Gremlins 2: The New Batch

Gremlins 2: The New Batch From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Gremlins 2: The New Batch is a 1990 American horror-comedy film, and a sequel to Gremlins (1984). It was directed by Joe Dante and written by Charles S. Haas, with creature designs by Rick Baker. It stars Zach Galligan, Phoebe Cates, John Glover, Robert Prosky, Haviland Morris, Dick Miller, Jackie Joseph, Robert Picardo, and Christopher Lee.

The story continues the adventures of the creature Gizmo, who spawns numerous small monsters when wet. In the first film, Gizmo's offspring had rampaged through a small fictional town. In Gremlins 2, Gizmo multiplies within a skyscraper in New York City. The new creatures thus pose a serious threat to the city should they be able to leave the building, and much of the story involves the human characters' efforts to prevent this disaster.

Like the first film, Gremlins 2 is a live action comedy-horror film. However, Dante put effort into taking the sequel in new anarchic directions. In general, the film is meant to be more cartoon-like than the darker original, and the violence is fairly slapstick. There are also a number of parodies of other films and stories, most notably Gremlins itself, as well as the Rambo films, The Wizard of Oz, Marathon Man and The Phantom of the Opera. As with the first film, critical response varied. However, some critics who thought the first film was too dark gave Gremlins 2 better reviews. Compared to its highly successful PG-rated predecessor, Gremlins 2 did not perform as well at the box office and it was rated PG-13 by the MPAA.

Plot The film takes place a few years after the original film in New York City, where Rand Peltzer (Billy's father) had acquired Gizmo (voiced by Howie Mandel). Gizmo is a mysterious, cute, good-natured furry creature called a mogwai. In the first film, Billy was informed of the "rules" regarding mogwai; namely that one must keep mogwai away from any bright light especially sunlight, never get them wet or feed them after midnight. Nevertheless, Gizmo was later exposed to water and therefore multiplied. When the new mogwais ate after midnight, they morphed into dark green, reptilian monsters with sharp teeth and claws. These monsters, or gremlins, caused much destruction and mayhem in Billy's small hometown of Kingston Falls. Gizmo's original owner Mr. Wing (Keye Luke) took the creature back after the gremlins had been eradicated.

Billy and his girlfriend Kate Beringer (Cates) now live in New York, where they are having difficulty adapting to the large and impersonal city. Billy works for Clamp Enterprises, which is based in a large, automated skyscraper in Manhattan. Kate also works at the building as a tour guide. The head of Clamp Enterprises, Daniel Clamp (Glover), is a caricature of tycoon Donald Trump and media mogul Ted Turner.[1]

As part of the new development in the area, Gizmo's owner Mr. Wing is offered money to sell his store to Clamp. Mr. Wing refuses, but not long afterwards dies of old age. His store is then demolished; Gizmo is captured and taken to a laboratory in the Clamp office building. The lead scientist of this laboratory, Dr. Catheter (Lee), is a sinister mad scientist who threatens to dissect Gizmo.

Billy eventually learns that Gizmo is in the building and rescues him. However, when one of Billy's bosses takes Billy away to a restaurant, Gizmo is left in the office and accidentally gets wet. The resulting mogwais, Mohawk (essentially the original film's Stripe reincarnated), Daffy (the crazy one), George (the tough one), and Lenny (the stupid one), soon eat after midnight in a cafeteria or near a water main and are transformed into gremlins. They quickly start a fire that triggers sprinklers, causing them to multiply even further.

The new gremlins cannot leave the building because it is still daytime and they are vulnerable to sunlight. While confined to the building, the gremlins invade the laboratory, where they discover various fluids that cause them to become creatures never before known. One gremlin consumes a hormone that makes him super-intelligent and gives him the ability to speak with a refined voice (provided by actor Tony Randall); this "Brain Gremlin" acquires a pair of spectacles to denote his newfound intellect. Like the original movie in Gremlins 2 the gremlin with the stripe was the leader. However, once Brain appears he becomes treated as such by the others. Another gremlin takes the form of electricity; after he kills Dr. Catheter, Billy captures him in the phone system. Mohawk drinks a potion which enables him to change into a centauroid spider-Gremlin hybrid. Another gremlin drinks a bat formula and sprouts wings. The Brain Gremlin injects him with a genetic sunblock formula, making him immune to sunlight. The Bat Gremlin breaks out through the lab's wall and flies through the city. It soon attacks Murray Futterman, who pours cement on it; thereafter it lands on a church and becomes a gargoyle. Another gremlin becomes part-vegetable as a result of the formula it drinks. Finally, the last gremlin becomes a female named Malinda.

Kate is trapped in Mohawk's spider web with Billy's boss Marla with Mohawk advancing on them; Billy is tied up in a dentist's chair with Daffy about to experiment on him; and Gizmo is tied up after being tortured by Mohawk. Gizmo manages to free himself and makes a bow and a flaming arrow to use as a weapon. Mr. Futterman enters the building and rescues Billy by driving off Daffy with a dentist's light; they seek and find Kate and Marla. Later, the Brain Gremlin leads all gremlins into the lobby when they are ready to leave the building. Billy and his friends turn a waterhose on the gremlins and, as the monsters start to multiply, Billy releases the electric gremlin. The gremlins are hit by the electricity and consequently melt away, while the electric gremlin explodes into nothingness. The sole survivor of the new batch of gremlins was Malinda, who appeared at the very end of the film romantically pursuing security chief Forster (Picardo).

[edit] Cast Zach Galligan as Billy Peltzer Phoebe Cates as Kate Beringer Peltzer John Glover as Daniel Clamp Robert Prosky as Grandpa Fred Robert Picardo as Forster, chief of security Christopher Lee as Doctor Catheter Haviland Morris as Marla Bloodstone Dick Miller as Murray Futterman Jackie Joseph as Sheila Futterman Gedde Watanabe as Mr. Katsuji Keye Luke as Mr. Wing Kathleen Freeman as Microwave Marge Twin actors Don Stanton and Dan Stanton as Martin and Lewis, Dr. Catheter's assistants Jason Presson (star of Dante's Explorers) as Alex, the Yogurt Jerk Rick Ducommun as a security guard Belinda Balaski as the mom in the movie theatre Paul Bartel as the theatre manager Kenneth Tobey as the theatre projectionist Hulk Hogan as himself Julia Sweeney as Peggy, the lab receptionist Charles S. Haas as Casper, Dr. Catheter's assistant John Astin as a janitor Henry Gibson as an employee fired for smoking Leonard Maltin as himself Dick Butkus and Bubba Smith as themselves, attacked at the salad bar Howie Mandel as the voice of Gizmo Tony Randall as the voice of the Brain Gremlin Frank Welker as the voice of the Mohawk, Daffy, George & Lenny Gremlins and director Joe Dante himself as the director of Grandpa Fred's show.

[edit] Looney Tunes segments In addition to the main plot, there is animation by Chuck Jones in the film featuring the Looney Tunes characters Bugs Bunny, Daffy Duck and Porky Pig. Jones had actually quit animation before returning to work on Gremlins 2.[2] Dante explained the animation at the beginning of the film was meant to "set the anarchic tone."[3] In his scenes, Daffy breaks the fourth wall when he forcefully tries to insert himself into the title and ending sequences it follows the same formula as the Pink Panther films did with the panther character created by DePatie and Freleng (friends of Chuck). At the beginning of the film, he stops the music, and tries to overthrow Bugs to ride the Warner Bros. shield, only for it to malfunction horrendously. Daffy also interrupts the end credits with sardonic humor. He calls the credits really long and wonders aloud why anyone would still be in the theatre during the credits. The ending has Daffy trying to usurp Porky Pig to say the closing line, only to get hit by another shield.

The DVD includes a longer version of the cartoon short. In it, Daffy is informed by Bugs that he has been promoted to executive and is subsequently put in charge writing the title of the movie. When Daffy mistakenly writes the title Gremlins 2 as Gremlin Stew, Bugs corrects the error. Daffy then attempts to rename the film The Return of Super-Daffy Meets Gremlins 2 Part 6: The Movie, but Bugs rejects this for being too long, changing it back to Gremlins 2 (rendered in the font of the official logo). Daffy then quits his new job and Bugs decides to add in the subtitle, saying it looks "a little skimpy". This material was removed from the film because early audiences expected a live-action film and were bewildered by the lengthy animated sequence.[4]

[edit] Production

[edit] Background The original Gremlins was a financial success, and Warner Bros. asked its director Joe Dante to make a sequel straight away. Dante declined, because he saw Gremlins as having a proper ending, and thus a sequel would only be meant to be profitable. Moreover, the original film was a taxing experience for Dante, and he wanted to move on. Work on Gremlins 2 proceeded without him, as the studio approached various directors and writers. Storylines considered included sending the gremlins to cities like Las Vegas or even the planet Mars. After these ideas fell through, the studio returned to Dante, who agreed to make the sequel after receiving the rare promise of having complete creative control over the movie; he also received a budget triple that of the original film's. Dante later acknowledged that by this point too much time had passed between the films, thus possibly reducing Gremlins 2's appeal.[5]

The film was released in 1990, and as the filmmakers later noted, this was a time when cable television, genetics and frozen yogurt were becoming more common and influential.[citation needed] This all left a mark on Gremlins 2, as Clamp's media empire ran many cable television channels. Gremlins 2 actually exaggerated what could be seen on cable television at the time, although as the filmmakers noted in 2002, that humour might be lost on present-day audiences. Cable television later grew to provide that type of variety. Genetics in 1990 is reflected in the laboratory seen in Gremlins 2, and frozen yogurt is what the mogwais eat after midnight.[3]

[edit] Plotting With more control over the film, Dante engineered a project that he later referred to as "one of the more unconventional studio pictures, ever." Dante included some material that he believed Warner Bros. would not have allowed had they not wanted a sequel to Gremlins. Allowed to break a number of rules in filmmaking, he also later claimed it was the film into which he had put the most of his personal influence. Dante imagined Gremlins 2 as a satire of Gremlins and sequels in general. Another basic description of Gremlins 2 was that, as Dante said, an hour into the film it becomes "extremely cartoony."[3]

The recommended screenwriter, Charlie Haas, brought to the project the basic storyline of moving the gremlins to New York City, and he also imagined a corporate head (the character Clamp) being Billy's boss and at the center of the new disaster. When the Warner Bros. executives grew concerned about the expense of portraying the gremlins attacking an entire city, Haas came up with the idea of confining the action within Daniel Clamp's "smart building". Haas also included a great deal of material in his screenplay that proved too elaborate to produce, including having a cow–hamster hybrid running on a treadmill in the laboratory.[3]

In keeping with Dante's desires to satirize the original film, the sequel has some meta-references and self-referential humor. These include a cameo appearance by film critic Leonard Maltin. He holds up a copy of the original Gremlins video and denounces it, just as he had in reality.[citation needed] However, his rant is cut short when gremlins pounce on him. Partly for this scene, one academic called Dante "one of contemporary cinema's great pranksters."[6]

Additionally, when Billy is trying to explain the safety precautions regarding the mogwai to staff in the building, the staff find them quite absurd and interrogate Billy on the application of the rules. This scene originates from the fact that the filmmakers themselves saw the rules as irrational, and some questions in the scene were based upon queries raised by fans of the original film.[3]

At one point in the film, Dante attempted to involve his audience in the story by making it seem as if the gremlins had taken over whatever theatre Gremlins 2 would be screened in. The film seems to be broken by the gremlins, who then engage in shadow puppetry over a white screen. Professional wrestler Hulk Hogan then appears in a cameo appearance and intimidates the gremlins into running the rest of Gremlins 2; this joke was inspired by a similar stunt in William Castle's film The Tingler (1959). The studio feared people might really leave the theater if they thought the film had broken. Dante thus secured the inclusion of the sequence by assembling some people for a preview of the film. When the scene was shown, the real-life audience found it enjoyable and stayed in the theatre. Dante later described this scene as one of the most widely enjoyed jokes in Gremlins 2. When Gremlins 2 made its debut on home video, the filmmakers altered the scene, to make it seem as if VCRs had been broken by the gremlins. This time actor John Wayne forces the gremlins into continuing the film, although voice impersonation was needed since Wayne had been dead since 1979.[3] Notably, a clip from Falling Hare, a film released in 1943 featuring Bugs Bunny and a gremlin, appears in this version.

The original version of the film was longer, but executive producer Steven Spielberg claimed there were too many gremlins, and several scenes were cut as a result. One deleted scene portrayed three of the main gremlins, Daffy, Lenny and George, sneaking into television host Grandpa Fred's studio and "helping" him host, which worked because Grandpa Fred's show was supposed to be scary.[4]

[edit] Casting Several actors from the original film returned to make Gremlins 2, including Galligan, Cates, and Dick Miller. Miller reprised his role as Billy's neighbor Mr. Futterman, who the gremlins severely injured in the first film. In the second, he plays a part in wiping out the creatures by turning the hose on them. Character actress Jackie Joseph returned to play Mr. Futterman's wife. Keye Luke also returned to play Mr. Wing, Gizmo's original owner. When Luke heard his character would die in Gremlins 2, he quipped, "Remember, when you make Gremlins 3, I'm a flashback!" Hoyt Axton was meant to return as Billy's father, the inventor. He would have appeared at the end of the film, having designed special clothing for Gizmo that would ensure Gizmo would never come into contact with water again. At the last moment, the filmmakers decided not to shoot the scene because the film was too long.[3]

New performers included Robert Picardo, who had previously worked with Dante and producer Michael Finnell in films such as The Howling (1981). He plays Forster, one of Billy's crueler bosses. Robert Prosky played Grandpa Fred, a television host, and his character was based upon Al Lewis's character Grandpa Munster. Joe Dante has a brief cameo as the director of Grandpa Fred's show. John Glover played Clamp and brought to the role an enthusiastic innocence that overrode how his character had been written as a villain. Dante felt Glover's approach to the role lightened the film in general.[3]

Christopher Lee played the mad scientist Dr. Catheter. Lee imagined his role as light-hearted, but Dante encouraged him to portray the scientist as evil to better match the atmosphere of the laboratory set. Lee was revered on the set for his experience.[3] In a deleted scene, Dr. Catheter examines a bat injected with "genetic sun-block." He then says to his colleague, "I'm told they sometimes feed on blood." This is a reference to Lee's performances as Count Dracula in the Hammer Horror films.[4]

[edit] Special effects For special effects, the original film relied on Chris Walas, who moved on to pursue a directing career. Dante turned to Rick Baker to create the effects for Gremlins 2. Baker was not interested, as he saw Gremlins 2 as too much work for a project in which he would not be the creator but rather a successor to Walas. He was eventually persuaded to accept the job when it was suggested he could make the gremlins and mogwai more diverse.[3]

In the first film, when Gizmo multiplied, his off-spring closely resembled himself, with the exception of the leader, Stripe. Here, the four mogwai Gizmo produces each possess their own distinct personalities and physical features. Additionally, each mogwai has a name, although the names were used in the script and never actually spoken aloud in the film. Two of the mogwais were George, black without a stripe and a caricature of Edward G. Robinson, and Lenny, buck-toothed, named for the principal characters in Of Mice and Men, whom they resemble in both appearance and demeanor. Daffy displays manic behaviour and the leader, Mohawk, named for his mohawk hairstyle. Based on the original film's character, Stripe, Frank Welker also voices Mohawk. While both the mogwai and gremlin versions of Stripe had fur stripes, Baker hit upon the idea of giving the Mohawk mogwai a fur stripe and giving the Mohawk gremlin something scalier. Gizmo was also redesigned; the puppet was generally larger and its design was simplified. Dante commented Gizmo may actually look less real in Gremlins 2, but the result was that Gizmo could convey more emotion.[3]

Later on, when the mogwais evolve into gremlins and multiply, they further diversify by running amok in the bio-lab and ingesting various drugs. One turns into a sunlight-resistant hybrid with a bat, thus becoming the Bat Gremlin. Mohawk becomes part-spider. One becomes part-vegetable (Vegetable Gremlin, as Dante named it), and another consumes a drug and turns into a femlin, Greta, with shiny red lips and mascara. Yet another has acid thrown onto his face, quickly presenting a mask of the Phantom of the Opera.[3]

As with the first, puppetry was involved, and some of the puppets were mechanical. An actor holding a puppet would actually have to have wires strapped to him. Gremlins 2 also includes more stop motion animation than the first film; the Bat Gremlin was portrayed through some stop motion animation. Film technology since the original had improved, and as a result the creatures can be seen walking more. In fact, Gizmo is able to dance, although this scene took the longest to make. While there are more gremlins in Gremlins 2 than the original, this still took a long time to make possible, with the filming lasting five months. Many of the effects had to be completed after the actors had finished their work.[3]

[edit] Music As with the first film, the music in Gremlins 2 was composed by Jerry Goldsmith, who also has a cameo in the film. In the latter half of the film, Gizmo, inspired by the Rambo films and tired of the abuse he has suffered at the hands of the gremlins, takes revenge on Mohawk. Gizmo shoots the Mohawk spider-gremlin with a makeshift bow and flaming arrow. For the scene in which Gizmo prepares for this move, Goldsmith – who had also authored the music in the Rambo films – composed a new theme based on that in the Rambo series.[3]

The scene featuring Mohawk transforming into a spider-like monster features a portion of the song "Angel of Death" by thrash metal band Slayer. In another scene, the Brain Gremlin leads hundreds of gremlins to sing Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York". Dante claimed that "The musical number is a shameless steal" from the film Dames (1934).[7]

When the Bat Gremlin flies out of the Clamp building after being injected with sunblock solution, a sample of the action music from the film The 'Burbs (1989) plays, also directed by Joe Dante and composed by Jerry Goldsmith. Gremlins 2 also prominently features "Rhapsody in Blue" by George Gershwin.

[edit] Reception Film critics varied in their reviews of Gremlins 2. Roger Ebert, who had approved of the first film, observed that Gremlins 2 was meant to satirize sequels. Nevertheless, he felt it did not manage to differentiate itself from the original enough and was not as good. He went on to claim that the film lacks a well-constructed plot, and once the gremlins arrived the film simply becomes a "series of gags." He thus gave the film two and a half stars, out of a possible four.[8] Hal Hinson of The Washington Post caught on to how the Looney Tunes animation is meant to imply "anarchic wit," but nevertheless felt both the cartoon short and the film itself are failures. He saw the beginning as too slow and, like Ebert, thought the film is too similar to the first. Hinson did, however, approve of the characterization of the gremlins and their version of "New York, New York." He also noted that turning the gremlins against Clamp resembles anti-corporate "poetic justice."[2]

In contrast, while one reviewer for Films in Review, like Ebert, argued the film resembles the original and abandons its plot when the gremlins arrive, he also felt the film's appeal could be found partly in its self-consciousness of these facts and its in-jokes and satire. He also complimented Cates as "wholesomely bewitching," and Galligan as "a suitably naive foil for the scaly fiends."[9] Desson Howe of The Washington Post also approved of the film, including its special effects and the parodies of Trump, Turner, genetics labs, cable television, and the film Marathon Man.[10] (Marathon Man is parodied when the gremlin Daffy abducts Billy and tries to torture him with dental tools.)

Some critics thought the film has qualities the original lacked, such as wit. A critic for National Review called the film "much freer and wittier than the first one," though he felt the sequel shies away from becoming an important piece of satire.[11] The cover of an issue of Entertainment Weekly in July 1990 also exclaimed that "actor John Glover... and director Joe Dante made Gremlins 2 wittier, better, and more subversive than the original." Some critics who found the first film too dark also gave Gremlins 2 more positive reviews. Leonard Maltin, who appears in the film, gave it three out of four stars for its references to other films, Glover's imitation of Turner and Trump, and Lee's performance.[12] An All Movie Guide critic complimented the sequel by saying the "original's violence and mean-spiritedness are gone, making this follow-up somewhat more kid-friendly."[13]

The film was nominated for several Saturn Awards, namely for Best Director, Best Fantasy Film, Best Music, and Best Special Effects. Glover and Picardo were both nominated for the Best Supporting Actor award.

Still, the film did not perform as well at the box office. The trailer introduced the film to audiences by displaying a surface of water intercut with scenes from the original. A narrator goes over the rules regarding how to safely handle mogwai. After the narrator says, "You didn't listen [to the rules]," scenes from the sequel are shown, revealing the gremlins morphing into strange new creatures and then ending with the Brain Gremlin speaking.[14] Gremlins 2 was released on June 15, 1990. In its first weekend it made $9,702,804, and it ultimately made $41,482,207 in the United States.[15] It was thus only the thirty-first highest grossing film of the year, behind a few other films in the comedy, horror or fantasy genre, such as Back to the Future Part III ($87,727,583), Edward Scissorhands ($56,362,352), and Arachnophobia ($53,208,180). It did, however, outperform Predator 2 ($30,669,413), Child's Play 2 ($28,501,605) and The Exorcist III ($26,098,824).[16]

Gremlins 2 also played in other countries. Canadian audiences reportedly enjoyed one scene in which Billy and his boss meet at a Canadian-themed restaurant, where the waiters are dressed like the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.[3] The film was released in Norway on July 5, Finland on July 6, Colombia on July 12, and much of the rest of Europe in the rest of July, including in the United Kingdom and Spain on July 27. It opened in France and Argentina in August and reached Australia on September 20.[17] It earned £7,400,000 in the United Kingdom. Later, the film made an additional $20,800,000 in rental stores.[18]

Unlike the PG-rated predecessor, the MPAA rated Gremlins 2 PG-13.

In the DVD commentaries for both the original film and the sequel, director Joe Dante stated that he felt that Gremlins 2 was a case of waiting too long to capitalize on the success of the original, which hurt the sequel's chances of success.

[edit] Merchandising As with the first film, merchandising accompanied Gremlins 2. This may have been integral to the film's purpose. As one critic wrote, "it's a savvy, off-the-wall comedy that acknowledges, yes, it is just one more silly rip-off sequel, produced to sell off the merchandise inspired by the first film."[9] One reference the film makes to the original, an allusion to the merchandising surrounding Gizmo, drew criticism. Some critics saw the mention of merchandise as tasteless. This type of product placement has since become more common.[3]

The new merchandise included action figures by the National Entertainment Collectibles Association based on characters such as the Brain and Mohawk Gremlins. There were also children's books like Gremlins 2: The New Batch: Movie Storybook, by Michael Teitelbaum, published by Goldencraft in December 1990. Golden Books published Gizmo to Rescue in July 1990.[19] David Bischoff wrote a novel based on the film published by Avon Books in June 1990. A unique aspect of the novel is how Bischoff adapts the sequence where the film breaks. In the novel, the Brain Gremlin subdues and locks Bischoff in his bathroom before taking the reins for a little bit to explain that the Gremlins take over at this point in the film, his displeasure at Bischoff using the nickname "Mr. Glasses" instead of his official name, and begins a treatise on politics before Bischoff breaks his way out of the bathroom with an axe and subdues the Brain Gremlin. The novel then continues where the film picked up after the film break.

Elite Software programmed a sidescrolling Gremlins 2: The New Batch video game for Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, MSX and the ZX Spectrum. Hi-Tech Expressions also released a DOS game at around the same time, but it was poorly received. Sunsoft released versions for the Nintendo Entertainment System and Game Boy in 1990.[20][21] In the NES game, the player controls Gizmo through various levels in the building, armed with weapons ranging from the genetically-modified super tomato in the laboratory to the new matchstick-firing bow in the later sections. The Game Boy game was a side-scroller also featuring Gizmo. The Elite game had featured Billy Peltzer using a wide variety of weapons (flashlights, tomatoes, frisbees and the like) to dispatch of Gremlin adversaries. The Hi-Tech game had Billy roaming the floors of Clamp Centre hunting down the Gremlins.

[edit] References to elements from the original Gremlins Kate, at one point in the film, talks about a family tragedy that happened at a previous time in history for her, parodying the reason she hated Christmas in the original film. Kate told about her father's accidental death in the previous film, while in Gremlins 2, she told about her encounter with a flasher resembling president Abraham Lincoln. Billy has in his cubicle at work a picture of Kingston Falls, the location of the first film. During the Microwave Marge sequence, the Gremlins specifically use the microwave as a fire source, despite the fact that the first film had a gremlin killed in one. A gremlin flashes Kate, as the one in the first film did. Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs is the Gremlins' favorite film, as in the original movie.

[edit] References ^ D. Ansen, "Gremlins in the Halls of Greed," Newsweek, June 18, 1990, vol. 115, issue 25, p. 59. ^ a b Hal Hinson, "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," The Washington Post, June 15, 1990. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p DVD commentary; Gremlins 2: The New Batch. Warner Home Video, 2002. ^ a b c DVD commentary, "Additional Scenes," Gremlins 2: The New Batch. Warner Home Video, 2002. ^ DVD commentary; Steven Spielberg presents Gremlins. Special edition. Warner Home Video, 2002. ^ Christopher Kelly, "Toys in the Attic: The Unsung Pleasures (And Terrors) of 'Babe: Pig in the City' and 'Small Soldiers'," Film Quarterly, vol. 53, no. 4. (Summer, 2000), p. 44. ^ Lou Cedrone and The Baltimore Evening Sun, "Gremlins 2 hit, suiting Dante just fine: Director happy to taste success again after disappointing Burbs," The Windsor Star, June 22, 1990, pg. C.5. ^ Roger Ebert, "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," Chicago Sun-Times, June 15, 1990. ^ a b Edmond Grant, "Gremlins 2," Films in Review, October 1990, vol. 41, issue 10, pp. 485–487. ^ Desson Howe, "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," The Washington Post, June 15, 1990. ^ John Simon, "Who Needs People?" National Review, August 6, 1990, vol. 42, issue 15, pp. 48–50. ^ Leonard Maltin, ed., Leonard Maltin's 2002 Movie & Video Guide. A Signet Book, 2001, pp. 557–558. ^ "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," All Movie Guide. URL accessed 22 May 2006. ^ "Gremlins 2: The New Batch, in Theatrical Trailers, in the DVD Steven Spielberg presents Gremlins. Special edition. Warner Home Video, 2002. ^ "Gremlins 2: The New Batch," Box Office Mojo. URL accessed 19 May 2006. ^ "1990 Domestic Grosses," Box Office Mojo. URL accessed 19 May 2006. ^ "Release dates for Gremlins 2: The New Batch" The Internet Movie Database, URL accessed 20 May 2006. ^ "Business Data for Gremlins 2: The New Batch" The Internet Movie Database, URL accessed 20 May 2006. ^ Gremlins 12" Roto-Cast Brain Action Figure by NECA, Amazon.com, URL accessed 22 May 2006; Gremlins 2: The New Batch: Movie Storybook (Hardcover) by Michael Teitelbaum, Amazon.com, URL accessed 22 May 2006; Gizmo To Rescue Look-Look Book (Gremlins 2 : the New Batch) (Paperback) by Jim Razzi, Gene Biggs, Kim Ellis (Illustrator) Amazon.com, URL accessed 22 May 2006. ^ MobyGames. "Gremlins 2: The New Batch - MobyGames". MobyGames - A Game Documentation and Review Project 1. MobyGames. Retrieved on 2006-05-23. “Gremlins 2: The New Batch... Released 1990 Platforms Amiga, Atari ST, Commodore 64, DOS, MSX, ZX Spectrum”" ^ MobyGames. "Gremlins 2: The New Batch for NES - MobyGames". MobyGames - A Game Documentation and Review Project 1. MobyGames. Retrieved on 2007-04-02. “Gremlins 2: The New Batch... Released 1990 Platform NES”"

[edit] External links Gremlins 2: The New Batch at the Internet Movie Database Gremlins 2: The New Batch at Rotten Tomatoes All Movie Guide entry for Gremlins 2: The New Batch Movie stills