The first “Smile,” from writer-director Parker Finn, came out in 2022, and in a less promising directorial debut its premise would’ve fallen apart around the third or fourth mirthless stare. Evil spirit, loose in the world, flits from human to human; unfortunate victim commits suicide in some heinous fashion in the presence of the next lucky customer; rinse, repeat. Simple, flexible idea, yes, but enough for a feature?
It was. Expanding on the grin-and-share-it idea in his slick, 10-minute short “Laura Hasn’t Slept” (2020), “Smile” revealed Finn as a filmmaker of sure pacing instincts and enough compelling interest in his female protagonist’s traumatic past to deliver more than one smash-cut jump scare after another. (The supernatural entity both stokes and thrives on trauma, like certain politicians.) Initially Paramount Pictures planned to dump “Smile” on Paramount+; if it had, it would’ve missed out on the $200 million the movie made instead in theaters.
“Smile 2” goes in a newish direction, to frustrating mixed results — but it’s a mixed bag you can respect because it’s not hackwork and it’s trying new things. This time, the anguished center of the narrative is pop superstar Skye Riley (Naomi Scott), about to launch a massive world tour after a difficult substance abuse recovery. She’s also recovering from a terrifying car accident that took the life of her fellow cocaine addict boyfriend.
In an exceptionally bloody prologue, the audience sees what Skye does not: a returning character from the first movie (played by Kyle Gallner) handing the curse off to drug dealer Lewis (Lukas Gage), who’s destined to meet with Skye later. Skye has more on her mind, and in her nightmares, than simply an aching back from some heavy-duty dance rehearsals. Flaming out so publicly a year ago, and alienating friends and family, has led to an unsteady present state.