson
| editing = Mike Jackson
| distributor = [[20th Century Fox Home Entertainment]]
| distributor = [[20th Century Fox Home Entertainment]]
| released = {{Film date|2008|10|7}}
| released = {{Film date|2008|10|7}}
| runtime = 91 minutes
| runtime = 91 minutes
| country = United States
| country = United States
| language = English
| language = English
| budget =
| gross =
}}
}}
'''''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead''''' is a 2008 American [[Horror (genre)|horror]] [[Thriller (genre)|thriller]] film and the sequel to ''[[Joy Ride (2001 film)|Joy Ride]]'' (2001). The film was directed by Louis Morneau and stars [[Nicki Aycox]], [[Nick Zano]], [[Kyle Schmid]], [[Laura Jordan (actress)|Laura Jordan]] and [[Mark Gibbon]]. The film was released [[direct-to-video]] on October 7, 2008.
'''''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead''''' is a 2008 American [[Direct-to-video]] [[horror film]]<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmovie.com/movie/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead-v467016|publisher=[[AllMovie]]|accessdate=September 10, 2020|last=Buchanan|first=Jason|title=Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) - Louis Morneau &#124; Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related &#124; AllMovie|archive-date=March 27, 2023|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230327072005/https://www.allmovie.com/movie/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead-v467016|url-status=live}}</ref> and the sequel to ''[[Joy Ride (2001 film)|Joy Ride]]'' (2001). The film was directed by [[Louis Morneau]] and stars [[Nicki Aycox]], [[Nick Zano]], [[Kyle Schmid]], [[Laura Jordan (actress)|Laura Jordan]] and [[Mark Gibbon]]. The film was released on DVD on October 7, 2008. It was followed by a sequel, ''[[Joy Ride 3: Roadkill]]'' (2014).

The film was followed by a sequel, ''[[Joy Ride 3: Roadkill]]'' (2014).


== Plot ==
== Plot ==
Melissa Scott and her fiancé Bobby Lawrence are on a cross country road trip to [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]] to get married. Joining them for the ride is Melissa's sister Kayla and Kayla's online boyfriend Nik.
{{Plot|date=September 2016}}
The film begins at a [[truck stop]] in an unspecified rural location. It is night time in the midst of a heavy rainstorm, and a [[prostitute|hooker]] gets into a large, black [[Peterbilt]] and offers her "services" to the trucker inside. The trucker is revealed to be Rusty Nail, when he recites his phrase "I like the rain. Keeps everybody inside and washes everything clean". He asks the hooker to go out into the rain to [[wetlook|get wet]]. When she is unnerved by this strange behavior and states she is leaving, Rusty Nail locks the doors and tells her to leave through the open window. He then shuts the window halfway as she is clambering out, trapping her with half her body hanging outside the truck. Rusty Nail then drives off, decapitating the hooker as he drives alongside a trailer attached to a truck.


During the trip, their car breaks down in the desert. Whilst looking for help, the four find a seemingly abandoned barn, in which they find a silver 1971 [[Chevrolet Chevelle]] in working order with a full tank of gas. The four reluctantly steal the car, although Melissa leaves a note in the house with her contact details for the owner of the car to find.
Meanwhile, Melissa Scott and her fiancé Bobby Lawrence, a young engaged couple in their early twenties, are on a cross country road trip in a [[Chevrolet Caprice|1983 Chevrolet Caprice]] Wagon. They are heading across the [[Southwestern United States]] to [[Las Vegas, Nevada|Las Vegas]], where they plan on getting married. Joining them for the ride is Melissa's sister Kayla, who along the way picks up her online boyfriend Nick "Nik" Parker, a [[punk subculture|punk]].


The next day, Melissa receives a phone call from Rusty Nail. He refers to Melissa as "[[Goldilocks]]", revealing that he can see her, and Bobby soon disappears from a diner restroom. The others find a [[CB radio]] in the car, through which Rusty Nail orders them to destroy their [[cellphone]]s and obey his orders if Bobby is to survive. He requests for Kayla to cut off her middle finger, mirroring an earlier incident when she had flipped off a trucker who turned out to be Rusty himself. The group heads to a [[Morgue|mortuary hospital]], where Kayla cuts a finger from a corpse, but Rusty, knowing they have broken the rules, cuts off Bobby's finger and puts it in the [[glove compartment]] of the Chevelle, where it is eventually discovered by the group.
When their car breaks down in the desert, the four find a seemingly abandoned house along a side road. In the barn, they find a silver 1971 [[Chevrolet Chevelle]] in working order with a full tank of gas. Melissa and Bobby are initially reluctant to take the car, as it amounts to thieving, but due to Kayla and Nik's persistence, they relent. However, Melissa leaves a note in the house with her contact details for whomever may own the house and/or car.


Rusty soon pulls up at a bar in Utah, and Bobby tries to escape. He gains the attention of a bartender, who tries to help out, but Rusty catches him in the act and kills the bartender. Nik then gets kidnapped by Rusty, and Melissa and Kayla chase them in the Chevelle. However, Rusty manages to ram the car several times in his truck, flipping the Chevelle over. Melissa manages to escape, but Kayla gets trapped and is killed after Rusty plows into the car again.
The next day, Melissa receives a phone call from the person who owned the car they stole. He then calls Melissa "[[Goldilocks and the Three Bears|Goldilocks]]" (she is blonde), revealing that he can see her. He also tells her, "I believe you have something of mine, 'cause I now have something of yours," soon after Bobby disappears from a diner restroom. The others find a [[CB radio]] in their car, with which Rusty Nail talks to them. He orders them to destroy their [[cellphone]]s and follow his orders if Bobby is to survive, and he has some quite nasty [[psychological]] [[mind game]]s that create a bridge for [[Splatter film|gory]], life-and-death situations. The group continues to follow Rusty Nail, who promises them that they will be ''all reunited'' soon, after Rusty requests for Kayla's middle finger, a reference to when Kayla flipped off the driver of a truck who turned out to be Rusty. The group heads to a [[Morgue|mortuary hospital]], then Kayla cuts a finger from a corpse and reach the wrong trucker because Rusty already knew that they had broken the rules. Rusty cuts one finger off Bobby and puts it in the [[glove compartment]] of the vehicle, which is eventually discovered by the group.


Rusty takes Bobby and Nik back to his home and sadistically tortures them, eventually killing Nik by impaling a steel bar through his head. Melissa, meanwhile, breaks into a police station and steals a motor bike, racing off to find Bobby. She eventually tracks Rusty down, and, after using the motor bike as a distraction, beats Rusty down with a shovel. She drives away in his truck, with Bobby locked in the trailer, but the trailer disconnects and leaves Bobby behind. Rusty manages to grab on to the side of the truck and climb on the roof. A scuffle ensues, in which Melissa manages to jump out of the truck right before it goes flying off of the edge of the cliff, upon where it explodes on impact. Bobby escapes from the trailer and meets back up with Melissa.
Rusty later instructs Melissa to "[[Striptease|strip]] down to her underwear" in front of his truck; it turns out not to be him, but some other trucker named Kenny Chesney whom Rusty Nail had instructed to be there. Rusty Nail soon pulls up at a bar in Utah, and Bobby tries to escape. He gains the attention of the barman, who has gone outside to smoke, but Rusty Nail catches him and uses a chainsaw-chain to cut off the barman's jaw. He then commands Nik to walk through a party dressed as a female and to buy crystal meth. Nik refuses to do this, and Melissa takes a knife to his throat, whereupon Nik cries, confessing that he is scared and his tattoos are fake. Nik walks up to the party in the clothes that were seen on the hooker earlier, only for Rusty to kidnap Nik and drive off. Melissa and Kayla chase them, and in the ensuing car chase, Rusty manages to ram his car, which was stolen by them, several times, overturning it with his truck. Kayla's leg is pinned, and she is killed when Rusty rams again, causing his car, which is mainly stolen by her, to explode as she flipped him off.


Later, Rusty is revealed to have miraculously survived the explosion after he picks up a girl whose car has broken down.
Rusty takes Bobby and Nik back to his home and has them play a sadistic game of "[[Craps]]" with dice. In this game, whatever one person rolls makes the other person suffer. Bobby's kneecap is struck by a hammer and his nipple branded by the letter R. Once Bobby rolls a double one [[snake eyes]], Rusty kills Nik by stabbing him with a steel bar through the top of his head. Melissa breaks into a police station and steals a motor bike, racing off to find Bobby. Rusty Nail hangs Bobby by his neck in the back of his truck. Melissa parks the police motorcycle by the side of the truck, distracting Rusty and allowing her to overpower the killer with a few well-placed hits to the back with a shovel. She drives away in his truck, accidentally disconnecting the cabin from the rest of the truck and leaving Bobby behind, but Rusty manages to grab on to the side of the truck and climb on the roof. Melissa drives until the sun comes up and ends up plowing into a gas tank, causing the truck to catch fire. Melissa jumps from the truck as Rusty takes control, but it's too late, and he drives off the side of a cliff, the truck exploding on impact. Bobby escapes from the trailer and meets back up with Melissa, their ordeal finally over.


==Cast==
Later, in the middle of nowhere. A girl is stuck on the side of the road because her car has broken down. A big red Peterbilt truck with a trailer attached drives past her, only to stop and back up after she makes a nasty comment. She explains what's happened and asks for a ride. As the truck door opens, it is revealed that the driver has a badly burnt right arm. The girl climbs in and a familiar voice says "You'll catch your death out there," revealing that the driver is Rusty Nail, who survived the explosion. He drives away with the girl as the film cuts to black.

== Cast ==
* [[Nicki Aycox]] as Melissa Scott
* [[Nicki Aycox]] as Melissa Scott
* [[Nick Zano]] as Bobby Lawrence
* [[Nick Zano]] as Bobby Lawrence
Line 59: Line 57:
* Rob Carpenter as Trucker #1
* Rob Carpenter as Trucker #1
* Gordon Tipple as Trucker #2
* Gordon Tipple as Trucker #2
* [[Rebecca Davis (Canadian actress)|Rebecca Davis]] as Woman Stuck in Snow
* [[Rebecca Davis (Canadian actress)|Rebecca Davis]] as Woman Stuck In Snow
* Daniel Boileau as Bald Trucker
* Daniel Boileau as Bald Trucker
* Lyle St. Goddard as Kenny Chesney (credited as Goofy Looking Truck Driver)
* Lyle St. Goddard as Kenny Chesney (credited as Goofy Looking Truck Driver)
* [[Mackenzie Gray]] as Bartender
* [[Mackenzie Gray]] as The Bartender
* Sean Tyson as Drunk Trucker #1
* Sean Tyson as Drunk Trucker #1
* Chris Kalhoon as Drunk Trucker #2
* Chris Kalhoon as Drunk Trucker #2
* Gardiner Millar as Mortician
* Gardiner Millar as The Mortician
* Colette Hills as Female Corpse
* Colette Hills as Female Corpse


== Development ==
== Development ==
Originally titled ''Joy Ride 2: End of the Road'' in promotional artwork, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' was filmed in [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]], at [[Cache Creek (British Columbia)|Cache Creek]], [[Kamloops]] and [[Vancouver]].<ref>Cameron McGaughy, "[http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/34868/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead/ Review of ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'']," ''DVD Talk'' (September 28, 2008).</ref>
Originally titled ''Joy Ride 2: End of the Road'' in promotional artwork, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' was filmed in [[British Columbia]], [[Canada]], at [[Cache Creek (British Columbia)|Cache Creek]], [[Kamloops]] and [[Vancouver]].<ref>Cameron McGaughy, "[http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/34868/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead/ Review of ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606111927/http://www.dvdtalk.com/reviews/34868/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead/ |date=2011-06-06 }}", ''DVD Talk'' (September 28, 2008).</ref>


Like the original film, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' was produced and distributed by [[20th Century Fox Home Entertainment]], although unlike the original it was [[direct-to-video|direct-to-DVD]].
Like the original film, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' was produced and distributed by [[20th Century Fox Home Entertainment]], although unlike the original it was [[direct-to-video|direct-to-DVD]].


== Release ==
== Release ==
The film was released on DVD on October 7, 2008 in the [[United States]] and opened at #9 at the DVD sales chart, making $1,492,635 off 62,000 sold DVD units. As per the latest figures, 200,000 units have been sold, translating to $4,307,361 in revenue. This does not include Blu-ray sales/DVD rentals.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/2008/0JYR2-DVD.php|title=Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) - Financial Information|publisher=[[The Numbers (website)|The Numbers]]}}</ref>
The film was released on DVD on October 7, 2008 in the [[United States]] and opened at #9 at the DVD sales chart, making $1,492,635 off 62,000 sold DVD units. As per the latest figures, 200,000 units have been sold, translating to $4,307,361 in revenue. This does not include Blu-ray sales/DVD rentals.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.the-numbers.com/movies/2008/0JYR2-DVD.php|title=Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) - Financial Information|publisher=[[The Numbers (website)|The Numbers]]|access-date=2009-11-18}}</ref>

==Reception==
A [[Dread Central]] review says, "2001's ''Joy Ride'' remains in my opinion one of the most underrated thrillers of recent years. While it had a smart script (co-written by J.J. Abrams no less) that put more emphasis on psychological torment than that of the physical variety, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' keeps the cruel mind games but puts a greater emphasis on physical pain and suffering. Though the original established that the mysterious psycho trucker Rusty Nail was capable of extreme brutality, the anguish he inflicted was primarily mental. This DVD sequel pretty much joy rides right into slasher territory." He adds that while it "doesn't hold a candle to its vastly superior predecessor, I still found it to be above average when compared to the questionable quality of most of these uncalled for DVD sequel cash-ins of late."<ref>{{Cite web |title=Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (DVD) |date=Oct 5, 2008 |url=https://www.dreadcentral.com/reviews/8924/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead-dvd/ |publisher=[[Dread Central]] |access-date=April 30, 2024 |archive-date=November 25, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231125000511/https://www.dreadcentral.com/reviews/8924/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead-dvd/ |url-status=live }}</ref>

The website Geeks of Doom writes, "While not as entertaining as the first one, ''Joy Ride 2'' hits all the right notes for a horror film... The direction was good and the overall film quality was first rate. Plus the actors are ridiculously good looking, the acting toes the line between decent and good, and the body count and gore [are] high."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Bauerstein |first=Jack |title=DVD Review: Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead |date=October 30, 2008 |url=https://geeksofdoom.com/2008/10/30/dvd-review-joy-ride-2-dead-ahead |publisher=[[Dread Central]] |access-date=April 30, 2024 |archive-date=September 30, 2024 |archive-url=https://archive.today/20240930011844/https://geeksofdoom.com/2008/10/30/dvd-review-joy-ride-2-dead-ahead |url-status=live }}</ref>

Reel Film Reviews gives a mixed review: "A slight cut above its direct-to-video horror brethren, ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' nevertheless suffers from many of the same problems that one tends to associate with low-budget efforts of this ilk – including scarcely-developed characters, derivative storytelling, and a sporadic emphasis on needless elements... It probably doesn't help that screenwriters James Robert Johnston and Bennett Yellin seem to be going out of their way to transform Rusty Nail into a run-of-the-mill psychopath, as the shadowy figure's rationale for pursuing the four central characters is awfully weak – while his newfound penchant for torture smacks of a desperate attempt to ape the success of the ''[[Saw (franchise)|Saw]]'' and ''[[Hostel (film series)|Hostel]]'' series." The reviewer adds, "There's little doubt that ''Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead'' suffers from the absence of [[Ted Levine]]'s voice this time around, as the actor's exceedingly menacing delivery certainly stands as one of the more overtly indelible horror-movie performances in recent years."<ref>{{Cite web |last=Nusair |first=David |title=Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead |date=October 8, 2008 |url=https://reelfilm.com/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead/ |publisher=Reel Film Reviews |access-date=April 30, 2024 |archive-date=April 30, 2024 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20240430225828/https://reelfilm.com/joy-ride-2-dead-ahead/ |url-status=live }}</ref>


== References ==
== References ==
Line 84: Line 89:
{{Joy Ride film series}}
{{Joy Ride film series}}


[[Category:2008 films]]
[[Category:2000s American films]]
[[Category:2000s English-language films]]
[[Category:2000s road movies]]
[[Category:2008 direct-to-video films]]
[[Category:2008 direct-to-video films]]
[[Category:2000s psychological thriller films]]
[[Category:2008 films]]
[[Category:American films]]
[[Category:20th Century Fox direct-to-video films]]
[[Category:20th Century Fox direct-to video films]]
[[Category:American road movies]]
[[Category:Direct-to-video thriller films]]
[[Category:American serial killer films]]
[[Category:Direct-to-video horror films]]
[[Category:Direct-to-video sequel films]]
[[Category:Direct-to-video sequel films]]
[[Category:English-language films]]
[[Category:Direct-to-video thriller films]]
[[Category:Films directed by Louis Morneau]]
[[Category:Films scored by Joe Kraemer]]
[[Category:Films set in abandoned houses]]
[[Category:Films set in abandoned houses]]
[[Category:Films set in the United States]]
[[Category:Films set in the United States]]
[[Category:Films shot in British Columbia]]
[[Category:Films shot in Vancouver]]
[[Category:American road movies]]
[[Category:2000s road movies]]
[[Category:Trucker films]]
[[Category:Trucker films]]
[[Category:Serial killer films]]

Latest revision as of 13:42, 18 November 2024

Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead
Official DVD cover
Directed byLouis Morneau
Written by
  • James Robert Johnston
  • Bennett Yellin
Based onCharacters
by J. J. Abrams
Clay Tarver
Produced byConnie Dolphin
Starring
Cinematography
  • Robert C. New
  • Scott Williams
Edited byMike Jackson
Music byJoe Kraemer
Distributed by20th Century Fox Home Entertainment
Release date
  • October 7, 2008 (2008-10-07)
Running time
91 minutes
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish

Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead is a 2008 American Direct-to-video horror film[1] and the sequel to Joy Ride (2001). The film was directed by Louis Morneau and stars Nicki Aycox, Nick Zano, Kyle Schmid, Laura Jordan and Mark Gibbon. The film was released on DVD on October 7, 2008. It was followed by a sequel, Joy Ride 3: Roadkill (2014).

Plot

[edit]

Melissa Scott and her fiancé Bobby Lawrence are on a cross country road trip to Las Vegas to get married. Joining them for the ride is Melissa's sister Kayla and Kayla's online boyfriend Nik.

During the trip, their car breaks down in the desert. Whilst looking for help, the four find a seemingly abandoned barn, in which they find a silver 1971 Chevrolet Chevelle in working order with a full tank of gas. The four reluctantly steal the car, although Melissa leaves a note in the house with her contact details for the owner of the car to find.

The next day, Melissa receives a phone call from Rusty Nail. He refers to Melissa as "Goldilocks", revealing that he can see her, and Bobby soon disappears from a diner restroom. The others find a CB radio in the car, through which Rusty Nail orders them to destroy their cellphones and obey his orders if Bobby is to survive. He requests for Kayla to cut off her middle finger, mirroring an earlier incident when she had flipped off a trucker who turned out to be Rusty himself. The group heads to a mortuary hospital, where Kayla cuts a finger from a corpse, but Rusty, knowing they have broken the rules, cuts off Bobby's finger and puts it in the glove compartment of the Chevelle, where it is eventually discovered by the group.

Rusty soon pulls up at a bar in Utah, and Bobby tries to escape. He gains the attention of a bartender, who tries to help out, but Rusty catches him in the act and kills the bartender. Nik then gets kidnapped by Rusty, and Melissa and Kayla chase them in the Chevelle. However, Rusty manages to ram the car several times in his truck, flipping the Chevelle over. Melissa manages to escape, but Kayla gets trapped and is killed after Rusty plows into the car again.

Rusty takes Bobby and Nik back to his home and sadistically tortures them, eventually killing Nik by impaling a steel bar through his head. Melissa, meanwhile, breaks into a police station and steals a motor bike, racing off to find Bobby. She eventually tracks Rusty down, and, after using the motor bike as a distraction, beats Rusty down with a shovel. She drives away in his truck, with Bobby locked in the trailer, but the trailer disconnects and leaves Bobby behind. Rusty manages to grab on to the side of the truck and climb on the roof. A scuffle ensues, in which Melissa manages to jump out of the truck right before it goes flying off of the edge of the cliff, upon where it explodes on impact. Bobby escapes from the trailer and meets back up with Melissa.

Later, Rusty is revealed to have miraculously survived the explosion after he picks up a girl whose car has broken down.

Cast

[edit]
  • Nicki Aycox as Melissa Scott
  • Nick Zano as Bobby Lawrence
  • Laura Jordan as Kayla Scott
  • Kyle Schmid as Nick "Nik" Parker
  • Mark Gibbon as Rusty Nail
  • Krystal Vrba as Lot Lizard
  • Kathryn Kirkpatrick as Big Wheels Waitress
  • Rob Carpenter as Trucker #1
  • Gordon Tipple as Trucker #2
  • Rebecca Davis as Woman Stuck In Snow
  • Daniel Boileau as Bald Trucker
  • Lyle St. Goddard as Kenny Chesney (credited as Goofy Looking Truck Driver)
  • Mackenzie Gray as The Bartender
  • Sean Tyson as Drunk Trucker #1
  • Chris Kalhoon as Drunk Trucker #2
  • Gardiner Millar as The Mortician
  • Colette Hills as Female Corpse

Development

[edit]

Originally titled Joy Ride 2: End of the Road in promotional artwork, Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead was filmed in British Columbia, Canada, at Cache Creek, Kamloops and Vancouver.[2]

Like the original film, Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead was produced and distributed by 20th Century Fox Home Entertainment, although unlike the original it was direct-to-DVD.

Release

[edit]

The film was released on DVD on October 7, 2008 in the United States and opened at #9 at the DVD sales chart, making $1,492,635 off 62,000 sold DVD units. As per the latest figures, 200,000 units have been sold, translating to $4,307,361 in revenue. This does not include Blu-ray sales/DVD rentals.[3]

Reception

[edit]

A Dread Central review says, "2001's Joy Ride remains in my opinion one of the most underrated thrillers of recent years. While it had a smart script (co-written by J.J. Abrams no less) that put more emphasis on psychological torment than that of the physical variety, Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead keeps the cruel mind games but puts a greater emphasis on physical pain and suffering. Though the original established that the mysterious psycho trucker Rusty Nail was capable of extreme brutality, the anguish he inflicted was primarily mental. This DVD sequel pretty much joy rides right into slasher territory." He adds that while it "doesn't hold a candle to its vastly superior predecessor, I still found it to be above average when compared to the questionable quality of most of these uncalled for DVD sequel cash-ins of late."[4]

The website Geeks of Doom writes, "While not as entertaining as the first one, Joy Ride 2 hits all the right notes for a horror film... The direction was good and the overall film quality was first rate. Plus the actors are ridiculously good looking, the acting toes the line between decent and good, and the body count and gore [are] high."[5]

Reel Film Reviews gives a mixed review: "A slight cut above its direct-to-video horror brethren, Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead nevertheless suffers from many of the same problems that one tends to associate with low-budget efforts of this ilk – including scarcely-developed characters, derivative storytelling, and a sporadic emphasis on needless elements... It probably doesn't help that screenwriters James Robert Johnston and Bennett Yellin seem to be going out of their way to transform Rusty Nail into a run-of-the-mill psychopath, as the shadowy figure's rationale for pursuing the four central characters is awfully weak – while his newfound penchant for torture smacks of a desperate attempt to ape the success of the Saw and Hostel series." The reviewer adds, "There's little doubt that Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead suffers from the absence of Ted Levine's voice this time around, as the actor's exceedingly menacing delivery certainly stands as one of the more overtly indelible horror-movie performances in recent years."[6]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Buchanan, Jason. "Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) - Louis Morneau | Synopsis, Characteristics, Moods, Themes and Related | AllMovie". AllMovie. Archived from the original on March 27, 2023. Retrieved September 10, 2020.
  2. ^ Cameron McGaughy, "Review of Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead Archived 2011-06-06 at the Wayback Machine", DVD Talk (September 28, 2008).
  3. ^ "Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (2008) - Financial Information". The Numbers. Retrieved 2009-11-18.
  4. ^ "Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead (DVD)". Dread Central. Oct 5, 2008. Archived from the original on November 25, 2023. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
  5. ^ Bauerstein, Jack (October 30, 2008). "DVD Review: Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead". Dread Central. Archived from the original on September 30, 2024. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
  6. ^ Nusair, David (October 8, 2008). "Joy Ride 2: Dead Ahead". Reel Film Reviews. Archived from the original on April 30, 2024. Retrieved April 30, 2024.
[edit]