Brahms- The Boy Ii Now

That said, Brahms: The Boy II is not without effective moments. The cinematography remains suitably gloomy, using the sprawling, gothic mansion to create oppressive atmosphere. Christopher Convery delivers a strong performance as Jude, balancing vulnerability with unsettling calm. The film’s climax, which sees Liza forced to enter the doll’s world inside a buried safe, offers a brief glimpse of the surreal body horror the premise could have fully embraced.

Brahms: The Boy II (2020) largely ignores that clever foundation. The sequel, directed by William Brent Bell (returning from the first film), chooses a simpler, more conventional path: the doll is now unequivocally haunted. Brahms- The Boy II

Ultimately, Brahms: The Boy II is a cautionary tale about horror sequels: twisting the lore to fit a more popular (but less interesting) supernatural model. It’s a watchable, if forgettable, haunted-doll movie—but it is not a worthy successor to the original’s quiet, tragic menace. For fans of the first film, the real horror isn’t the doll. It’s what the sequel chose to break. That said, Brahms: The Boy II is not