The sequel starts a year later, with Marshall,
Gilbert, and Amy being driven in Buzzy’s hearse to Amy’s hometown of Rockport,
a Salem-like town that really loves Halloween. Amy is planning a scary party
for her father’s (Claude Knowlton and Antonio Cayoone) Halloween wedding, but
while they’re in town, they decide to visit Harold and his spouse, Rose, played
by Sophia Hammons, who are on display in a nearby museum. They use the ancient
amulet to bring the mummies alive to experience the nicer things (like room
service and arcades), but they aren’t the only mummies in town.
Sobek, played by T.J. Storm, has been accidentally
revived through a meatball falling out of his dinner sub. With museum worker
Larry, played by Jordan Conley, hypnotized to carry out his evil mission, Sobek
goes on a mission for revenge against his former best friend turned worst enemy,
Harold, for stealing his former love.
Along with his safety and that of his friends
(mummified or not), this time around Marshall has difficulty being the ignored
one to Gilbert and Amy, who have become close while working for the school
paper together. Alex DiVincenzo said in his review, “It’s also a pleasant
surprise to see LGBTQ+ representation — in the form of a same-sex wedding —
handled so matter-of-factly, especially after the recent manufactured outrage
over Lightyear.”
DiVincenzo continued, “While Under Wraps is the more
well-rounded movie, Under Wraps 2 admirably attempts to one-up the Halloween
vibes with a huge festival in the holiday’s honor.” Along with an evil mummy as
the villain other than a human also makes it more of a horror movie, even
though Larry is always by Sobek’s side to help the scares with comedic relief.
It’s nice to see Adam Wylie, who plays Gilbert in the 1997, make a cameo as
well.
DiVincenzo ended his review by saying, “It’s unlikely
that the new iteration of Under Wraps will have the same impact as the original
— with smart devices and streaming services readily available in virtually
every household, most kids have unfettered access to untold horrors at their
fingertips — but both the remake and its sequel serve their purpose as fun
Halloween treats.”
If you want to see this sequel, check it out on
Disney+. Personally, I didn’t really see much of a problem, but I don’t think I
will be going back to see this again. However, I think this is relatively harmless,
so I don’t think it will hurt to see it. Watch it and judge for yourself.
Tomorrow I will be looking at a surprising sequel in “Disney
Month 2025.”






