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The movie revolves around a youthful whose life is going to swing to a bad dream when he purchases a new laptop and doesn't realize that the past proprietor puts hack documents in it. He isn't just watching him, yet he will likewise place him perilously in the dark web, he and his companions.
Dark Web, not overly compromised by success, retains its predecessor's sense of lo-fi menace, marrying the now-established "rules" of the budding franchise to a fresh storyline.
Dark Web skates by on saturated nastiness, one terrific kill, and the audience's engagement in seeing if the filmmakers can pull off the stunt. Barely, but it's fun to watch them try.
We're now two-for-two on films in this series that really feel like they ought to be doing more than just presenting the same old shocks in online drag.
With all the film's technical efficiency, the introduction of the black-clad internet trolls/criminals does not work. Their presence pixelates the screen, taking us out of the action. It's a step too far, instead of making us wonder...
Unfriended: Dark Web is an unrelentingly effective, albeit cruel, experience. If you've never thought to put tape over your webcam, this movie will scare you into doing so.
Dark Web is a surprisingly welcome sequel. It's not going to be a horror classic, but it plays with its concept enough to feel like its different from the original.