The doctor turns out to be a priest on order from those high up to get a blood sample from Medeiros, a possessed girl who was being experimented on by the Catholic Church within the expansive top floor of the building. As they make their way through the blood-splattered tenement, it soon becomes clear that this isn’t a contagion in the general sense, but an example of real-life demonic possession. Owen (Jonathan Mellor), a mysterious Health Department representative who guides them through the quarantined building and is the only one who holds the authority to get them out.
Part two focuses on a small SWAT team led by Dr.
The second film picks up soon after the first, which followed a TV reporter (Manuela Velasco) as she tailed a group of firemen on an emergency call at an apartment complex infected with a viral outbreak that turned the inhabitants into blood-thirsty zombie-like creatures. In fact, 2 not only changes the dynamic of the series, it forever switches up the first film - a tall, and rare, feat for any sequel. While the far-inferior American remake, Quarantine, so foolishly opted out of the exorcism backstory so that it could chalk it all up to rabies (ugh), those in the audience who felt cheated are given a big gift-wrapped present here. It’s not as if this element wasn’t strongly hinted at in the original film. The hand-held camerawork aesthetic still holds true, as do the intense attack scenes, yet 2 adds a whole new ingredient to the horrific recipe: the eternal battle between the holy and the damned. Scare-hounds who thought they had seen it all with Spain’s 2007 zombie-outbreak opus,, will be mighty surprised when they discover the evils that await them in this stellar follow-up.