I Spit On Your Grave: Deja Vu (2019) Apr 2026
At nearly two and a half hours , the film is punishingly long. The pacing frequently stalls, and many scenes—particularly the taunting dialogue from the villains—drag on well past their point of impact.
I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu is strictly for of the 1978 original. It is a grueling, amateurish, yet strangely fascinating piece of exploitation cinema. While it succeeds in honoring Camille Keaton’s legacy, it ultimately collapses under the weight of its own excessive length and uneven tone. Rating: 2/5 stars I Spit on Your Grave: Deja Vu (2019)
Seeing Keaton reprise her most iconic role provides a sense of continuity and gravitas that modern remakes often lack. Her performance is weary and haunted, grounding the film’s more outlandish moments. At nearly two and a half hours ,
Forty years after the original cult classic defined the "rape-and-revenge" subgenre, director returns with a direct sequel that reunites viewers with the original survivor, Jennifer Hills. While the 2019 film is a bold attempt to bring the story full circle, it is an endurance test in more ways than one. The Plot It is a grueling, amateurish, yet strangely fascinating
The story follows a successful, older Jennifer Hills () and her daughter, Christy ( Jamie Bernadette ). The past comes screaming back when they are kidnapped by the relatives of the men Jennifer killed decades ago. What follows is a brutal, sun-drenched nightmare where the cycle of violence is inherited by a new generation. The Good: A Legacy Reclaimed